H
Horton
Guest
All prior marriages must be looked at before entering into a new marriage regardless of when or where you were married.
That’s really confusing. Can a diocese overturn a previous decision? Or is the decision of a diocese not binding on another diocese? Does that mean one of them is wrong? Is there an appellate tribunal for multiple dioceses?They later moved to another diocese and tried again and it was approved.
Got it. The thing is, not all parish priests have a good understanding of canon law. There are many examples in these forums in which a person reports something they say that a parish priest told them, and their reporting of his words are way off base. We can’t tell whether the priest was accurate and the person who heard them either heard or reported them inaccurately, or vice versa. Still… going to their advocate is probably the best idea, since they are familiar with the details of the OP’s case.Of course he isn’t getting an annulment without a priest…I was asking whether he has asked the priest these questions.
He does. And then the tribunal assigns an advocate to help the petitioner through the process.Why can the OP not petition the tribunal without a priest?
It’s not. A person has the right to re-file a petition, using a different cause for nullity.They later moved to another diocese and tried again and it was approved. I don’t know details since this was mentioned to me in a conversation and I wasn’t involved. I just thought it was unusual.
Nope. You need an annulment if you are (putatively) validly married. The Catholic Church does not assert that the only valid marriages are ones in a Catholic Church. Non-Catholic Christians marry validly, and therefore sacramentally, all the time.I thought you didn’t need an annulment unless the marriage was in a Catholic Church.
No. What it means is that the first attempt might have asked “was my marriage invalid because of an intention against permanence” and received the answer “no, it is not invalid on those grounds.”Can a diocese overturn a previous decision? Or is the decision of a diocese not binding on another diocese? Does that mean one of them is wrong?
To answer this question, if your first marriage can’t be annulled, then is is a valid marriage and you must live according to Catholic teaching on these matters.What if my first marriage cannot be annulled?
Yes, it is possible but, speaking from my own experience, it is unusual…maybe .25% of the cases I’ve seen were such as that (like a 1 out of 400 ratio). But, that’s just me.They later moved to another diocese and tried again and it was approved. I don’t know details since this was mentioned to me in a conversation and I wasn’t involved. I just thought it was unusual.
To the OP: all I would say is be honest and do your best to see to it that you inform the Judge(s) to the best of your ability. The truth will set you free.
Dan
I don’t think anyone’s statements were intended as pushback, nor did anyone suggest that you shouldn’t talk to a priest. I think it was the statement, “of course he isn’t getting an annulment without a priest.”I find it weird that there is such push back about a suggestion that a divorced Catholic see his or her priest to discuss annullment.
My priest pointed me to the website of the Marriage Tribunal to get me started. He was never involved again. A deacon convalidated my marriage shortly after the annulment was approved.Priests are often not the person who will be talking with you about grounds or filing the paperwork.
The OP has said that both him and hiw wife are now remarried…I would suggest that you operate on the assumption that your current marriage is valid, so that you will not be disappointed if that turns out to be the case.