C
cardinalsrule
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You’re right. I hadn’t thought of that. Thank you.
Remember – in a marriage, both spouses are the celebrants of the sacrament. Therefore, if one enters into the marriage without full consent, then it doesn’t matter whether the other does – it’s not a marriage that has been fully consented to by both!the Church says through the tribunal, you didn’t really do what you said you did at the time.
So, like @Tis_Bearself says, there are fewer of those than you’re making it out to be. It’s not like all of us are on the Liz Taylor plan, or have the tribunal on speed-dial.three prior attempts at marriage isn’t too good for the person or for the Church
In fact, the tribunal is set up to address it! The tribunal can impose some restrictions on the person, requiring them to enter into counseling or some other process before they would be permitted to attempt marriage in the Catholic Church again. Then, after undergoing whatever is imposed, the tribunal must sign off before a priest can plan a wedding for the person. So, it’s not the slam dunk you’re trying to say it is.They might have a problem that needs addressing. The tribunal system isn’t set up to address it.
And here’s why your proposal is encountering resistance: in essence, it’s saying “we really stink at this marriage thing. How can we fix it? We can’t. So, let’s just give folks a free pass.” See how that doesn’t solve the problem?The members of the Church are still divorcing at the same rate as the rest of the population, and the marriage prep we make couples go through isn’t helping much, or enough. That’s why I’m making the proposal.
You could make the same argument for the nullity process… but I bet you would agree that it doesn’t have the side effect you’d like to see, right?I think the penance proposal would help people understand what they are doing, because they don’t seem to understand it now.
However, doctrine is unchanging. So, yeah… kinda it does mean that.She is eternal, which they take to mean immutable, though eternal doesn’t mean that.
You have to understand the context of that question. It’s not a question about Catholic nullity, it’s a question of interpretation of the Mosaic law. They were asking Jesus to weigh in on an open question: did the Mosaic covenant’s provision for divorce allow that remedy for any reason whatsoever, or was it necessary to find a serious reason in order to justify divorce? Jesus answered, “neither – divorce wasn’t intended at all by God.”The original question put to Jesus was, “Can a man divorce his wife for any reason whatsoever,” Jesus’ answer, the short version, “No.”
Umm… you’re forgetting the one big ‘standard’ that is at the center of nearly all nullity cases: consent. That, rather than ‘ability’ or ‘knowledge’, is the hinge upon which most cases rest.A person has minimal standards to meet in order to validly enter a marriage. The ability to know what he is doing, and a knowledge of what marriage is–permanent and indissoluble.
‘Maturity’ is one of the grounds that is meant to be used rarely. Moreover, it must be proven, and not just asserted by a petitioner. I think you’re mischaracterizing the situation.We have on the one hand, a population that claims maturity when the want to marry, or have sex in general, and then magically become immature when they want an annulment.
That depends on whether couples are truly giving consent at the time of their wedding, don’t you think?There are very few grounds for granting annulments, which should be rare and hard to get.
If by ‘low standard’, you mean the things that are potential causes in a nullity proceeding, then yeah, sure.The knowledge needed in order to give consent doesn’t have to meet a high standard but a low one.
Divorce isn’t a canonical decree, it’s a civil decree. The Church doesn’t support it, per se. Moreover, nullity isn’t a process that “supports” divorce. So… how can discussions of tribunal processes affect divorce?The site is dedicated to an end to no fault divorce.