G
Gorgias
Guest
Wanna take a guess that those ten were spouses who were abandoned by their adulterous spouse?Annulments were happening at the rate of 10 per year in 1929 and there were divorces then also.
Wanna take a guess that those ten were spouses who were abandoned by their adulterous spouse?Annulments were happening at the rate of 10 per year in 1929 and there were divorces then also.
No. You don’t have to guess. The reasons are explicitly stated can be checked in the Catholic books of yearly statistics. What I recall seeing mentioned were duress, fraud and impotence and i am not sure about non-consummation.Wanna take a guess that those ten were spouses who were abandoned by their adulterous spouse?
“Baptist” is not a generic term, so, I will look at the biggest group, the Southern Baptists.It has not gone from 10 to 50000 in the Baptist Church.
Realize … you’re really speaking for yourself … and perhaps some others.Are we all to blame ?
i am speaking of relative growth in the number of civil divorces, not the actual numerical values.There are many studies out there, it is safe to say there are far more than 50,000 Southern Baptists who divorce each year.
Mark Twain popularized an aphorism: “There are three types of lies: lies, d*** lies, and statistics.”Look at it this way:
In 1920, the US divorce rate was 1.7 divorces per 1000 population.
in 1940 the US divorce rate was roughly 2 divorces per 1000 population.
The present US divorce rate is roughly 3.2 per 1000 population.
So the US divorce rate has roughly doubled from 1920 to the present day.
Compare that with what has happened to the number of Roman Catholic annulments.
10 marriage annulments in the USA in 1929
50,000 marriage annulments in recent years in the USA.
The point concerning the huge increase in Catholic annulments over the period from 1929 to the present stands.Nice try at obfuscating the facts.
The following are rough figures to illustrate the point.Let’s look at whether your statistics tell a lie or not…
I’m not saying that there isn’t an increase. I am saying that your characterization of it is unfair and overwrought.The point concerning the huge increase in Catholic annulments over the period from 1929 to the present stands.
In 1930, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that there was one divorce for every 6.1 marriages.1929: 9 annulments per 28 million is a rate of 3.2 x 10^ -4 per 1000.
In 1937, the NY Times reported that the Kenedy Directory’s count was 20.9 million. Are you saying that it decreased by 28% over the course of seven years in the 1930’s?Catholic population 1930 roughly 28 million
In 1949, “the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota receives 137 annulment requests from all over the world; 51 are granted and 86 are denied.” See this article.1929: 9 annulments per 28 million is a rate of 3.2 x 10^ -4 per 1000.
CARA reports that the annual number of annulments initiated has declined steadily, from a high of 72K in 1990, to 21K in 2018. If only ~20K are being applied for each year, how can 50K be being granted annually? I think your numbers are off by an order of magnitude or two…Today 50000 annulments per 75 million is a rate of 6.7 x 10^-1 per 1000.
They charge $139 which is more than a cup of coffee.…and that and a quarter, is worth a cup of coffee.
Umm… you realize that they’re talking something completely different, right? They’re advertising services leading to civil annulment, not an ecclesiastical annulment in the Catholic Church!Gorgias:![]()
They charge $139 which is more than a cup of coffee.…and that and a quarter, is worth a cup of coffee.
[link removed]
“Our mission is to make the whole process for you as simple as possible. You will receive all the forms you need to file for annulment thanks to our services. …We guarantee that your forms will be accepted by the courts.”
For past annulment statisticsWhere do you get your statistics?
Here’s a link to a service specializing in Catholic annulments:They’re advertising services leading to civil annulment , not an ecclesiastical annulment in the Catholic Church!
OK. So… your point is…?Here’s a link to a service specializing in Catholic annulments:
There are various sources. For example, there is the Catholic almanac of Our Sunday Visitor. And the Official Catholic Directory.Also, where do you get your modern numbers?
Services specializing in help to get through the Catholic annulment process cost more than a cup of coffee.OK. So… your point is…?
The hourly rate is $185 per hour. …At the time of engagement the retainer for the first two hours of service [$370] is necessary. This is much higher than the cost for a cup of freshly brewed coffee at Starbucks which goes for about $2.00 although there are some specialty coffees for as much as $5.00 which is still much lower than the retainer cost of $370.…and that and a quarter, is worth a cup of coffee.