C
catharina
Guest
Nevertheless, the decision of the Church stands.What I mean is that a marriage is either valid or invalid AT THE TIME the vows are taken, when the sacrament of marriage is administered by the man and woman themselves. The Church neither administers the sacrament nor is it the determining factor in whether or not the sacrament is valid.
The tribunal merely looks over the facts of the case and cross-references those with canon law in order to be able to tell us whether or not the sacrament was valid when it took place. Therefore, it is very possible for the tribunal (because of a lying spouse or witness, or historically, even a spouse with a certain amount of influence in the Church) to judge a marriage that the couple KNOWS for a fact to be invalid to be valid. This judgement does not make the marriage valid - it is still an invalid marriage that was judged wrongly by the tribunal.
Just as I’m sure the tribunals sometimes judge a valid marriage to be INvalid, I am sure the opposite sometimes happens as well.
No one has the authority to override that decision.
One can appeal to Rome. That’s all there is to it.