M
Mintaka
Guest
Because until the last few centuries, married people were supposed to abstain from sex (ie, observe continence) during Advent and Lent, as well as in all fast days, and from midnight before receiving Communion. Getting married at the wrong time implied that consummation would be impossible for weeks, unless the newlywed couple started marriage with some sinning right after the Sacrament.
This is also why there were some Catholic weddings with nuptial Masses at midnight. (Such as the saintly Martins, the parents of St. Therese. And they were not even planning to consummate. But it allowed their friends not to have to worry about fasting et al.)
Even when it was permitted in the West, continence during fasting times was still pretty common as a voluntary custom, and many local bishops (like in Ireland) commanded it for hundreds of years afterward. And in the East, the custom has never ceased, although people can get exceptions from their pastors, I guess.
So yes, there is a reason the Church (in the Latin Rite) lets people marry in Advent, but there are plenty of reasons that it “seems weird”.
This is also why there were some Catholic weddings with nuptial Masses at midnight. (Such as the saintly Martins, the parents of St. Therese. And they were not even planning to consummate. But it allowed their friends not to have to worry about fasting et al.)
Even when it was permitted in the West, continence during fasting times was still pretty common as a voluntary custom, and many local bishops (like in Ireland) commanded it for hundreds of years afterward. And in the East, the custom has never ceased, although people can get exceptions from their pastors, I guess.
So yes, there is a reason the Church (in the Latin Rite) lets people marry in Advent, but there are plenty of reasons that it “seems weird”.
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