1 posted on
07/10/2012 2:57:10 PM PDT by
NYer
To: netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; SumProVita; ...
2 posted on
07/10/2012 2:58:08 PM PDT by
NYer
(Without justice, what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
To: NYer
Oil - water.
Up - down.
Left - right.
Catholic - Lutheran.
...
This makes no sense.
3 posted on
07/10/2012 3:03:19 PM PDT by
fishtank
(The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
To: NYer
Don’t do it. I thought it could be done, but if they are not Catholic they don’t get it. I wish I had married a Catholic
7 posted on
07/10/2012 3:44:20 PM PDT by
yldstrk
( My heroes have always been cowboys)
To: NYer
May I now be blunt....
My wife, a non-catholic and myself a Roman Catholic by birth etc. were married with the benefit of a mass. Yes, only I received holy communion that day. It was a beautiful mass with the singing of Ave Maria in memory of my late grandmother.
Oh, did I mention we celebrated our 40th Anniversary last week?
And as we promised to my parish priest, our daughter was raised as a practicing Catholic.
14 posted on
07/10/2012 6:55:59 PM PDT by
Wilum
(Never loaded a nuke I didn't like)
To: NYer
I am going to marry a Lutheran girl next year, and we would like to have a Tridentine wedding celebrated within mass. However, I was warned that, because of Universae Ecclesiae, some current laws may not apply, and it may not be permissible. However, the 1970 Matrimonia mixta allows wedding to be celebrated within mass with the permission of the bishop. Does this apply on the Tridentine wedding, or do we need to consider 1962 Canon law? What does it say about the case?seems like a bad omen to need a legal opinion before getting married.
17 posted on
07/11/2012 5:24:50 AM PDT by
the invisib1e hand
(A Dalmation was spotted wagging its tail.)
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