Sure because all Catholic marriages are assumed valid unless something arises later to call into question the validity.
Yes, I can’t see logically why: given the broad scope of anullible offenses, how does any marriage pass muster.
You know what happens when you assUme.
You cant introduce the terms “divorce” to the case of annulments because you are talking about different things. A divorce could only ever happen on the civil level, and that has no bearing in God’s eyes on the Sacramental nature of the marriage.
I haven’t introduced anything. No divorce, no anullment.
And your wrong on the “only civil”: your Petrine and Pauline “privleges” dissolve (i.e. divorce) valid marriages.
A person CAN want and seek to see if their marriage can be annulled (checked and found invalid) if something arises to question the validity. What they have no control over is the facts, if it is found valid then they are bound regardless of what they want.
Yes, this was like grounds for divorce. Now, in both divorce and anullments, perjury seems to be the ground of choice.
Im not sure about the third party thing, and that is questionable considering he has to judge the person’s heart subjectively. So given that I would say the most a third party could do is bring up the issue, but it would have to be one of the spouses that initiate the inquiry into an annulment.
The third party is more neutral than a self serving spouse wanting an anullment to marry the young secretary, or that beau fling.
As for the people falling in love later on, that doesnt change anything because the marriage was invalid to begin with.
Right. Most marriage begin with perfect intent and follow through on that.
If one spouse suspects problems they can have the Church look into it, that is fine, that however does not change the fact the spouse has no control over the facts.
That judging someone else’s heart thing.
That is a totally separate subject and just leading towards more confusion here. The Church is never ever bound by what secular authorities do, if secular authorities all of the sudden forbade civil divorce that does not mean the Church cant determine if a marriage was invalid or not.
Bet your anullments would dry up.
I dont know the answer, a tribunal might not even be necessary if they have the intention to stay together, in that case I would assume there would be a regularization process, similar to a conditional Baptism.
Maybe all marriages should be examed, a sort of Cana audit, every, say, seven years. To make sure they are all valid.
You are setting up a false characterization of putting the civil authorities one step above the Church and I dont have the time or energy to keep correcting you.
You’re not correcting, you’re evading.
Divorce equals deliberately severed marriage. And in Scripture and Tradition divorce equals grave sin.
Yes. And denial doesn’t make it go away.
I dont know what Rota is, but I would guess it is a higher authority in the Church. If I am right then the higher authority’s ruling takes precedence
.
It’s the highest appellate tribunal of your church. It doesn’t make precedent, but retries cases.
It would be very similar to an ordination that a bishop later claimed was invalid but then a Patriarch came in and looked over the issue and said was valid, in that case the Patriarch’s claim overturns the original Bishop’s claim.
which the pope of Rome (or the Rota) can reinstate and overturn the patriarch’s claim.
Further, I have yet to see convincing reasoning why the “innocent” party must undergo a penance for something they are not guilty of, that doesnt make sense.
(cont)
I take it you don’t believe in original sin then?
Even the innocent party is affected by the divorce, but then you believe that no one is affected by an anullment, so I don’t know how to explain it to you.