J
JimG
Guest
I don’t think anyone can know whether someone else is in an objective state of mortal sin. What one can know is that if a person is in a second marriage without the first one having been declared null, then one of those marriages must be invalid. Both cannot be valid, and the first one entered into is presumed valid unless declared null.Almost everyone knows what the Cardinal means, he was speaking to orthodox Catholics who know what he means by a so-called “second marriage”, or almost everyone that is?
It is touching, it is, these charitable replies to a comment trying to provide a response to the OP’s question: “How will the more liberal bishops respond”?
Anyway, I was wondering how y’all would know a person in a so-called “second marriage”, as understood by almost everyone (well, almost everyone), is in the objective state of mortal sin by that fact alone?
So the person is either living in a de facto adulterous relationship or not. If “not,” the uncertainty can only be resolved by a marriage tribunal.
