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I am wondering, if I am getting divorced but the marriage was with a non-baptized person and outside of the church, is an annulment needed?
OK, so: as a non-practicing but baptized Catholic, you married outside of the Church, right? Then, very likely, this is a simple “lack of form” case, which requires only a documentary process. Once the divorce is finalized, talk to your priest. You should be able to get this resolved fairly easily.I was not practicing at the time. So, if you consider ‘once Catholic always Catholic’ a true statement then yes, but I was not participating in the life of the Church at all.
Either a decree of nullity OR a dissolution of the natural bond.I am wondering, if I am getting divorced but the marriage was with a non-baptized person and outside of the church, is an annulment needed?
Then this may be neither a formal nullity case nor dissolution of a valid natural bond, but rather a document processes to document a Catholic invalidly attempting marriage outside the Church.I was not practicing at the time. So, if you consider ‘once Catholic always Catholic’ a true statement then yes, but I was not participating in the life of the Church at all.
What are you planning for the future?is an annulment needed
Technically, a “lack of form” case does not result in a “declaration of nullity” (despite a lot of diocesan tribunals/chanceries/etc., calling it that). The one who signs the paper is not making a judicial pronouncement since that person is not acting as a judge. He’s (…or She’s…) not even declaring that an attempted marriage is invalid. He’s merely stating a fact. It’s a minor detail with no practical significance out here in the pews…but what else is a canon lawyer good for, other than pointing such things out?“Lack of form” or “defect of form” declarations of nullity are merely administrative matters
This raises another question.While I’m at it, a “defect of form” (as that phrase is commonly understood) case is a judicial process (it may be a documentary process, yes, but this is actually a judicial process). It is not an “administrative” (i.e., anyone with executive authority can do it) process.
Dan
That is how it is in most of Europe. My sister married an Austrian. He has been married before— only civilly.It is my understanding that in some locations (not in the United States) a priest at the parish level can decide that a prior attempted marriage is a “Lack of Form” case and thus the associated person is free to marry.
Dan will correct me if I’m wrong, but what it means is that it’s not a judicial process at all. It falls under the pastor executing his duty under canon 1066 and 1067.Does that mean that the “parish priest” has “judicial authority” in such places? Or does it just mean that this priest’s word is good enough for whoever handles judicial matters in the diocese?
The parish priest who can look at civil and ecclesiastical documents and say “your civil marriage was not a marriage in canon law” is not exercising judicial power. Since the merely civil union of a Catholic has no existence in church law, there is no judgment about that union.It is my understanding that in some locations (not in the United States) a priest at the parish level can decide that a prior attempted marriage is a “Lack of Form” case and thus the associated person is free to marry.
Does that mean that the “parish priest” has “judicial authority” in such places? Or does it just mean that this priest’s word is good enough for whoever handles judicial matters in the diocese?
You’re the canon lawyer, not me. I’ll take your word for it. Thanks for the clarification.HomeschoolDad:![]()
Technically, a “lack of form” case does not result in a “declaration of nullity” (despite a lot of diocesan tribunals/chanceries/etc., calling it that). The one who signs the paper is not making a judicial pronouncement since that person is not acting as a judge. He’s (…or She’s…) not even declaring that an attempted marriage is invalid. He’s merely stating a fact. It’s a minor detail with no practical significance out here in the pews…but what else is a canon lawyer good for, other than pointing such things out?“Lack of form” or “defect of form” declarations of nullity are merely administrative matters
While I’m at it, a “defect of form” (as that phrase is commonly understood) case is a judicial process (it may be a documentary process, yes, but this is actually a judicial process). It is not an “administrative” (i.e., anyone with executive authority can do it) process.
Dan
“Defect of form” means “I tried my best, but somehow managed to not do it right.” “Lack of form” means “I didn’t even try to do it right.”I was just looking at it (and conflating “lack of form” with “defect of form”, a distinction I have some kind of mental block in understanding)