Perhaps the hardest thing for people who are applying for a decree of nullity is finding out that the Church a) absolutely intends to follow Christ, and b) the Church firmly believes and accepts Christ’s statement, that what God has brought together, no one may put asunder.
I have been around long enough to know that people get married, all too often, for any reason, and at times for no reason at all. Emotion, likely, but reason? Nope - as common sense at the time of the marriage would have said “NO WAY!” (yes, screaming it).
The church has about 2,000 years of history, and presuming we all accept that the Holy Spirit has guided it, has obtained not just a little confirmation that people may take the easy way out.
IF Christ took marriage as seriously as He did (and He did not mince words about it), then the Church is bound to take marriage seriously too.
That is not to say that the tribunal process, which Pope Francis has modified to remove the “eternity” of time it takes to process to a decision, cannot be worked on further. The other side of that coin, however, is taking the original exchange of vows seriously enough to do more than give just a lick and a promise to dining out if the parties, or at least one of them, had an impediment as of the day of the exchange of vows, sufficient that they could not form a covenant relationship.
Yes, it is intrusive. Yes, it is painful. Yes, it asks for evidence. Yes, that invades privacy.
However, we are not a community of privacy, We are a community of the Body of Christ, and that means that each and every one of us have a responsibility not just to ourselves, and to a spouse, but to both the community and to Christ.
And we have the sacrament of Reconciliation, because all of us - each and every one - are adept at breaking that responsibility in many ways. and the Church works to assure us, individually and as a community, that we do not take a solipsistic approach to what Christ said about marriage.
And that, for someone who has not been brought up in what the Church teaches about marriage, can be a bitter pill to swallow. But the Church didn’t make the rule; Christ did, and the Church, in following Christ, expresses a need to determine that the first exchange of vows did not come within Christ’s statement - that is, that it was not a covenant relationship.
It is a high standard.
But the Church did not set the standard high. Christ did. And the Church understands that not everyone exchanging vows intended, or was capable of, a covenant relationship, but it needs evidence, other than just the statement of the parties.
The process is a pain. So is finding out that the Church has not received enough evidence (or, sometimes, any evidence) that there was any impediment on that day of vows.
“Come, follow Me. My burden is light…” can sound exceedingly hollow and bereft of any mercy, be it over marriage issues, or any of the multitude of crosses we find ourselves being given. To say otherwise would be to make a lie of reality.