K
KindredSoul
Guest
That “yes” is not the die-hard traditionalist answer; that is the *Catholic Church’s *answer, that is the Biblical answer, and in short that is the Christian answer.IN AN IDEAL WORLD IT IS!
What about the scenario where a woman is living in a loveless marriage, seh is emotionally and mentally abused and feels dejected, unloved and uncared for. She is ill due to the consequences. She is also by nature very tactile.
She meets a man who is also married. He is living in enforced celibacy because his wife married him for the wrong reasons. He too is feeling very dejected. He can no longer function due to the stresses in his life.
The two of them have been told by a canon lawyer they have good grounds to apply for an anulment of their respective marriages.
The two of them meet. It is harmful to their respective families to take the easy route and just divorce and apply for an annulment.
Is it still wrong for them to mutually satisfy each other?
I guess the die-hard traditionalists would say yes.
How anyone can logically choose to believe the warm fuzzy things taught by these sources (such as Heaven, eternal life, love your neighbor) and not the ethics that they as individuals deem too hard to live by is beyond me.
We may not live in an ideal world, but we are called to strive to be ideal people, even when the going gets tough.