J
JReducation
Guest
What you want to do, from a counseling perspective is very good. I’m not saying it is not good. However, the sacrament does come before the person in the sense, that person is bound by the sacrament. Therefore, when we speak as a Church, we’re not being legalistic when we say that the bond must be protected. This is not pharisaical. This is a fact. The Church teaches this and we cannot change this. Even the Church with her divine authority cannot change the fact that the marital bond must be protected.Again you interpret my posting as ‘rude’.
“When speaking of the sacrament our role is always to defend the bond” - In other words, you’re saying “OP chose to get married, her hands are tied. Bond becomes before person,” Sounds you out as legalist. Almost Pharisaic?
“There is no room in Church dialogue around that” - In other words, you’re saying “The law comes before the person.”
From what OP posts, she does wish to bring the marriage up for examination. This is her whole thrust of argument. This is what she is doing, perhaps feels guilty as a consequence.
As a Christian Counsellor I encourage her to examine her life, not by reinforcing legal position.
If she is feeling guilty, charity does not need us to point out legal standing. She needs to be cheered, to slow down, and look dispassionately at her position. Guilt already troubles her. Why should she be further burdened?
Prayerful investigation will take her journey into the hands of God (Psalm 138)
Fear can only be overcome by Love. The Law is doing nothing but tie her into guilt.
She fears ‘doing the wrong thing.’
God is a God of Love, He is a Shepherd who carries us. Both she and her husband pray together, God will not abandon them.
OP is in a dark night, I refuse to be one of Job’s comforters who reminds her of the Law.
'Speak not any thing rashly, and let not thy heart be hasty to utter a word before God. For God is in the heaven, and thou upon earth: therefore let thy words be few ’ (Ecc 5:1)
More than anything OP needs to be listened to.
I do not have any answers for her, it would be ethically (and perhaps theologically) unwise.
As to bringing up a marriage for examination, the only proper place to do that is a tribunal. To do that you must believe that there is at least a remote possibility that your marriage is invalid. The OP has not suggested that she believes her marriage may be invalid. She has express regret, becaues she may have had a religious vocation. But if you follow the Church’s teaching on marriage, this is not likely. The proof would be in the validity of the sacrament. The only way to prove that the person entered into a marriage where they don’t belong is to bring the marriage for examination before an eclesial tribunal who will judge the bond. If the bond is found to be valid, then the person is where he or she belongs. This is where a counselor can be most helpful, to help the person accomodate and grow into their situation.
When I say that there is no dialogue around the marriage bond, I’m not talking law. Marriage is not a law. It is a sacrament, a divine sign from Christ himself. A sign cannot be wished away. It either is or is not. But only the Church can decide that. The Church cannot undo the sign. She has the authority and the wisdom to say “This is a sign from Christ or this is not a sign”. She cannot say, “This is a sign, but we can make it go away.” We can’t do that. We don’t have that authority. This is not a matter of law. Sometimes I wish it were. It would make it easier to work through difficult marriages. But it’s not a legal question, it is a sacramental question. It is either a sacrament or is not. One is bound by a sacrament. If it’s not a sacrament, because careful examination proves that it was never a sacrament, then there is not bond. In a certain sense our hands are tied once we enter marriage.
It’s a difficult thing to deal with, because even when you present a marriage to a tribunal for examiantion, you have to go through some very painful processes. There is not way to avoid the pain. The question to the person is, “Do you believe that you are married?” If the answer is no, then it has to be examined by a tribunal. If the answer is yes, then there is nothing else that can be asked. That’s when a good counselor can help the person work through whatever issues interfere with their happiness, but not work out of the marriage, because that’s impossible.
There is one other way here. The person can believe that the marriage is valid and the Church can rule that it is not. That rarely happens, but it’s possible.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF