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Aug 17, 2009 at 17:44 o\clock

Marriage and faith, - Divorce

by: aristorano   Category: Religion

  

Love and Marriage

Marriage and faith

Many young couples hesitate to proceed with this final commitment, knowing that marriage is exposed to unforeseen developments. But we cannot plan, secure and  test  everything  to  the last detail. Sometimes, we have to make a decision, because we cannot leave things forever revocable. Having been together for some time, many couples decide to get married, especially with the prospect of raising a family, in order to put their relationship into a firm and legally protected framework. 

The  celebration in the church reinforces the consciousness of finally and forever belonging together. Should a crisis emerge, the fact of a church wedding can give an important support. Many older and experienced married couples confirm this. It is true that marital difficulties cannot simply be resolved by faith and prayer. But faith in the God of love and reconciliation gives us confidence in the possibility of lifelong faithfulness.  This faith helps the spouses  to accept  each other, forgive and allow and dare a new beginning should they disappoint each other and fail.

This shows how  important  it is not to put the religious life into a file after the wedding day, but to continuously care for it together.

Divorce
 

Jesus voiced the opinion that divorce is essentially directed against love. "What God has joined together,  let not man put asunder"  (Matthew 19, 6). The Church derives the insolubility of a validly concluded marriage from this sentence. She does not intend to bind and force people to hold on to the past.  Rather,  the thought of  insolubility  reinforces  the  endeavor to exhaust all  possibilities of living in marital community.

Divorce shows that a couple has  stopped looking to the future  together and trying to find each other always anew.  Therefore,  Jesus radically opposes people continuously looking for new circumstances under which a married  couple might eventually be divorced. Jesus demands of us  free decisions for a faithfulness which excludes loopholes right from the start. The aim of this exigency is not only to avoid marriage breakup  but to influence the partnership in such a way that  divorce becomes out of the question.

Reality,  however,  proves  that  even  with  a Christian marriage, breakup and the entailing separation of partners cannot always be avoided. Separation is often the lesser of two evils. In such cases the Church permits partners to live separately from each other and get a civil divorce because of the civil law consequences.  But  this  does  not  change the legal view of the Church regarding the continuity of the marriage concluded before the altar.

Sometimes, it is said that a married couple was "divorced" by the Pope. In reality the Pope made a declaration of invalidity which has nothing to do with divorce. In this case, it is established through proceedings before the matrimonial court of the Church that a valid marriage was not concluded in the first place.