Catholic Marriage
In reviewing the information provided on parish registration
forms, it is interesting to note the number of couples who indicate
that they have not been married in the Catholic Church. This gives
cause to review what is in fact a requirement: Catholics must be
married through the Church in order to be truly married.
Many Catholics seem to have the idea today that it is just a suggestion
or a “better way” to be married in the Church. The
reality is that it is the only way for a Catholic to get validly
married.
Why is this?
The reason is that when you are baptized a Catholic,
the Church takes responsibility for your soul and makes a promise
to help you get to heaven. One of the biggest keys to our salvation
is the making of, and persevering in holy matrimony. If a person
is not married in the Church it makes it impossible for the community
to help discharge this responsibility. And so Canon Law states
that for a Catholic to get married they must do so through and
in the Church. (In special circumstances permission may be granted
to celebrate the marriage in a ceremony other than the Catholic
rite, but this marriage is still accomplished only through the
Church.)
For non-Catholics, they can be married anywhere by any recognized
official and still be validly married. The difference for the Catholic
is that through baptism they take on the responsibility of being
married according to the “form” of the church.
Requirements
This is the first requirement for marriage: “proper
form”. But there are several other important requirements.
A person must be “free” to marry, that is they do not
have a prior marital bond. They must also be capable of marriage,
that is mentally and physically capable of carrying out marriage
as the Church understands it. The last important requirement is
that on the day of their marriage they must promise three things.
The Three Promises
The first promise is fidelity. They
must plan on, and intend to be, faithful exclusively to the person
they are marrying.
The second is that they must plan on being faithful
in a life-long commitment. They cannot just be “seeing if
it will work out” but promise for better or worse, richer
or poorer, till death do they part.
The third promise is openness to children. If
a couple were to come to me wanting to get married but be planning
on never having children they could not be married in the Church,
because they do not want a Christian marriage. However, openness
to children does not necessarily mean that they will have children
as sometimes sterility or other problems intervene, nor is a marriage
that does not have children any less of a marriage or family. Openness
to children simply means that the couple will be open to allowing
God to bless their marriage with life.
Now for the hard part
People who have been married outside of the Church
cannot receive Communion. The reason is that choosing to live in
a union that is not a marriage recognized by the Church is a serious
sin, which prevents one from receiving communion and even confession
so long as one persists in this state. This is true even if the
couple feels they are married. The Church that authenticates the
Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist is the same
Church entrusted with defining what is necessary for a valid marriage,
one that has God actually bind the couple together, for life. If
one chooses to reject the Church’s teaching and authority
with regard to the most important relationship of intimacy between
a man and a woman, then they are forfeiting the opportunity to
celebrate their Communion with Jesus Christ as Catholics publicly
in the reception of Holy Communion.
There is Always Hope
In most cases, however, a marriage may be convalidated
(or “blessed”) in a Catholic ceremony in a fairly simple
manner. What seems to be at issue, and is very disconcerting is
the fact that many people simply do not know that Catholics must
be married in a Catholic church by priest or deacon, and that it
is not simply a suggestion. If you find yourself in this
situation now please call me, so we can get to work at
getting things straightened out.
Marriage Guidelines
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