Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Answer: If someone was married and his or her spouse dies, the widow or widower is considered free to marry.

  2. Nov 2, 2023 · Which brings us to cremations and urns. Cremated remains are considered the same as intact bodies – cremation was first permitted by the Vatican in 1963 and part of canon (church) law since 1983. But urns are to be placed in mausoleums or columbariums, not kept at home, and cremains are not to be scattered or split up.

  3. People also ask

    • A Baptized Christian
    • Not Too Closely Related
    • Free to Marry
    • Of The Opposite Sex as Your Partner
    • In Good Standing with The Church
    • What to Do If You're Not Sure

    Both partners do not have to be a Catholic in order to be sacramentally married in the Catholic Church, but both must be baptized Christians (and at least one must be a Catholic). Non-Christians cannot receive the sacraments. For a Catholic to marry a non-Catholic Christian, express permission is required from his or her bishop. A Catholic can marr...

    Legal prohibitions on marriage between cousins (and other close blood relationships, such as uncle and niece) stem from the Church's ban on such marriages. Before 1983, marriages between second cousins were prohibited. Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani famously received an annulment of his first marriage after determining that his wife was his se...

    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. The mere fact of a divorce is not sufficient to prove the nullity of a marriage. During marriage preparation, you must inform the pries...

    Marriage, by definition, is a lifelong union between one man and one woman. The Catholic Church does not recognize, even as a civil marriage, a contracted relationship between two men or two women.

    It's an old joke that some Catholics only see the inside of a church when they are "carried [at baptism], married, and buried." But marriage is a sacrament, and, for the sacrament to be properly received, the Catholic partner(s) in a marriage must be in good standing with the Church. This means not only normal Church attendance but also avoidance o...

    If you're not sure whether you are free to contract a valid marriage, or whether your potential marriage would be sacramental or non-sacramental, the first place to check is, as always, with your parish priest. In fact, if your potential spouse is not Catholic or if either of you has been married before, you should discuss your situation with your ...

  4. Oct 25, 2018 · In 2013, I was asked to speak about Sacramental Marriage at the Wisconsin Catholics at the Capitol conference in Madison. The focus of the presentation was to clarify Sacramental as defined by the Catholic Church in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 1601 and to explain why this view of marriage brings the most […]

  5. (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).

  6. t. e. Marriage in the Catholic Church, also known as holy matrimony, is the "covenant by which a man and woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life and which is ordered by its nature to the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring", and which "has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity ...

  7. 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.