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Consequences of the
sacramental 'yes' in Marriage
Fr Ireneusz Skubis
Due to the growing number of
requests in the world, especially in America, directed to diocesan tribunals
concerning matrimonial nullity, the Apostolic See promulgated a special document
entitled Dignitas connubii (Dignity of marriage). Pope Benedict XVI spoke
about this as well. The document - instruction, has not been commonly known yet.
Its aim is to protect the sacrament of marriage, which has special dignity given
by God.
Legal controversies concern the
interpretation of Can. 1095 of the Code of Canon Law, which says, 'The following
are incapable of contracting marriage: 1/ those who lack the sufficient use of
reason; 2/ those who suffer from a grave defect of discretion of judgment
concerning the essential matrimonial rights and duties mutually to be handed
over and accepted; 3/ those who are not able to assume the essential obligations
of marriage for causes of a psychic nature.'
The instruction specifies the general formulation of the canon and stresses that
a declaration of matrimonial nullity can be granted only in special situations
when marriage was invalid for various reasons at the moment of its contraction.
In a process of matrimonial nullity
the above-mentioned canon usually requires opinions of trustworthy experts. For
some time one has observed activities of special lawyers' offices, which offer
help to write requests, including suitable argumentation, to the ecclesiastical
tribunals and which charge high fees for their services. It may happen that
people who make a lot of money on human naivety and ignorance take up these
matters. It seems that family counselling should help here as being more
competent in ecclesiastical proceedings. Certainly, the whole problem can be
properly dealt with in the very beginning, namely it would be clear that there
are no divorces in the Catholic Church and in some justified cases there is a
possibility to render a contracted marriage invalid. (The often-used term
'matrimonial nullity' is erroneous - annulment assumes that at first marriage
was valid and then it was rendered invalid). Of course, one can always approach
the ecclesiastical tribunal, which will give information in the most complete
and competent way. A marriage is valid in the Catholic Church when it is
contracted in the presence of an ecclesiastical witness (the local Ordinary,
parish priest or of the priest or deacon delegated by either of them) and in the
presence of two witnesses. Before a marriage is contracted future spouses are
instructed about their functions. The Catholic Church organizes preparation
classes commonly known as Pre-Cana. Unfortunately, especially in big cities one
can see a growing tendency towards broken marriages, which often end with
processes of the so-called 'church divorce' as if the moment of contracting
marriage - oath of fidelity made to God and people - was only a solemn signing
of some contract, but in fact it is a sacramental relationship. In order to
speak about matrimonial nullity one need to provide important facts which render
a marriage invalid in the very beginning, and such facts are few although many
spouses may think during their marriage that the person he contracted union with
is not the one he imagined to spend his life with. In the ecclesiastical
judicial trial concerning the question of validity one should 'screen' the very
moment of contraction of the marriage in question. The whole judicial process
aims at showing whether at the moment of contraction marriage was valid or
invalid.
The first instance tribunal and the
second instance tribunal must give an identical judgment in matrimonial
proceedings. For example, the Metropolitan Tribunal in Czestochowa gives
judgments as tribunal of first instance. If a judge has given a judgment of
matrimonial nullity in first instance, the defender of the bond appeals to the
second instance tribunal, in this case to Krakow. If the second instance
tribunal grants matrimonial nullity a person can contract a second marriage
after the verdict is rendered final and binding.
Why am I speaking about this today?
Because once again I want to stress the importance of the decision - to contract
a sacramental marriage, and I want to appeal for responsibility in choosing a
spouse and in remembering about the consequences of such steps. And if we add
human tears, bitterness of failure, loss of precious time, then the answer to
the question whether it is worth acting rashly in such an important life issue
is self-evident.
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