The Portal Archive July 2011 | Page 16

THE P RTAL July 2011 Page 16 F ather Peter’s P a ge But I am divorced... It is ironic that for some of those who are wishing to join The Ordinariate one of the main attractive reasons for doing so seems, in some cases, to be also one of the problems in making the step. For a long time, sometimes all one’s Christian life, you may have been told – and believed – that one of the qualities of a true Christian Community is that it is loyal to Scripture: In faithfulness to Christ, it would not believe, or practise, anything that was contrary to Scripture .  [It sometimes is a part of a person’s spiritual development that one comes to realise that those who make the ‘claim’ the most - to be ‘Biblical Believers’ - in fact are not!  One comes across people who have very strange literal views about the creation story in Genesis, but are the first to deny our Lord’s clear words about his ‘Real Presence’ in the Eucharist in St John Chapter 6!] It used to be a quality of the Church of England, sometimes alone among other Protestant Churches, that she was consistently faithful to Christ’s teaching about Marriage. How things have changed!  Not only now has she ignored the clear teaching of Christ about marriage (e.g. St Matthew Chapter 19), but she has ordained and/or re-licensed people who have been re- married after divorce – in some cases, more than once! The Church has long realised that there may be reasons why a wedding ceremony may not have resulted in a valid marriage.  If, after careful investigation, reasons are discovered which prevented it from being a valid marriage, then the Catholic Church can declare it to be invalid.   What are these reasons?  To make a list would not be helpful since we are involved in a very personal situation and therefore there could be a number of reasons that might be relevant.  It is very important to ensure that what is done, is done for YOU and addresses YOUR particular circumstances.    There are, though, two broad categories: If the Church’s rules for marriage have not been followed, then the marriage can be declared ‘null’.  On the other hand, there may be an impediment to a marriage or something not entirely correct in the exchanging of consent to marriage at the time.   The Marriage Tribunal   The only way to find out, is to ask!  In the first instance, via a priest in The Ordinariate who will know  It is often a surprise to some – especially Protestant the procedures and details of the Marriage Tribunal Christians - to hear that one of the reasons for being used at present.  belonging to the Catholic Church is because she, and she alone, is faithful to scripture.  Above all remember that the Tribunal is very sensitive to the delicacy of the situation/circumstances  But here is the crux: By being dedicated to Scripture in which people find themselves and it simply wants one cannot evade, or explain away by weasel words, to help balance compassion with being loyal to Christ.  the clear teaching of Christ that a true valid Christian Marriage is life-long and cannot be ‘repeated’.    But isn’t that what Catholicism is all about? Experiencing Christ’s compassion through the   But alongside being faithful to Christ – however sacraments and the life of the Church and, at the same ‘hard’ his teaching seems to be – the Church is time, being loyal to Christ.  conscious that sometimes “we make his love too narrow by false limits of our own; and we magnify His   Remember: In your pilgrimage, you never walk strictness with a zeal He will not own”. (F W Faber) alone.  There are others surrounding you to help and encourage you.  In faith, take the next step . . .  Faithful to scripture  A true valid Christian Marriage   Note the claim: “a true valid Christian Marriage”.  Father Peter