Celebration of Marriage and Evangelization
of Non-believing Baptized Persons
68. Precisely because in the celebration of the
sacrament very special attention must be devoted to the moral and spiritual
dispositions of those being married, in particular to their faith, we must here
deal with a not infrequent difficulty in which the pastors of the Church can find
themselves in the context of our secularized society.
In fact, the faith of the person asking the
Church for marriage can exist in different degrees, and it is the primary duty
of pastors to bring about a rediscovery of this faith and to nourish it and
bring it to maturity. But pastors must also understand the reasons that lead
the Church also to admit to the celebration of marriage those who are
imperfectly disposed.
The sacrament of Matrimony has this specific
element that distinguishes it from all the other sacraments: it is the
sacrament of something that was part of the very economy of creation; it is the
very conjugal covenant instituted by the Creator "in the beginning."
Therefore the decision of a man and a woman to marry in accordance with this divine
plan, that is to say, the decision to commit by their irrevocable conjugal
consent their whole lives in indissoluble love and unconditional fidelity,
really involves, even if not in a fully conscious way, an attitude of profound
obedience to the will of God, an attitude which cannot exist without God's
grace. They have thus already begun what is in a true and proper sense a
journey towards salvation, a journey which the celebration of the sacrament and
the immediate preparation for it can complement and bring to completion, given
the uprightness of their intention.
On the other hand it is true that in some places
engaged couples ask to be married in church for motives which are social rather
than genuinely religious. This is not surprising. Marriage, in fact, is not an
event that concerns only the persons actually getting married. By its very
nature it is also a social matter, committing the couple being married in the
eyes of society. And its celebration has always been an occasion of rejoicing
that brings together families and friends. It therefore goes without saying
that social as well as personal motives enter into the request to be married in
church.
Nevertheless, it must not be forgotten that
these engaged couples, by virtue of their Baptism, are already really sharers
in Christ's marriage Covenant with the Church, and that, by their right
intention, they have accepted God's plan regarding marriage and therefore at
least implicitly consent to what the Church intends to do when she celebrates
marriage. Thus, the fact that motives of a social nature also enter into the
request is not enough to justify refusal on the part of pastors. Moreover, as
the Second Vatican Council teaches, the sacraments by words and ritual elements
nourish and strengthen faith"(171): that faith towards which the married
couple are already journeying by reason of the uprightness of their intention,
which Christ's grace certainly does not fail to favor and support.
As for wishing to lay down further criteria for
admission to the ecclesial celebration of marriage, criteria that would concern
the level of faith of those to be married, this would above all involve grave
risks. In the first place, the risk of making unfounded and discriminatory
judgments; secondly, the risk of causing doubts about the validity of marriages
already celebrated, with grave harm to Christian communities, and new and
unjustified anxieties to the consciences of married couples; one would also
fall into the danger of calling into question the sacramental nature of many
marriages of brethren separated from full communion with the Catholic Church,
thus contradicting ecclesial tradition.
However, when in spite of all efforts, engaged
couples show that they reject explicitly and formally what the Church intends
to do when the marriage of baptized persons is celebrated, the pastor of souls
cannot admit them to the celebration of marriage. In spite of his reluctance to
do so, he has the duty to take note of the situation and to make it clear to
those concerned that, in these circumstances, it is not the Church that is
placing an obstacle in the way of the celebration that they are asking for, but
themselves.
Once more there appears in all its urgency the
need for evangelization and catechesis before and after marriage, effected by the whole Christian-community, so that every man
and woman that gets married celebrates the sacrament of Matrimony not only
validly but also fruitfully.
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