And the Orthodox Church frowns on divorce as well. I think the problem here is the insistence that divorce in the Orthodox Church is seen in the same light as divorce in the secular world. They are not even close. Divorce is a sin no matter what. If you have a good priest then you will be required to do the penance for the sin. Remarriage is a result of mercy. I mean, would you rather have the situation in the Catholic Church where people fall out of the faith because they want to remarry and they can’t? So they rather go somewhere else? Or that someone who has been remarried wants to come back to the Church but can’t because they are being told they have to separate with their current legal spouse? Isn’t that a greater sin? Especially if they already have a family.
I hope I did not consign Orthodox marriage and divorce to the level of the secular world. Obviously the Orthodox is church.
I think you all have done a good job in explaining the economia. However, I cannot see it is as theologically right.
Here is my reason. Economia, as I see it, is basically about mercy – to prevent a person from greater sin. But its usage is so very wrong. Mercy is about forgiveness of sin committed but never thereafter to justify a person from committing it again. “Your sin is forgiven.” “Go and sin no more,” so says Jesus.
I am afraid you have wrongly given example the reason for remarriage. But if this is the Orthodox Church’s stance, it is with her that I disagree with. Marriage, most of all, is a Sacrament. One cannot ‘undo’ a Sacrament. One cannot undo Baptism and assign to a person a lesser form of Baptism, for example. Similarly for the Sacrament of Marriage (Matrimony).
So to say it is so that a person will not lose the faith does not apply here. If we believe marriage being a Sacrament is a grace, then surely God, is present there and he is the Lord of the marriage. When we believe and offer our marriage to God because it is his gift, everything will fall into place. Marriage couples have to be obedient to God and not to find solution outside of God.
People who fall out of faith because their marriage has broken down shouldn’t blame God for it but rather to look at themselves for the reason. It may be hard, but God says unequivocally that marriage couples have become ‘one flesh’ and ‘no man must put it apart’. Thus divorce is not allowed. In any case, there are many Catholics for reasons they cannot help, separated from their spouses and yet faithfully remain Catholics. Yes, the road is narrow.
…. Also, death of a spouse does not end the marriage of the one on earth. If they marry again, that is still a remarriage.
I do agree with this approach. How many Catholics divorce and end up leaving the Church? Better to find a way to get them to stay within the guidance of the Church and work on their weaknesses and get them back on the path. I also agree that this is a case-to-case basis, not a general rule, which is what the Orthodox Church do.
I have referred to earlier post (post #3) for reference. There is a disconnect here. A person is free to marry at the death of a spouse for marriage is only binding while they are still alive. There is no impediment for a living spouse to marry.
Yes, there may be Catholics who leave the church after divorce but there are also who stay. But this is not the reason to water down the Sacrament of Marriage. With God’s help through her people in the church, many broken marriages have been saved. And this is truly by the grace of God. Those who leave therefore must be accountable to their own action.
The bottom line is, if one is still in a state of being married, to remarry must be equivalent to commit adultery. Scripture is unambiguous on this. And adultery is a sin, an abomination.