E
ethelzguy
Guest
Ok, Bob…reading your posts, I get the impression that you believe that some “post-Vatican II loosening of annulment requirements” has resulted in more divorces between Catholics.
I heartily disagree. I believe the increase in divorce among Catholics as well as non-Catholics to be the result of societal acceptance.
I don’t see anywhere where the Church “has loosened” the requirements for annulments. The increase in civil divorce has caused the increase in annulment requests, not the other way around.
When I was a kid, a divorced woman might as well been an adultress/prostitute/whatever. Social stigma was such at that time. We couldn’t play with kids who’s parents were divorced, as we “didn’t associate with those kind”.
People didn’t stay married because they couldn’t get an annulment, they stayed married because of the social stigma attached to divorce back then.
TBL
I heartily disagree. I believe the increase in divorce among Catholics as well as non-Catholics to be the result of societal acceptance.
I don’t see anywhere where the Church “has loosened” the requirements for annulments. The increase in civil divorce has caused the increase in annulment requests, not the other way around.
When I was a kid, a divorced woman might as well been an adultress/prostitute/whatever. Social stigma was such at that time. We couldn’t play with kids who’s parents were divorced, as we “didn’t associate with those kind”.
People didn’t stay married because they couldn’t get an annulment, they stayed married because of the social stigma attached to divorce back then.
TBL