S
styrgwillidar
Guest
I found the annulment process, including the length of time, to be extremely beneficial and helpful in healing. My wife wanted a divorce after deciding she loved me, but wasn’t ‘in love’ with me. Her decision that she didn’t want to be married anymore, or have a home with her kids, and wanted radical change in her life.
I took a vow before God. I took it knowing as a rational human being that I risked being betrayed. Did I think it was likely? No, but then, no one can see the future.
But that is the chance you take when you take The Vow before God, not just to a spouse.
Will I keep my word to God?
I have faith in Christ, and that he established a Church with the authority to teach on His behalf, as you said- to make decisions which will be upheld in heaven. A Church which teaches that it’s authority does not extend to invalidating a valid marriage. Something I knew and understood when I made my pledge before God.
You phrase this as a two party agreement, that one doing something wrong should invalidate the vow. But it’s not just a legal compact between two people. It’s a three party covenant-- God is involved. Even if your spouse betrays you, even if it gets into that ‘… for worse’ part, you do have an obligation to God to uphold your vow. That isn’t the Church’s call-- that’s the agreement you willingly enter into when you get married. I’m truly sympathetic but-- Sorry, life sucks sometimes. Life on this earth isn’t always fair. Sometimes the going gets rough— again, what did I sign up for, what did I promise, now that it’s really going to cost me something – did I mean it? In the words of Zelazny, “Talk is cheap. Whiskey costs money.”
Petitioning for a declaration of nullity. Upsides (regardless of the answer)
I took a vow before God. I took it knowing as a rational human being that I risked being betrayed. Did I think it was likely? No, but then, no one can see the future.
But that is the chance you take when you take The Vow before God, not just to a spouse.
Will I keep my word to God?
I have faith in Christ, and that he established a Church with the authority to teach on His behalf, as you said- to make decisions which will be upheld in heaven. A Church which teaches that it’s authority does not extend to invalidating a valid marriage. Something I knew and understood when I made my pledge before God.
You phrase this as a two party agreement, that one doing something wrong should invalidate the vow. But it’s not just a legal compact between two people. It’s a three party covenant-- God is involved. Even if your spouse betrays you, even if it gets into that ‘… for worse’ part, you do have an obligation to God to uphold your vow. That isn’t the Church’s call-- that’s the agreement you willingly enter into when you get married. I’m truly sympathetic but-- Sorry, life sucks sometimes. Life on this earth isn’t always fair. Sometimes the going gets rough— again, what did I sign up for, what did I promise, now that it’s really going to cost me something – did I mean it? In the words of Zelazny, “Talk is cheap. Whiskey costs money.”
Petitioning for a declaration of nullity. Upsides (regardless of the answer)
- The length of the process give you time to heal, to get your head on straight and keep from making what could be fairly major mistakes.
- The process does provide insight into your marriage, yourself, and the dynamics between you and your spouse. It takes time to get the witness statements and to generate the decision that provides this.
- It lets you know where you stand-- at a time when you’re able to act on the decision.
Assuming you continue to accept the authority of the Church, petitioning soon lets you know where you stand. Before you start getting your hopes up because you drifted into a relationship with somebody nice, but after you’ve had time to adjust to all the changes that come with a divorce. After you’ve learned to live with (and hopefully like yourself), to be a whole person again as opposed to the torn and battered half of a marriage. - Not an aspect of the process, but may be something for your relative to think about.