Fair enough, but isn’t it reasonable to suggest that this ‘assumed’ meaning is the meaning that’s in play 99.9% of the time that people talk about “pre-nuptial agreements?”
No. It isn’t reasonable to assume that.
The idea that it is reasonable to assume that is exactly the misconception that he’s trying to dispel.
As the author attempted to explain, there are many kinds of pre-nuptial agreements. Most couples make such agreements without even realizing that they are “pre-nuptial agreements.”
2 masters degree candidates who agree that once they’re married they will support each other emotionally and financially until they both graduate on-time are making a pre-nuptial agreement–even if it’s not committed to writing.
Engaged couples make all kinds of pre-marital agreements. In fact, from a pastoral point of view, I would be less inclined to go forward with a marriage if a couple has absolutely no pre-marital agreements because that tells me that they are not thinking about their future together.
If so, then Peters would have been well served to plainly make the distinction between the common use of the word and the ecclesiastical use of the word. After all, that’s what we do whenever there’s a Church doctrine that uses words in a way differently than people encounter them in secular settings! If we fail to make the distinction plainly, then we’re actually courting misinterpretations!
And I would agree with you, except for the fact that he did write this
One can, of course, easily imagine terms in pre-nuptial agreements that violate Church teaching on marriage. For all I know, these represent the great majority of pre-nups now in force. Such documents cannot in good conscience be signed. But one can also, I suggest, imagine terms in a pre-nup that are wholly consistent with, nay even supportive of, Church teaching on marriage.
Which is exactly the distinction you wrote about.
Again, the problem is that people are not reading his words—they’re assuming his meaning instead.
Keep in mind his target audience. Even though his blog is on the internet and available for everyone to read, he often makes comments to the effect that his writing is geared toward those who have some understanding of canon law—meaning that he does not explain every single point as if he were teaching Canon Law 101.
And, it would seem, a simple paragraph of explanation, in the body of his post, would have been sufficient to prevent these misunderstandings, don’t you think?
Which (I submit) is exactly why he did write such a simple paragraph of explanation.
When dealing with canon law, whether that’s a canonist writing about it, or a parish priest applying the canons in a real-life marriage preparation setting, we cannot make assumptions.
It’s disturbing to me when I read so many posts (not just the recent threads, but many of them over the years) when people make blanket statements along the lines of “no priest will let you get married if you have a pre-nup” because such statements are unfair generalizations. Not just unfair, but outright untrue.