Posted on 09/08/2015 5:09:14 PM PDT by ebb tide
Early reports are in, and it looks like Pope Francis, as expected, has radically reformed the process by which Catholics may annul their marriages, streamlining steps that many liberals in the church considered too cumbersome.
The move is the latest in a series of public relations initiatives, whereby Francis hopes to make his pontificate appear more responsive to the needs of lay Catholics, especially those who have "long felt marginalized" by the hierarchy (READ: Don't like Catholic moral theology).
The three main changes announced on Tuesday are:
Eliminating a second review by a cleric before a marriage can be nullified.
Giving bishops the ability to fast-track and grant the annulments themselves in certain circumstances -- for example, when spousal abuse or an extramarital affair has occurred.
The process should be free, except for a nominal fee for administrative costs, and should be completed within 45 days.
The Pope's reforms came Tuesday in the form of two "motu proprio" documents, Latin for "by (the Pope's) own initiative." They become part of Catholic canon law on December 8, the beginning of Francis' declared "Year of Mercy."
REMNANT COMMENT: We'll have to wait for the official translation later today, but this already promises to dramatically undermine marriage, especially in third world countries where the annulment process is less popular and marriage vows are stronger.
The Pope is reportedly waiving fees, leaving it up to local bishops to delegate priests to handle annulments, removing one of the tribunals, removing the automatic appeal, and green-lighting annulments when both parties want the annulment. (This last one is my favorite, by the way, since it basically means that when you and the missus decide to call it quits all you need is mutual agreement that the thing never happened in the first place. Now . isn't . that . convenient!)
And of course the Holy Father is adding a lack of faith to the growing list of trumped-up reasons to conclude there was never a marriage in the first place, as well. At the end of the day, if you WANT an annulment you GOT an annulment . . . but lets not call it divorce. Heck, no! That would tamper with the indissolubility of marriage!
By the way, what about those of us who feel marginalized for believing as Catholics believed for thousands of years, that marriage vows actually mean something, that only death can break them, that we are married in the eyes of God, that there is no opt-out clause? What about us?
What about those who follow the rules and take marriage seriously, and who firmly believe that "streamlining the annulment process" is just an embarrassingly transparent euphemism for on-demand divorce for Catholics? Any chance of us getting a little mercy up in here? No? I didnt think so!
What a joke! How the halls of hell must be echoing with the booming laughter of old Henry the King of England.
Well played, Francis. You've done it again!
The Word doesn’t go into intent to keep the vows. It allows for divorce due to adultery. What’s so hard to understand about this?
Oh I see. Your point is Jesus sanctions multiple divorce/remarriages and fornication. Got it.
Well, there are youthful marriages, and lack the sufficient use of reason. Depends on who us doing the judging.
But that would have removed the marriage of Henry from being a recourse of RCs to impugn Protestantism, vs. above-the-board Rome.
Right up there with a basket of kitties!
Thanks for telling what I my point was.
In all the confusion I kinda forgot.
You’re welcome.
“There is SO much documentation to prove it.”
True.
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