Are you planning on getting married, now or in the future? Then here are some important things you should know.
Catholics have an obligation to celebrate their marriage in a Catholic Church. The only exceptions to that rule occur when a Catholic is marrying a non-Catholic and a dispensation is requested and granted (for any one of several reasons) for the marriage to take place in a non-Catholic church, or when Catholics wish to be married in a university or other school chapel where permission had been given by the diocese or archdiocese for weddings to be performed. Aside from those exceptions, a Catholic cannot enter into a valid, sacramental marriage in a park or on a beach, in Las Vegas or a judge’s office, or in any place other than a parish church. Marriages that take place outside the Church are called “invalid”, which simply means that, in the sight of God and the Church, there is no marriage. A couple may have a license that makes the marriage legal, but they are not married at all as far as the Church is concerned.
An invalid marriage makes a couple’s relationship to the Church problematic because technically, they can’t receive any of the other Sacraments until their marriage is validated in and by the Church. That might sound harsh, but it is simply part and parcel of living a faithful life as a Catholic; as Catholics, we don’t get to pick and choose which rules we want to follow. The good news is that validating an invalid civil marriage is usually very simple—unless one person has been married previously in the Church and then divorced; then it gets considerably more complicated, though still not impossible. But it is important to consider one scenario at a time:
The relatively simple way for Catholics to avoid the need to deal with many of these complications is to do from the start what the Church requires of its members who wish to marry: enter into a sacramental marriage in the Catholic Church. Of course this means resisting the impulse to get married in Vegas, by a Cook County judge, or on a beach in Mexico. It means having the integrity to do what’s right rather than what feels good. It means having the humility, courage and determination to seek an annulment when a valid marriage fails for a serious reason. But again, the good news in our day is that Pope Francis and the bishops of the world have begun moving forward with ways to help reconcile difficult marriage issues in a more pastoral and merciful way.
It is extremely important for Church leaders and for Catholic parents to teach young people what’s expected of them as Catholic Christians. As a Catholic community, there is a need to foster an understanding of the importance of the Sacrament of Matrimony and to help young people appreciate the grace and strength that can be found in that intimate encounter with the God who wants to bless and affirm their love in the community of the Church.
If you are planning on getting married or remarried, now or somewhere down the road, please take the time to contact a priest and ask for the support you need to make this a moment of grace which will lead to a future of love and faithfulness.
Please contact the rectory at least 6 months prior to the wedding. For available times and dates, please call 708-798-0622.
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BEING CATHOLIC….GETTING MARRIED
BEING CATHOLIC….AND GETTING MARRIED: PART II
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