Are you sure it was that many? Let’s say it was
I’m being facetious.
The point isn’t in the number of instances – the point is that, even for long-standing marriages, nullity can be valid… which is what you were disputing.
Actually it is worth much more than that since there are reports from Roman Catholic sources concerning the high percentage of approval of marriage annulments.
Actually, you’re misinterpreting that statistic. (No worries – it’s a common misunderstanding.)
That statistic says that, of the number of nullity cases that make it to a tribunal decision, a high percentage of the nullity requests are granted.
Let me frame it up for you: Would you say that a “high percentage of people in your neighborhood are groceries today?”
Nah. But what if I said “are a high percentage of folks who get in their car today, buying groceries?”
That one’s a little higher percentage. How about this one: “are a high percentage of folks who park in the shopping center parking lot, buying groceries?”
Oh, that number is getting bigger and bigger! How about “Of those who actually enter the grocery store, will a high percentage buy groceries?”
That number is through the roof! And therefore, you end up with the (inaccurate) statement, “there are reports concerning the high percentage of grocery buyers!!!”
You see, what you’re not recognizing in the statistic you quote is that there’s selection bias at play – just as there is in my grocery store example!
Your statistic doesn’t include those who investigate and never continue, or those who talk with a priest or canon lawyer and learn that they don’t really have a case, or who start the process but don’t complete the paperwork, or who do all the paperwork but are told by their advocate that the application isn’t likely to succeed.
All your statistic uses as its denominator is the number of folks who investigated, learned that their case was likely to succeed, went through with the paperwork, submitted it to their advocate, who agreed with the assessment, and filed their case.
OF COURSE a high percentage of these will succeed, just as a high percentage of folks who walk into the store will buy groceries!
Why do you suppose that fewer Roman Catholic couples are getting married now? Could it be possible that they have been reading about the high number of marriage annulments
Nah. It’s more like:
- people aren’t getting married as young, and are waiting
- people aren’t as tied to their churches / denominations, and are less likely to pick a church as their “destination”
- people are more unwilling to follow the rules of the church location where they might get married. (Ask me about the couple who wanted their dog to walk down the aisle with them, sometime. I’m not kidding…)
Young folks these days – by and large, and I know I’m generalizing – tend to get married in church only because “Grandma really wants it.” If there’s not that pressure, they’re not going to go to church – and nullity has nothing to do with it!