Catholic marriage
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In the theology of Catholicism, marriage is an inseparable bond between a man and a woman, created by human contract and ratified by divine grace. It is one of the seven sacraments.
The nature of the conventant requires that the two participants be one man and one woman, that they be free to marry, that they willingly and knowingly enter into a valid marriage contract, and that they validly execute the performance of the contract.
On the exact definition of each of these steps hinge all the arguments and technical points involved in annulments, and annulment disputes (eg, the most famous, that of Henry VIII). Catholic Canon law covers this subject in detail.
Free to marry
The participants in a marriage contract must be free to marry, and to marry each other. That is, they must be an unmarried man and woman, with no impediments as set out by Canon law.Intent to marry
The participants must knowingly and willingly intend to marry as the Church understands the Sacrament of Marriage. This precludes marriages in which one party was forced, drugged, or statutorily i intent (due to physical age or mental incapacity). Such a marriage is invalid. A marriage in which one party is misled may be either invalid or illicit, depending on the nature of the fraud. Simulation (faking) is faking some aspect of what the Church understands marriage to be.Intend Catholic marriage
The participants must intend Catholic marriage specifically. That is, they must intend an exclusive, lifelong, childbearing union. Therefore, if a couple marries intending to use artificial contraception and avoid having children at all costs, such a marriage would be invalid.Actually marry
The husband and wife must validly execute the marriage contract. If either is Catholic, this requires a sacramental Catholic marriage ceremony for validity. The bride and groom administer the sacrament to each other; the priest or deacon who witnesses the marriage is not the minister of the sacrament.This is different for the Eastern Catholic Churches, which follow the Eastern Orthodox beliefs regarding marriage. Therefore, the priest (never a deacon) is the minister of the sacrament through the act of "crowning" the couple with a pair of crowns while proclaiming them received into the Kingdom of Heaven. The vows are exchanged well beforehand in the Byzantine ritual and are not binding. They are a remnant of the Liturgy of Betrothal which had used to be done in a separate Liturgy. Many Western Catholics are surprised when clicking on their cameras after hearing the exchange of vows to be told by the priest that they are still not married, having not yet been crowned. Thus it is known in the East as the Mystery (read: Sacrament) of Crowning as often as it is called matrimony.
Validity
A marriage may be somewhat defective and yet still be valid; such a marriage is illicit. A marriage which was sufficiently defective as to not meet the required criteria is invalid, and the participants are considered to not have actually married (although their children may still be considered to be legitimate).Nullity
Catholic theology teaches that a validly contracted marriage is accompanied by divine ratification, creating an indissoluble union; therefore, no divorce is possible.An annulment is a declaration that the marriage is deemed to have been invalid. Therefore, an annulment is granted with some finding of lack of validity in the marriage itself, at the time of the marital contract; in theory, behavior subsequent to the contract should not be directly relevant, except as post facto evidence of the validity or invalidity of the contract. That is, behavior subsequent to the contract cannot actually change the validity of the contract.
Annulment and divorce, therefore, differ in both in rationale and effect; an annulment is a finding that the original marriage was invalid (denying that the marriage ever truly existed), whereas a divorce is a dissolution of an existing marriage, but without undoing its historical existence.
Glossary
- Affinity - Relationship by marriage (eg, brother-in-law)
- Consanguinity - Relationship of blood
- Crimen - An impediment to marriage caused by one party previously conspiring to marry (upon condition of death of spouse) while still married
- Diriment impediment - A hindrance to marriage which renders the marriage invalid, the only kind recognized under the 1983 Code of Canon Law
- Disparity of cult - Marriage between a Catholic and a non baptized person
- Dispensation - Removal of an impediment by a formal action of a Church official
- Illicit - A marriage which was not celebrated according to the norm of law, yet remains a marriage
- Impediment - A hindrance to marriage
- Invalid - A marriage is not valid, and so is not a Sacramental marriage
- Invalid as to form - a marriage which invalid due to defect canonical form of the celebration of the marriage
External links
See also
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