C
chevalier
Guest
As I said, can. 1095 sec. 3 is on the book and there’s no arguing there. If for a reason of psychic nature a person is unable to assume one of the essential duties of marriage, marriage is invalid. There is no such rule about physical illness except downright impotence, but there is a rule about intent and a rule about essential duties and essential goods of marriage.I don’t see the difference, in both cases it is a just cause that happens to continue throughout the whole marriage.
Consent needs to persist when a defect of consent for a psychic reason is gone. If there’s a defect of consent at the moment of the wedding and the defect persists until such time as the other supposed spouse has withdrawn consent, then convalidation is prevented and the marriage stays null. This concerns the assumption of duties itself rather than directly the performance, but a person unable to perform is unable to promise to perform.Physical defects are not set in stone. A treatment that will restore health may be around the corner, some illnesses that are generally considered permanent will sometimes (albeit rarely) go away on their own. Likewise with mental illnesses.
A person’s discerning mental illness as a just cause for NFP does not remove can. 1095 from the book. A person who intends forever to use NFP is not open to life. The impression that mental illness is just cause for NFP cannot serve as a distraction from the problem that mental illnesses affect the ability to consent to marriage. Severe cases of personality or mental disorders fall under canon 1095 and incapacity of consenting.I disagree with your interpretation of the Canon Law items you quoted. To me it would seem that they require openness to life (i.e. practicing NFP when there are just reason to do so). A person who uses NFP because they discern mental illness to be a just reason to do so is open to life.
“Ability” is a precise word and it does not include all sorts of situations where it would be hard or difficult.This one is not specific to mentally ill people as 1095 is, and also talks about inability to marry by excluding some essential element of marriage (i.e. physical illness includes never being able to have and raise children).
Yes, it is a positive act of will not to have children. It *can *be tricky because the person making that decision may be accepting the possibility that NFP will fail him or her and be ready to receive and educate the offspring that comes from that. *Not *getting a vasectomy further illustrates the point. However, the intent not to have a single child unless a miracle or error happens is problematic.I guess you could say it’s not a positive act of will, but that seems to be open to interpretation because the choice to practice NFP throughout marriage is a positive act of will.
I think it does so when it’s not planned for but results from the circumstances as they arise. I think it’s more complex when NFP is the plan forever.I think this is the crux of our disagreement. I think using NFP continuously throughout the marriage for a just reason meets the openness to life requirement without which marriage can’t be contracted.