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  1. Answer: If someone was married and his or her spouse dies, the widow or widower is considered free to marry. Should the person at some point decide to get married again, the parish priest might ask for a copy of the death certificate or a copy of the obituary or testimony that the first spouse has passed away.

  2. Jun 16, 2023 · Yes, you absolutely can. It is very common, in fact. The Catholic partner will be asked to agree that any children the couple have together will be raised as Catholics, with the non-Catholic ...

  3. (The Church has a minimum age requirement as well; see Canon 1083.) Previous marriage: You cannot marry someone else if you are already married. This most common impediment to marriage is discussed more below. Relatives: You cannot marry someone who is already your relative (Canons 1091-1094).

  4. Why does a Catholic wedding have to take place in a church? For Catholics, marriage is not just a social or family event, but a church event. For this reason, the Church prefers that marriages between Catholics, or between Catholics and other Christians, be celebrated in the parish church of one of the spouses.

  5. Like any other Catholic who is not conscious of grave sin, he or she may receive Holy Communion. The only exception to full sacramental participation is that the divorced person may not enter a new marriage in the Church.

  6. Dec 23, 2018 · If one of the partners, Catholic or non-Catholic Christian, has been married before, he or she is free to marry only if his or her spouse has died or he or she has obtained a declaration of nullity from the Church.

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  8. May 8, 2024 · Divorce and the Catholic Church. The first thing Catholics should know is that divorce is not a sin that should keep a divorced Catholic from receiving the sacraments. A divorced or separated person is not excommunicated and is still a Catholic in good standing.

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