OK so you would remain single and celibate if your spouse divorced you? Lets say you wanted to stay in the marriage but your spouse left you for someone else. I can relate to staying single and celibate because I have no desire to date but for those who do like being married, I feel bad for them who had to divorce through no fault of their own. I’m sorry but I do feel sympathy for them
My ex-husband wanted the divorce, and I had no recourse in a state with “no-fault” divorce. But I had also just returned to the Catholic Church when he decided on divorce, and I knew that our “marriage” was null to begin with because we were married outside the Church.
Through no fault of my own I am now a single mom. I hate it. I am actually free to marry in the Catholic Church, but that doesn’t give me the freedom to treat men as objects to fulfill my emotional and physical needs. If God wills it, I will marry again (it’s been over four years since the decree of nullity, and I have yet to even hold a man’s hand, let alone enter a courtship).
My point here is that having the freedom to marry in the Church does not mean that God is calling one to marriage. But the lack of freedom to marry in the Church is a pretty clear indication that God is saying “no” to that option – one must search elsewhere for
His will, and not search for a way to go against His will.
If the tribunal fails to judge correctly, thus refusing a decree of nullity, thus refusing the person the right to enter into what would actually be a perfectly valid marriage with another individual, then I see no grave sin in marrying in another Church as a result of being refused justice in the Catholic Church.
Being married is a
vocation, not a hobby or something to do to make us feel better. One will not die from being single or from being celibate.
The major flaw I see with your whole argument has nothing to do with the Tribunal and it’s correct or incorrect judgments. The flaw is with your view of obedience. We are called to obedience to God’s will. If God closes the door to the vocation of marriage through a Tribunal decision – we can discern that it is God’s will for us to remain single, regardless of the sense of entitlement engrained in us through society (like contemporary society has such a great grasp of the sacrament of marriage – NOT).
You can throw that word around all you want Catharina, but my position remains the same, which is that if the tribunal judges incorrectly and a marriage is in fact invalid, then one is not committing adultery by dating someone else. This is a fact.
I love the Church and I think they do the best they can given the information available to them. That being said, whether a marriage is valid or invalid is not a fact that changes with the judgement of a tribunal…if that were so, then an annulment really WOULD be a Catholic divorce, which we all know is not the case.
You are right – I was never in a sacramental marriage, and the Tribunal only confirmed what I already knew. Evenso, out of obedience, I was not free to date until I had that declaration of nullity in hand. To do otherwise would have been a slap in God’s face, and completely disobedient to the teachings of His Church.
Jesus Himself said that we show our love for Him by keeping His commands – obedience. It is a narrow road, and few take it. But having been on the other side (going by what I feel is right, regardless of Church teaching) I can honestly say I prefer single and celibate over doing what I’m sure “God doesn’t mind.”
Gertie