J
JimG
Guest
Yes, I understand that “validity” is a juridical term. But it is also a term to refer to the reality of the first marriage and that is the way I have been using it. Without regard to juridical findings, the marriage is either “valid” from the start or it is not. The marriage is either real or null. One hopes of course, that a juridical finding conforms to reality. One also hopes that a private judgment on the matter conforms to reality.Your statement, as previously noted, appears flawed. “Validity” is a juridical term and therefore is only meaningful when pronounced by a public authority.
The private judgments of individuals on “validity” is no more than personal disagreement or agreement on an official pronouncement of legal “invalidity.” It cannot change the legal status so declared in the external forum can it?
Yes, I would think that the status of the first marriage needs to be recognized in some way, either by a tribunal decision, or by some new method. It would not seem right to make a decision for communion without also acknowledging either formally or otherwise, that the prior marriage is null.Your real difficulty seems to be with the possibility of the remarried being officially allowed to receive Communion when the invalidity of their 1st one has not yet been legally proven in the usual external forum (a Tribunal)?
You seem to refer to the “accompanyment” proposal?
So, it sounds as though the status of the first marriage is to be ignored in this forum, whatever form it may take. It seems contradictory to me that such a decision might have the effect, for example, of acknowledging that the parties are actually still married to a former spouse while cohabiting with a new partner in a putative second marriage, and yet allowed to receive communion. Perhaps that is not the intent of the proposal, but it could be the effect if the status of the first marriage is not taken into account.Well that proposal is currently stated ambiguously about how the decision is actually reached. But one thing is for sure, if it is made a formal process with steps that require consensus with an appointed Priest before “ascending” then it is definitely a form of external forum. But it is an external forum that makes decisions about Communion reception not the marriage’s actual legal status (“validity”).
If that’s the case, then this might clear up the difficulty, provided that a decision to allow the person to receive communion would also act as a decision on the status of their former marriage.Obviously such a couple would only be admitted to this process if their original marriage had annulment merit but which tribunal judgement has not yet been made for a variety of well known tribunal process weaknesses discussed at length elsewhere even by the Popes themselves.