A
Anesis
Guest
If you were going to attend a wedding in a Catholic church, there would be no reason for you to know whether there had been a previous “marriage” with either the bride or groom because that is all taken care of during the marriage prep process and the couple must be determined “free to marry” before they would even be able to set a date. A decree of nullity in the Catholic Church means that any previous relationship, even one that was legally recognized by a government agency, was never valid in the eyes of the Church because of a defect that made it impossible for one or both parties to enter into a sacramental marriage. This is determined by two tribunals in two different diocese after careful examination of everything that lead up to the day of the marriage and the marriage itself.
As for asking someone on a date, why not just ask them if they’ve ever been married before? Even if they’re not Catholic or were not Catholic at the time, even if it was “5 minutes in Vegas” because if they have and have not received a decree of nullity from the Catholic Church, they are not free to marry and that would definitely something I would want to know up front. If they had received a decree of nullity of a past relationship, then that “marriage” never existed in the eyes of the Church anyway.
It sounds like you may be getting the terms mixed up. There is such a thing as a legal annulment of marriage and that is handled through the court system. It’s completely separate from the type of annulment that the church declares. There is literally no reason that you, as a non-clergy member, would need to know if someone had been through the annulment process.
As for asking someone on a date, why not just ask them if they’ve ever been married before? Even if they’re not Catholic or were not Catholic at the time, even if it was “5 minutes in Vegas” because if they have and have not received a decree of nullity from the Catholic Church, they are not free to marry and that would definitely something I would want to know up front. If they had received a decree of nullity of a past relationship, then that “marriage” never existed in the eyes of the Church anyway.
It sounds like you may be getting the terms mixed up. There is such a thing as a legal annulment of marriage and that is handled through the court system. It’s completely separate from the type of annulment that the church declares. There is literally no reason that you, as a non-clergy member, would need to know if someone had been through the annulment process.