I “just happened” to listen to a sermon on the Audio Sancto website shortly after the
engagement was announced. (You can listen to the whole sermon here,
and I’ve transcribed part of it below.) Near the end of the homily, the priest
says:
And every year at this time of
year, the phone rings off the hook, the calls keep pouring in. They go
something like this: "Father we just got an invitation to a wedding. My
son (daughter, nephew, niece, brother, sister, cousin, God son, God daughter)
is a Catholic, but has decided to get married down at the First Church of
What's Happening Now. Can we go to the wedding?"
"No Father."
Well, I'm sorry to say then, you can't go. See,
they've decided to not invite Christ to the wedding. And if they're gonna force
you to make a choice, you're gonna have to choose Christ our Lord. They're not
getting married, and as Catholics who love our Lord, we don't want to get
involved in those kinds of situations...
Parents, tell your children
that you love them, but they must obey the Church's marriage laws. And if they
ever decide to disobey and force you to take sides, as much as you love them,
if they're gonna force you to take sides, you're always gonna side with Christ
Our Lord.
We live quite a distance away, so I wrote our granddaughter
a letter to explain that, even under the best of circumstances, I would not be
attending the wedding, but also, and more importantly, that she was taking a
step that would endanger her soul. I didn’t expect a reply; I just wanted to
make sure she knew the gravity of the situation.
I did receive a reply via email, but it was a couple of
weeks after the wedding. She told me that she could not have had a Catholic wedding
because the young man was not Catholic and that
the only way that I am “more
Catholic”’ than him is that I was baptized in the Catholic church, received my
First Holy Communion when I was young, and have gone to confession once,
because we had to for CCD.
Cafeteria Catholics? |
Hindsight is 20/20, of course.
RE Class |
Sigh.
Our granddaughter also wanted to know:
Since we are equally matched
with a love and passion for God, faithful to His command of sexual purity, and
regularly attend and enjoy being involved in church, why is our decision to get
married outside of the Catholic Church considered a grave sin?
Yes, thank God, they did not live together before marriage,
nor surrender their purity. And yet, she seems to have an incomplete
understanding of what marriage means. If she’d been married in the Church, she
and her fiancé would at least have gone through some pre-marriage classes (though,
seriously, I have little confidence in such things these days). I wonder if she
would have heard the definition of marriage the FSSP priest gives in his
sermon:
[What do we mean by the
marriage contract?] A man and a woman give and accept an exclusive and
perpetual right for acts which are of themselves suitable for the generation of
children. That's the marriage contract; if it's properly made, validly made,
then this contract results in a relationship known as marriage. The man and the
woman make the contract; if it's properly made, God makes the relationship,
which is marriage...
…[T]hey've just been given not only
God's permission, but His blessing, His actual blessing at that moment, to use
the great creative power. They may use this great power on the condition that
the acts are of themselves suitable for the generation of children, so that
tells us God's limits on the power, right there. They use it on the condition
that these rights are exclusive, which means that each partner uses these
rights exclusively to the other partner; that shows the unity of the relationship.
And on the condition that each partner yields these rights perpetually, till
death do us part. And that shows the indissolubility of the relationship.
…It's important to note this:
if the couple did not make a valid
contract, then the relationship does
not come into being. In other words, they weren't actually married.
The priest goes on to explain about the canonical
requirements of marriage:
The canonical form of marriage
means that in order to be valid, the marriage must be contracted in the
presence of two witnesses and also in the presence of the local bishop or the parish
priest, or a priest or a deacon with delegation from the bishop or the parish priest.
The basic idea here is, if you're
Catholic, the Church requires you to have a Catholic wedding…
…See here's the problem. If a Catholic guy and
his girlfriend get a wild idea to go to the local justice of the peace or over
to the First Church of What's Happenin' Now, and stand up there in front of
everybody and exchange vows, it's not valid. That's another way
of saying nothing happened. They came in as boyfriend and girlfriend, and they
left as boyfriend and girlfriend. They don't actually leave as man and wife. They're not married.
Would she have been taught this kind of thing in a
pre-marriage class? Having never attended one myself, I have no idea. And would
our granddaughter have been made aware of the wonderful symbolism of the
wedding Mass itself? (See my transcription of a homily by this same priest on
that subject here).
Does anyone make sure our Catholic kids know this stuff? Well,
parents have the first responsibility to make sure this happens, of course. But
they’re getting very little help, support, or encouragement from the Church!
And that, dear readers, is why we need to know our faith.
That is why we need to pass our faith onto our children first-hand, us to them,
not relying on the local parish RE program which may be under the influence of
a modernist, liberal, progressive Protestantized RE director. Our Catholic
identity is important. It is unique. It is different from a Protestant
identity! Our children need to know this, and they need to know it at more than
a second-grade level.
And, as parents (and grandparents, and godparents), so do we.
Take to
heart these words which I enjoin on you today. Drill them into your children.
Speak of them at home and abroad, whether you are busy or at rest. (Deuteronomy
6:6-7)
Click "read more" to see the transcript.
In this sermon, which you can listen to here, the priest is discussing the canonical form of marriage; he is concerned with the Church law governing the situation in which one party is a Catholic of the Latin Rite. He spends the first half of his sermon laying the groundwork, noting what marriage is, for whom these marriage rules hold sway, and establishing what is meant by the “marriage contract”; it’s well worth listening to the whole sermon. However, this transcript begins at about the 8 minute mark in the sermon. I’ve done some editing where he repeats himself for effect and ease of comprehension of a listening audience, but I believe this is a true representation of the points he is trying to make.
In this sermon, which you can listen to here, the priest is discussing the canonical form of marriage; he is concerned with the Church law governing the situation in which one party is a Catholic of the Latin Rite. He spends the first half of his sermon laying the groundwork, noting what marriage is, for whom these marriage rules hold sway, and establishing what is meant by the “marriage contract”; it’s well worth listening to the whole sermon. However, this transcript begins at about the 8 minute mark in the sermon. I’ve done some editing where he repeats himself for effect and ease of comprehension of a listening audience, but I believe this is a true representation of the points he is trying to make.
[What
do we mean by the marriage contract?] A man and a woman give and accept an
exclusive and perpetual right for acts which are of themselves suitable for the
generation of children. That's the marriage contract; if it's properly made,
validly made, then this contract results in a relationship known as marriage.
The man and the woman make the contract; if it's properly made, God makes the
relationship, which is marriage...
…In
other words, what happens when they've entered into this contract, [is that] God makes the relationship; they've
just been given not only God's permission, but His blessing, His actual
blessing at that moment, to use the great creative power. They may use this
great power on the condition that the acts are of themselves suitable for the
generation of children, so that tells us God's limits on the power, right
there. They use it on the condition that these rights are exclusive, which
means that each partner uses these rights exclusively to the other partner;
that shows the unity of the relationship. And on the condition that each
partner yields these rights perpetually, till death do us part. And that shows
the indissolubility of the relationship.
…If the
contract is properly made, if it's validly made, then this contract between a
man and a woman results in a relationship which is made by God Himself, and
that relationship is known as marriage. It's important to note this: if the
couple did not make a valid contract, then the relationship does not come into
being. In other words, they weren't actually married. That's important.
Everyone needs to burn this into his mind…
Our
so-called legal system might call it a marriage, but calling something a
marriage does not make it so in the eyes of God. Marriage is what it is. And if
a couple contracted for some other relationship... let's just say, “we'll do
this like a test drive, we'll go for three years and see how it works, and if
it isn't working out after three years, we'll just split the sheets and go our
ways”; or they're not open to acts which are themselves suitable for the
generation of children; they might call that a marriage, but it isn't. Marriage
is what it is. God created it. These days, folks call a lot of things marriage
that aren't marriage in the eyes of God.
… If
that contract is properly made, which is the same as saying if it's validly
made, that results in a relationship, and that relationship is known as
marriage, and marriage is made by God. If the couple did not properly make the
contract; if they don't validly make the contract, then the marriage did not
actually come into being.
…With
that as background, let's consider just what the canonical form of marriage is
for all us Latin rite Catholics, and then, why does it matter.
The
canonical form of marriage concerns the validity of a marriage in which at
least one of the spouses is Catholic…[and] concerns the validity of that
situation. There are certain requirements which the Church itself has imposed
on Catholics, and which must be met in order for Catholics to be validly
married, in order for them to make a valid contract…The Church has said to
Catholics, "You're free to make this contract; that's fine. Then in order to
actually make the contract, here's the rules."
So
before we even discuss exactly what these Church-imposed requirements are,
before we even discuss exactly what the canonical form of marriage is, we can
already see why it's so important: because it concerns the validity of
marriage.
An
invalid marriage is no marriage at all… So you can see this is a salvation
issue.
...What
is the canonical form?
I'll
read from the code of canon law, canon 1108: “only those marriages are valid
which are contracted in the presence of the local ordinary [the local ordinary
is the bishop of the diocese] or parish priest, or the priest or the deacon
delegated by either of them [the bishop or the priest] who in the presence of
two witnesses assists in accordance, however, with the rules set out in the
following canons..."
The
canonical form of marriage means that in order to be valid, the marriage must
be contracted in the presence of two witnesses and also in the presence of the
local bishop or the parish priest, or a priest or a deacon with delegation from the bishop or the
parish priest. The basic idea here is, if you're Catholic, the Church requires you
to have a Catholic wedding…
…See
here's the problem. If a Catholic guy and his girlfriend get a wild idea to go
to the local justice of the peace or over to the First Church of What's Happenin'
Now, and stand up there in front of everybody and exchange vows, it's not valid. That's another way of
saying nothing happened. They came in as boyfriend and girlfriend, and they left
as boyfriend and girlfriend. They don't actually leave as man and wife. They're
not married.
You
don't need me to tell you it's serious. It's serious! We all remember from when
we were kids learning our catechism, the 6th commandment of the Church: the
sixth commandment is where we're required to obey the laws of the Church with
marriage. Back when we were little shavers learning our catechism, that didn't
seem very important. But once we see the consequences of it, we can see why
it's important.
Here's
another important point… Suppose this Catholic guy wants to marry a girl, and
it's gonna cause World War III and all kinds of fire and shootin' and family
problems if she doesn't get married in her dad's church, because her dad
happens to be the preacher at the First Church of What's Happenin' Now. We just
saw that if they go in and standup in
front of her dad and exchange vows, and leave, nothing happens. They came in as
boyfriend and girlfriend, and they left as boyfriend and girlfriend. They
didn't get married because they couldn't
get married. What can they do?
Here is
an important detail: The Bishop has the power in individual cases to release a
particular couple from the requirement of having a Catholic priest or deacon
witness the marriage. And if because of this grave family problem, the bishop
releases the couple from that requirement, then it actually is a valid
marriage. The Church has no power to change God's rules. But these are rules
made by the Church 500 years ago. And so if there's a good reason, the Church
can relax them to some degree. So the Church has established these rules, which
also means the Church has the power to dispense from these rules.
What
does it mean? It means that if everything else is the same, if a Catholic tries
to contract marriage down at the First Church of What's Happenin' Now, but he
doesn't have a dispensation, then he didn't
get married. But if he does have a dispensation from the bishop, then he did get married. So everything else
being the same, no dispensation, no marriage; dispensation: marriage.
…We're
saying that if a Catholic doesn't observe the canonical form of marriage, and
he doesn't have a bishop's dispensation, then he can't validly contract
marriage. It's true whether or not the couple is aware of the fact… Marriage is
what it is. The couple may not be guilty
at all, perfectly innocent, not guilty of a single thing. They may be quite
innocently unaware of the teaching of the church in this area. This is common.
And we live in strange times; it's surprising it's not more common. But good
intentions don't have the power to change what marriage is. Marriage is what it
is, which means that if a Catholic doesn't observe the canonical form of
marriage, and doesn't have a dispensation from the bishop, then that person
cannot validly contract marriage.
Of
course, if they don't know, there's no sin. In order to commit a sin, we have
to actually realize we're doing something wrong. So if we're ignorant of this
in this case, there's no sin, but there's
still no marriage.
I'm
just going to make a remark to the people that will be listening to his on CD
[or reading this transcript!]. If you're in that predicament, go see your
priest; he can help you out.
Now
let's consider the case when there's a couple, at least one of whom is
Catholic, [who] does this knowingly. They actually realize that the Church
requires formal marriage, but they decide to blow that off. What are they
doing? Well, in the first place, since they're not observing the canonical form
of marriage, they're not married. It's
not possible. Marriage is not the will of the parties. Marriage is what it
is. It's not possible, since marriage is what it is and good intentions don't
change a situation, and bad intentions sure can't change it either. They're not
married, and worse yet, they're knowingly deciding to live together without
being married. They're knowingly deciding to live in sin, so not only is it not
marriage, it's serious sin.
And
every year at this time of year, the phone rings off the hook, the calls keep
pouring in. They go something like this: "Father we just got an invitation
to a wedding. My son (daughter, nephew, niece, brother, sister, cousin, God son, God daughter) is a Catholic, but has decided
to get married down at the First Church of What's Happening Now. Can we go to
the wedding?"
I have
to ask: Do they have a dispensation from the bishop?
"No
Father."
Well,
I'm sorry to say then, you can't go.
See,
they've decided to not invite Christ to the wedding. And if they're gonna force
you to make a choice, you're gonna have to choose Christ our Lord. They're not
getting married, and as Catholics who love our Lord, we don't want to get
involved in those kind of situations. There's a lot more that can be said on
this topic, and we'll take it up again soon and fill in more details...
Parents,
tell your children that you love them, but they must obey the Church's marriage
laws. And if they ever decide to disobey and force you to take sides, as much
as you love them, if they're gonna force you to take sides, you're always gonna
side with Christ Our Lord.
Tell
them, we love you, but if you force us to take sides, we're always gonna side
with Christ Our Lord.
We're
always gonna side with Christ Our Lord.
Jay, you sure hit the nail on the head with that one. It's so important that our kids are properly catechized, but even before that, what about all the adults currently who never were properly catechized, myself included?
ReplyDeleteI guess for the adults it comes down to intellectual curiosity and/or nudges from God that will inspire them to start looking, reading, listening to good sermons (like on audiosancto.org).
But it sure is dismaying to think of the generations that have totally missed the boat on what the Faith really is and how wondrous and beautiful it is.
I had a similar situation come up when my sister and her boyfriend decided to marry. First off, they'd been living together for 10 years or so. So I was thrilled that she finally decided to go "all the way", as he'd been wanting to get married for years. But alas, the "wedding" was in a non-denominational chapel on the campus of the university they lived near. I must admit, I just couldn't NOT go...she's my sister. I know it was wrong but I didn't have the strength to stay away or make any comment whatsoever, God forgive me.
Elizabeth, it's all a learning process, isn't it? We have all made mistakes and will make more, most likely, being human and all! But I think we really need to encourage all the adults we know who are little more than nominal Catholics to really get to know their faith. Many won't listen, but it's still worth trying to tell them there's more to their faith than they know! I told my granddaughter that if she would spend even half the time studying Catholicism (in an adult way) that she spent studying the Bible from the Protestant view, she would not be able to resist the Truth.
ReplyDeleteI participated in the wedding of a good friend of mine earlier this year. It was an anglican service, but it's a High Anglican church and they even give respect to Mother Mary and they're well aware that I'm a Catholic.
ReplyDeleteFather A was even instrumental in me finding the Trad church I attend.
My friend is a new christian - she only came to God a few years ago, and while she's not Catholic, she is still attending a High Anglican church.
It was a beautiful ceremony with Bishop H presiding and Father A also participating. With the Ordinariate kicking into gear here in Australia next month, it will be interesting to see what will happen with those Anglicans who hunger for the Real Presence.
As for the Protestants and their knowledge of the Bible.... I have a friend who went to bible college for a year and still managed to come out of it never hearing of the word 'catechism.'
Wow. I'm having trouble understanding why you posted this. Did you really want the whole internet to know how much you don't love your family?
ReplyDelete