[…]for children establishing a parenting schedule under which children are ordered to go back and forth waiving the obligation to maintain the common conjugal life freeing both to civilly marry someone else According to the Catholic marriage contract, the Church, not the state, has competence to decide all these issues, […]
[…]Plus, Coccopalmerio must consider “the jurisprudence and practice of the Roman Curia, and the common and constant opinion of learned authors.” My long-time readers know I’ve found that the Church does not relegate to the no-fault divorce courts cases of civil separation or civil divorce. The mechanism by which the […]
[…]a just judicial exchange occurs, implementing the system would ensure that rights are protected. For example, no case could progress through the chronological steps without both a petitioner submitting a libellus containing his description of the facts and proofs in a general way that support the allegation of nullity of […]
[…]There was no respect for the possibility that our marriage was – in fact – valid. When my husband and I were having a marriage crisis, I expected Church personnel to hold him accountable to uphold his marriage promises; “What therefore God hath joined together, let no man put asunder” […]
[…]he, instead, only answers a questionnaire, which is not permitted (see Dignitas Connubii: Norms and Commentary, pg. 209). . A respondent is illegitimately cited and never sent a copy of the petitioner’s libellus containing the required general description of the facts and proofs supporting assertion that marriage is invalid. . […]
[…]read his audience a second translations also: “whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry another, committeth adultery: and he that shall marry her that is put away, committeth adultery” (Douay-Rheims) Some protestants will say that if one separates because the other spouse is […]
[…]Unless the Defendant agrees with the Plaintiff on a plan to split everything, lawyers file back-and-forth pleadings and the court schedules pre-trial appearances, conferences, depositions, and mediation, at $375/hour or more for each attorney. In Anita’s original petition to her Bishop, she described lawyers: Anita asked the diocese to implement […]
[…]were issued on the incapacity to assume the essential obligations of marriage per canon 1095 §3, and the example provided by Msgr. Salvatori was that the incapacity to be ordered toward bonum coniugum is ground for invalidity based on psychic reasons “in the case of a person with a severe narcissistic […]
[…]courts, the obligations decided by the government are arguably contrary to divine law when her husband committed no grave offenses justifying permanent separation. Thereafter, sometimes a Catholic wife is taught how to apply for a Catholic annulment in which she is directed to claim she suffered a grave lack of […]