Posted on 10/27/2003 12:47:07 PM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
From: milford@e... Date: Thu Aug 16, 2001 2:42 pm Subject: Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
Greetings!
I am attaching the transcript of a thread initiated by one of our listmembers on another list, namely CDLEO, concerning annulments. Of particular interest to me, is how it illustrates the misleading nature of statistics, and the need to treat the illness, rather than the symptoms -- in this case, through better marriage preparation.
Funny how some of the intellectual giants in the "orthodox" Catholic press never picked up on this.
DLA '54
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From: pete_vere@y... Date: Fri Aug 10, 2001 6:14 pm Subject: Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
Hi, I just got back from a regional canon law conference, where Fr. Sable of the Roman Rota gave an interesting presentation.
One of the interesting things that came out is the actual annulment rate among Catholics. Turns out that only between 30 and 40% of annulments in the United States pertain to Catholic marriages. The vast majority pertain to non-Catholic marriages of which one party now seeks to marry a Catholic, or convert to Catholicism.
However, when we look only at marriages attempted in the Catholic Church, our per-capita annulment ratio is reportedly lower than both Italy and Poland.
Pax Christi, Pete Vere
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From: artsippo@a... Date: Sat Aug 11, 2001 2:34 pm Subject: Re: [cdleo] Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
This is an interesting set of statistics. It shows that at least half of all annullments represent ACTUAL or POTENTIAL converts to the faith. Strange, but the annullment process may be a tool of evangeliaztion.
Any thoughts?
Art
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From: pete_vere@y... Date: Sun Aug 12, 2001 3:26 am Subject: Re: Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
Dear Art,
--- In cdleo@y..., artsippo@a... wrote: > This is an interesting set of statistics. It shows that at least > half of all annullments represent ACTUAL or POTENTIAL converts to > the faith. Strange, but the annullment process may be a tool of > evangeliaztion. > > Any thoughts?
Yeah, I think we have to look at the Bible-belt as well. It is not uncommon for individuals to have attempted marriage multiple times before meeting a Catholic, or seeking to convert to Catholicism.
For example, a friend of mine from the Deep South had a couple come to him wanting to be received into the Catholic Church. She was from a fundamentalist protestant background, and had attempted seven prior marriages before meeting her present spouse. The first of these prior marriages was attempted when she was fifteen, and the last one ended when she was about twenty-four, making for roughly one a year.
Her eighth marriage, to a guy who was also fundy prot background, was in its tenth year, and thus much more stable than the previous ones. However, he too had gone through three marriages beforehand, each of which lasted somewhere between a year and three years. Each party had come from a similar background, whereby their parents had married a number of times.
Suddenly, my buddy was looking at ten annulments for one couple seeking to enter the Church. However, all those previous marriages were legitimately invalid, because the parties had entered the marriage partially motivated by their erroneous belief marriage was soluable, and thus they could get out of it if things didn't work out.
Pax Christi, Pete Vere
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From: "Christopher Zehnder" Date: Sat Aug 11, 2001 3:33 pm Subject: Re: [cdleo] Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
Mr. Vere,
Is there any documentation on this? It's sounds very interesting.
Pax Christi, Christopher Zehnder
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From: pete_vere@y... Date: Sun Aug 12, 2001 3:11 am Subject: Re: Some perspective on the Annulment Crisis
> Mr. Vere,
Just Pete will do...
> Is there any documentation on this? It's sounds very interesting. > > Pax Christi, > Christopher Zehnder
Yeah, the statistic cited was from Msgr. Sable who serves as a judge on the Roman Rota. The Vatican keeps all sorts of statistics on annulments, so I would imagine they're available. I can also say, although not scientific, that in the somewhere over 50 marriage cases I have worked on, less than half involved a Catholic party.
Nevertheless, I am just beggining my own research on this issue, and have thus far relied on information provided to me by other canonists who have been keeping tabs a lot longer than I have. However, a former classmate and I are seriously thinking of collaborating on some future projects concerning this issue for the Catholic media.
Pax Christi, Pete Vere
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fini
We have a niece married to a 1st generation Italian . His father told her that that a man taking a mistress does not mean he does not love his wife..
Remember the reaction of Europe to Clinton? They thought we were "provincial "
I do not know if even 50% of Italian men are married (marriage is on the down turn there too according to some current events programs .)
But as my niece was told Mistresses are a cultural practice.
Europeans are disinterested in the things of God. (Not all but many perhaps most..if we look at the 30% number for church attendance).
That is why they are willingly inviting Muslims (that are not indifferent to allah) into their countries IMHO they do not understand or perhaps even remember religious zeal..God will make them remember me thinks
This is what I thought, but I was referring to the example you gave:
Two baptized non-Catholic Christians who marry in an ostensibly Christian ceremony are presumed by the Catholic Church to have entered a sacramental marriage.
This sort of thing is what confuses me about Catholic beliefs. It seems they have all angles covered. They call a marriage sacramental that did not have a priest presiding, but when the couple want an annulment, it can be annulled on the grounds that a priest did not preside. Now how can that make sense?
Becky
Don't confuse the media with all Europeans.
I do not know if even 50% of Italian men are married (marriage is on the down turn there too according to some current events programs .)
Like in most other countries, over 90% of Italian men of marriable age are or have been married.
But as my niece was told Mistresses are a cultural practice.
Cute generalization. My wife's family is all Italian. Any mistresses over there would result in somebody's death. Its not "understood".
Europeans are disinterested in the things of God. (Not all but many perhaps most..if we look at the 30% number for church attendance).
As I've patiently pointed out to you before, American Church attendance is overinflated and is really no more than 20-30%. Ergo, most Americans are disinterested in the things of God.
That is why they are willingly inviting Muslims (that are not indifferent to allah) into their countries
They are no more "willingly" taking them in than Americans are "willignly" being inundated with Mexicans, Chinese, and Indians.
The minister is the representative of the Church as a witness to the marriage. The Catholic Church regularly designates PROTESTANT ministers as official witnesses in cases of mixed marriages where the Protestant party, in order to avoid strife in the family, insists on a ceremony in the Protestant Church.
Any marriage of a non-Catholic is presumed to be valid, regardless of who officiates, and cannot be annulled simply because of the minister (unless he was holding a gun to someone's head).
The presence of the Priest is not required for validity in and of itself, especially for non-Catholics. Catholics are required to be married either within the Church or in another Church with a Catholic minister witnessing. Catholic's attempting marriage in Protestant Churches without dispensation or by a Justice of the Peace are by default in canonical bad-faith and cannot contract a valid sacramental marriage.
I must be missing something.
You just said that a non catholic wedding is valid in the eyes of a church. You also said, I think, that a non catholic marriage can be nulled because it was not presided over by a priest so that one or the other participants can be re-married in the catholic church..??
If I have all that right:), then it seems to me the catholic church is covering itself at both ends, which makes it a bit hypocritical, IMO.
Becky
Can the fact that the marriage was not witnessed by a Priest be grounds for anullment? Becky
Only between Catholics, not between non-Catholics.
Wrong
They are recruited into the country as Guest workers . The problem is that they are having babies there that are citizens . The inflow of Muslims to European countries ties into the anti semetism that is growing in Europe again
increasingly over the last quarter-century, as women in industrialized countries have sought careers, marriage rates have fallen and divorce rates have increased. The trends are particularly evident in France, Italy and Australia.
The statistics per 1,000 population:
In France, from 1971 to 1990 the marriage rate fell from 7.9 to 4.3, while the divorce rate climbed from 0.9 to 1.9, and births fell from 16.7 (1970) to 13.4 -- during a period when the percentage of women in the work force was climbing from 50.1 percent to 59.0 percent.
In Italy, the marriage rate over the same period fell from 7.5 to 5.4, the divorce rate advanced from 0.3 to 0.5, and births declined from 16.7 to 9.8 -- as the percentage of working women rose from 33.7 to 43.3.
Meanwhile, in Australia, marriage rates went from 9.0 to 6.9, the divorce rate increased from 1.0 to 2.5, and births retreated from 20.6 to 15.4 -- the percentage of women working shooting up from 47.7 to 62.3.
Over the same period, the U.S. marriage rate has gone from 10.5 to 9.8, the divorce rate from 3.7 to 4.7, births decreased from 18.2 to 16.6 -- and the proportion of working women climbing from 51.1 to 69.0.
The statistics also reveal that couples who do marry are doing so at an older age.
http://www.ncpa.org/pd/social/spoct98b.html
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