T
TimothyH
Guest
This is a disgusting comment.Let’s do something to change that. That way, you can post as a canon lawyer and people can still not care what you say. It’s great fun.
Dan
-Tim-
This is a disgusting comment.Let’s do something to change that. That way, you can post as a canon lawyer and people can still not care what you say. It’s great fun.
Dan
Don’t understand why you’re upset that a deacon is being frank about how people here react to his comments.This is a disgusting comment.
-Tim-
Currently none. But then none of the unmarried couple I know currently are Catholic so to their mind there’s nothing wrong with living together and having relations. Heck some of them aren’t even inclined to ever marry anyway since they don’t see the point.How many couples do you know who are living together in continence? Because the ones I know make no bones about the fact that they have an active sex life. I’ve even had them joke about it during baptismal preparation.
Right, I’m not a deacon. But, maybe I should change that. That way, I can post as a deacon and…!Oops, meant to say canon lawyer, not deacon. Sorry.
Well, what Dan writes is exactly the truth.This is a disgusting comment.
-Tim-
Right, I’m not a deacon. But, maybe I should change that. That way, I can post as a deacon and…!
Dan
Give it about 5 more years, father…it took about that long for me to just say what I want to say and leave it at that. Not always easy, though.Well, what Dan writes is exactly the truth.
It applies not only when you are a canon lawyer…it applies on this site when you are a priest and a long time theology professor as well.
Unlike Dan, I don’t find it great fun. I do find it, to use your word, “disgusting,” above all when it quickly becomes evident that the person trying to argue an unsustainable position has no basis to even attempt to argue, so lacking are they in the most rudimentary knowledge…let alone the knowledge that would come with having successfully completed even a basic course of study in the field they are trying to hold forth in.
Well, what Dan writes is exactly the truth.
It applies not only when you are a canon lawyer…it applies on this site when you are a priest and a long time theology professor as well.
Unlike Dan, I don’t find it great fun. I do find it, to use your word, “disgusting,” above all when it quickly becomes evident that the person trying to argue an unsustainable position has no basis to even attempt to argue, so lacking are they in the most rudimentary knowledge…let alone the knowledge that would come with having successfully completed even a basic course of study in the field they are trying to hold forth in.
Actually, I find that not unlike what we read in the Gospel: the solicitude of Jesus for the prostitutes and the tax collectors; he warned the pharisees that such as those were entering the Kingdom ahead of them.Just so you know; I am not questioning canon law regarding marriage at all. Sorry if anyone got that impression.
I was just pointing out some possible negative effects on other Catholics, who may feel less motivated to counter secular norms, if they don’t feel supported by the Church.
And it seems many Catholics have had that response to the current Pope’s focus on mercy for sinners. “What’s the point of even trying to do the right thing, then? Others can sin as much as they want, and be forgiven, anyway”.
I know that’s not theologically sound, but people do feel that way, and some even leave the Church for the SSPX, Orthodoxy, etc. Sure, we don’t want to drive sinners away. But doesn’t that also include those Catholics who have a more harsh attitude toward sinners, who one could argue are guilty of the sin of pride. Sometimes I get the sense that the Pope doesn’t care as much about driving that type of sinner away.
I agree with both of your statements.This, my dear Deacon, is the $64K question!
Based on many posts here at CAF, making it worse seems to be the more popular option.
So sad, considering our Holy Father has spoken out against the attitude that the Church and her Sacraments should be a “reward” for only the most holy.![]()
It is a requirement to be in a state of grace prior to receiving a sacrament I believe or the sacrament is invalid, I could always be wrong of course.You shouldn’t create impediments where they do not exist. Sacramental confession is not a perquisite for a valid marriage. If it were, I would be a fornicator. I went to confession before our wedding, of my own volition, but it was never outlined as a requirement in marriage prep. My wife certainly did not go to confession - nor could she have as a Protestant.
This would surprise me. How would that explain marriage between a Catholic and a non-Catholic? My fiance is not Catholic. He cannot partake of the sacrament of reconciliation prior to our marriage, therefore he cannot be in a state of grace. At least not in the regular method. And yet my priest is willing to marry us, in the Church. It seems like if my priest is willing to do that, that the sacrament must be valid. Perhaps my fiance or even both of us will not receive all the graces we would receive if both of us were in a state of grace at the time we are married, but it’s still going to be a valid marriage is my understanding.It is a requirement to be in a state of grace prior to receiving a sacrament I believe or the sacrament is invalid, I could always be wrong of course.
State of grace does not determine validity,It is a requirement to be in a state of grace prior to receiving a sacrament I believe or the sacrament is invalid, I could always be wrong of course.
IIRC, no, the sacrament is not invalid; however, a person will not receive the graces from the sacrament until he or she is in a state of grace. Only 3 sacraments bestow grace on someone not in a state of grace - baptism, reconciliation, and anointing of the sick (if the situation is so grave that the person receiving anointing cannot confess his/her sins). Note - all three of these sacraments bestow grace and remove sins. All other sacraments bestow additional graces on people already in a state of grace (and the only sacrament we are explicitly to not receive if not in a state of grace is the Eucharist, as to receive the Eucharist while in a state of mortal sin is itself a mortal sin). Regardless, though, the graces of Confirmation, Holy Matrimony, and Holy Orders can only be obtained while a person is in a state of grace. If he/she is in a state of mortal sin while receiving Confirmation or while entering into the sacraments of Matrimony or Orders, then the person will not benefit from the graces of these sacraments until he/she has made a good Confession. But the sacraments themselves are still valid, as long as the proper form and materials have been used, the proper minister has conferred the sacrament, and the persons receiving or entering into the sacrament do so willingly.It is a requirement to be in a state of grace prior to receiving a sacrament I believe or the sacrament is invalid, I could always be wrong of course.
While we await Deacon Jeff’s answer, I think he addressed some of what you bring up in his rubrical answers in post #29.Deacon,
…
[At the risk of inspiring another tempest in a tee-potWhile we await Deacon Jeff’s answer, I think he addressed some of what you bring up in his rubrical answers in post #29.
Personally, I understood “unrepentant” to mean a refusal to go to Confession. Certainly, pastoral ministers should encourage and educate but if those pastoral efforts do not result in a decision to repent in Confession, this, in itself, is not reason enough to refuse to allow the wedding.
If attempts to educate and form the couple reveal that they do not and will not intend to marry (through simulation, for example), then that is a different story.
Dan