G
Gorgias
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OK. I get that this is your personal opinion.Marrying outside the Church seems more analagous to those situations to me.
The Church, who has the authority to regulate her sacraments, disagrees with you.
OK. I get that this is your personal opinion.Marrying outside the Church seems more analagous to those situations to me.
Thatâs a valid â but completely distinct! â assertion.I honestly do not believe the Church puts burdens like this on people without helping them
That is also true of protestants.The marriage has not been vetted properly, so it may turn out that she has been married 7 times. That her first 7 husbands all died on the first night after the wedding. Or other unusual circumstance the Church does not want to endorse. Or does.
It was an example that wasnât sufficiently illustrative of the issues weâre addressing. One example that might be more illustrative is âshe has been married seven times, and some of her seven husbands â but not all â have passed away, and others have prior spouses (such that thereâs a valid question as to whether they were free to marry her at the time of their wedding).â Thatâs not too âunusualâ a set of circumstances that the Church regularly encounters.That is also true of protestants.
Again, also true of protestants.It was an example that wasnât sufficiently illustrative of the issues weâre addressing. One example that might be more illustrative is âshe has been married seven times, and some of her seven husbands â but not all â have passed away, and others have prior spouses (such that thereâs a valid question as to whether they were free to marry her at the time of their wedding).â Thatâs not too âunusualâ a set of circumstances that the Church regularly encounters.
Ahh, but thatâs the rub. Weâd consider their previous marriages valid, and therefore, not able to be nullified. So⌠big difference.Again, also true of protestants.
They could be null, but are not automatically considered null.Ahh, but thatâs the rub. Weâd consider their previous marriages valid, and therefore, not able to be nullified. So⌠big difference.![]()
Exactly. However, in a Protestant context, their marriages and remarriages are considered valid â divorce is considered legitimate in their communities.They could be null, but are not automatically considered null.
And those Protestants who wish to join the Catholic Church and have prior marriages must go through the tribunal process to investigate the prior marriage(s).That is also true of protestants.
The Church would only presume validity for the first marriage where the spouse was still living. We donât recognize remarriage without nullity for Protestants either.Again, also true of protestants
So, letâs go back to that argument. Can pizza be consecrated as Eucharist? If the answer is ânoâ, then you have reason youâre searching for.It doesnât make sense to me that Church rules can impact the validity of a sacrament. Licity, yes, but not validity.
Just because a protestant community allows divorce does not mean that all (or even most) of their members do not intend permanence. Very few people Iâve met, regardless of creed, entered marriage without intending it to be lifelong. The Church explicitly states that knowledge of divorce does not invalidate consent, but rather that it is an individualâs intent against permanence that invalidates their consent.Given most protestant churches are ok with divorce and remarriage, I find it hard to believe that they meet the criteria of intending permanence.
Hereâs the rub: thereâs a difference between âexpectationâ and âresolveâ â namely, the difference is between âI donât expect that my marriage will failâ and âif XYZ happens, I will nevertheless never entertain divorce.âVery few people Iâve met, regardless of creed, entered marriage without intending it to be lifelong.
Marriage is a lifelong commitment that cannot be dissolved; rather, it is indissoluble. If a person consents to a marital union that is something less than indissoluble, then that person does not bring about a marriage, as the Church understands marriage. This ground is often evidenced in cultures that have a pervasive divorce mentality. It could also be applicable if a person espouses the tenets of a religion that does not support the indissolubility of marriage as part of its beliefs.
Yes, there is a difference between âexpectationâ and âresolveâ, but the Church holds to the presumption that interior disposition conforms to their spoken words. That means if someone says â⌠to have and to hold, from this day forward, til death do us partâ we must accept that they intended permanence unless the contrary is proven by a positive act. It is not enough to hold that it is okay for some people to divorce, if they intend for their particular union to be binding for life.Hereâs the rub: thereâs a difference between âexpectationâ and âresolveâ â namely, the difference is between âI donât expect that my marriage will failâ and âif XYZ happens, I will nevertheless never entertain divorce.â
In essence this means that it has to be show that someone had possitively held/stated something like: âif XYZ happens then our marriage is overâ and not simply holding a general attitude that marriages can fail.Even in societies where the legal system countenances divorce, the natural marital tendency to want a permanent bond remains. ⌠It would be anthropological pessimism to think that people commonly anticipate that their marriage will end in failure. They realize of course that this might happen; but for people who sense each other to be really in love it remains a remote possibility, far from their minds and intentions. Therefore when it is clearly established that a couple were in fact in love, the allegation that one or other consciously and deliberately impaired the essential nature of marital consent, must always be considered an unlikely hypothesis.
This too explains why the Church resists any tendency towards allowing a presumption of âautomaticâ exclusion of indissolubility from marital consent, based simply on the grounds that a person had voted for a divorce law. Such a fact may certainly favor the proof of a positive act of exclusion applied to the particular marriage contracted; but is not in itself sufficient proof of this positive act. Otherwise it would be but a step to holding that all modern marriages have to be presumed null; and it is non-exclusion that has to be proved. ⌠This is an inversion of what is required. The Church presumes the conformity of the exterior words of consent and interior acceptance; it is disconformity which, if alleged, has to be proved. And the disconformity has to expressed in a positive, deliberate and conscious act.
As a Protestant minister, I would invite a couple to seriously reconsider their wish to have their union blessed in the church if I doubt their intent about permanence. Just because we do not forbid blessing of second - or more - marriages (which a number of ministers, myself included, would really hesitate about) does not mean we do not take the commitment seriously or do not our best to ensure the that the couple making it know what they do and have the proper intent.Given most protestant churches are ok with divorce and remarriage, I find it hard to believe that they meet the criteria of intending permanence.
Right. Itâs not an âautomaticâ presumption, although itâs something that a good deacon will suss out in the premarital interview. So, if you havenât had a discussion that plumbs these depths, and you only have the spoken vows to go on, then youâve kinda missed the boat.Having read several decisions from the Roman Rota, @Elf01âs argument is incorrect that we can almost automatically assume that protestants do not intend permanence because their community accepts divorce.
Right. And, in the course of the pre-marital interviews which you conduct, it will be your responsibility to find out whether the two persons hold to the former.In essence this means that it has to be show that someone had possitively held/stated something like: âif XYZ happens then our marriage is overâ and not simply holding a general attitude that marriages can fail.
You brought up the topic of âinterior dispositionâ in the context of consent to perpetuity. As a minister of the Church, you will be responsible for determining whether valid consent exists, because, after all, you are not permitted to be the celebrant at a wedding you know to be invalid.While I donât disagree about what should be done during the premarital investigation, I fail to see how itâs germane to the topic at hand
I would agree with this if it were what the Church is doing. It is not. Marriages in nonCatholic churches are treated just like Catholic marriages unless a Catholic is involved without a dispensation.Weâre merely asking that she brings her marriage into line with Catholic standards for marriage. Thatâs not too big a deal in the context of Communion
I suspect weâre looking at the same thing and calling it by different names. A marriage between non-Catholic Christians is already âin line with Catholic standards for marriageâ. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, a valid marriage between two non-Catholic Christians is a sacramental marriage.Gorgias:![]()
I would agree with this if it were what the Church is doing. It is not. Marriages in nonCatholic churches are treated just like Catholic marriages unless a Catholic is involved without a dispensation.Weâre merely asking that she brings her marriage into line with Catholic standards for marriage. Thatâs not too big a deal in the context of Communion
Presuming the Catholic was not dispensed from form, of course.IOW, if twin sisters have a double wedding in a Baptist church, one marrying a Baptist, the other a Catholic without a dispensation. The same ceremony, same witnesses. The Church recognizes the two nonCatholics as married, but the Catholic is not married to the other sister.
Letâs take the example a step further, then, because this is where the discussion is going: letâs presume that, ten years later, the girl who married the Baptist guy gets divorced and wants to remarry â letâs say that she wants to marry the Catholic best man at her first wedding. Now we have an issue: her first marriage is putatively valid. So, if we wish to assert it was not valid, we have to ask whether there were any defects in consent or any impediments present, at the time of the wedding.The difference is not about belief in permanence.