V
Vico
Guest
The actual difference in terms of Catholic living is that the Catholic’s faith will be eroded or even lost (or that of children), so for that reason the canon law requires permission for a Catholic to marry a non-Catholic Christian and a dispensation to marry a non-Christian. There are specific promises made:I’m going with your first answer Dan, since my mind is getting boggled by the whole thing. I’ll have to take one step at a time and worry about the finer points later. As long as I can function practically as a Catholic, that’s okay for now.
Unless that just opened up something else that is all complicated . . .
There is the promise by the Catholic party must declare that he is prepared to remove dangers of defecting from the Catholic faith (c. 1125 n. 1).
There is a promise sincerely to do all in his power to ensure that any children of the marriage will be baptized and raised in the Catholic faith (c. 1125 n. 1).
The non-Catholic is to be informed of the promises made by the Catholic party to the marriage (c. 1125 n. 2).
If the Catholic freely and willingly agrees to have his children baptized and raised in a non-Catholic religion then the Catholic is to be punished with a censure or other just penalty canon 1366 .