Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Is annulment of marriage allowed to those non catholic christians?

Would that be a sin if you get an annulment and you're a non catholic christian?Is annulment of marriage allowed to those non catholic christians?
Yes.





All previous marriages, civil or religious, have to be dealt with before someone can be married in the Catholic Church even for non-Catholics.





The Catholic Church believes that God does not recognize civil divorces.





Jesus said, ';Therefore what God has joined together, no human being must separate.'; (Mark 10:9)





However there may be hope of a declaration of nullity.





The term ';annulment'; is a misnomer because the Church does not undo or erase a marriage bond.





Rather the Church issues a declaration of nullity when it discovers that the parties were not truly joined by God and hence a full spiritual sacramental marriage as understood by the Church was not present.





Then the parties are free to marry for the first time.





Grounds for nullity include:


鈥?Either one or both of the spouses were not baptized persons during the time of marriage


鈥?An unauthorized marriage by a Catholic before someone other than a designated priest or deacon


鈥?A marriage where one of the spouses had an impediment such as a previous marriage and civil divorce


鈥?A marriage where there was a deficiency in consent or the ability of one or both the spouses





The procedure is the same whether or not there are children in the marriage. If a declaration of nullity is granted then the children are still considered legitimate and retain all legal rights (Canon 1137).





Approach the appropriate person your in your parish who has been trained in the process. If you encounter difficulties, you may go directly to the diocese.





Be prayerful, honest and patient. It takes a while.





With love in Christ.Is annulment of marriage allowed to those non catholic christians?
Sure, annulments have nothing to do with religion, marriage is sort of like a binding contract, and if say, your partner is mentally incompetent, or infertile and didn't tell you, or you haven't consummated the marriage then an annulment is a get-out clause. It has nothing to do with catholics at all.
A court procedure that dissolves a marriage and treats it as if it never happened. Annulments are rare since the advent of no-fault divorce but may be obtained in most states for one of the following reasons: misrepresentation, concealment (for example, of an addiction or criminal record), misunderstanding and refusal to consummate the marriage.





Marriage is a legal matter not a religious matter.
If you are marrying a Catholic and you are a divorced non-Catholic you need an annulment. But if you are a non-Catholic, divorced and marrying another non-Catholic...no you do not need an annulment.
With the law, annulment is the termination of a non-consummated marriage. I don't know of any churches besides the Catholic one that erase a marriage from reality in order to allow remarriage.
By the law yes


?


By some churches no


.


For me I used it when I was married for less than 2 months


.


It was not long enough to be a common law marriage


.


Just a mistake made by the hormones of man


.
I think it's only Catholics that do annulments. With other Christians it's simply divorce.
Yes, it is allowed.


No, it would not be a sin.
Marriage was meant forever I mean until death .

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