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  1. Jan 17, 2013 · Let’s get back to the specific question of a Catholic marrying a non-Christian. As was discussed at length in “Does a Catholic Wedding Have to be Held in a Catholic Church?” all Catholics who wish to get married are bound to observe canonical form . That means that as a rule, Catholics are married in a Catholic church, in a Catholic ...

  2. A deacon is an ordained minister of the Catholic Church. There are three groups,or "orders," of ordained ministers in the Church: bishops, presbyters and deacons. Deacons are ordained as a sacramental sign to the Church and to the world of Christ,who came "to serve and not to be served."

  3. Feb 5, 2024 · For example, when two Lutherans marry in the Lutheran Church, the Catholic Church views their marriage as a valid marriage contract in Catholic Church law. Can Lutherans marry outside of the church? Lutherans can marry non-Lutherans. The largest Lutheran denominations don’t forbid their members from marrying outside the tradition, but ...

  4. Apr 21, 2009 · Guest Columnist. The Catholic Church and HIV and AIDS. The world has been living with the AIDS epidemic for more than 25 years and it has caused untold suffering. The scope of the AIDS epidemic is ...

  5. There are three basic requirements for a valid Catholic wedding: The couple must be capable of being married—that is, they must be a woman and a man who are free of any impediment that would prevent marriage. The couple must give their consent to be married — that is, by an act of their will they irrevocably give and accept one another in ...

  6. Sep 9, 2010 · Not according to canon 1091.2, which says marriages are invalid up to and including the fourth degree. First cousins, therefore, cannot marry in the Church. As for second, third, and other cousins, however, their degree of consanguinity is farther removed — they are related in the fifth, sixth, and even further degrees of the collateral line ...

  7. Answer: Scripture does not say that we must marry in a church. This is a matter of canon law, not divine law. The reason the Church asks Catholics to marry in a church is to remind us that marriage is a sacrament. Marriage is not a mere contractual agreement between two parties, it is a living embodiment of Christ’s relationship to his Church.

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