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The Sacrament
of Matrimony
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337. What is the plan of God regarding man and woman? |
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God who is love and who
created man and woman for love has called them to love. By
creating man and woman he called them to an intimate
communion of life and of love in marriage: “So that they are
no longer two, but one flesh” (Matthew 19:6). God
said to them in blessing “Be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis
1:28). |
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338. For what ends has God instituted Matrimony? |
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The marital union of man
and woman, which is founded and endowed with its own proper
laws by the Creator, is by its very nature ordered to the
communion and good of the couple and to the generation and
education of children. According to the original divine plan
this conjugal union is indissoluble, as Jesus Christ
affirmed: “What God has joined together, let no man put
asunder” (Mark 10:9). |
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339. How does sin
threaten marriage? |
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Because of original sin,
which caused a rupture in the God-given communion between
man and woman, the union of marriage is very often
threatened by discord and infidelity. However, God in his
infinite mercy gives to man and woman the grace to bring the
union of their lives into accord with the original divine
plan. |
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340. What does the Old Testament teach about marriage? |
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God helped his people
above all through the teaching of the Law and the Prophets
to deepen progressively their understanding of the unity and
indissolubility of marriage. The nuptial covenant of God
with Israel prepared for and prefigured the new covenant
established by Jesus Christ the Son of God, with his spouse,
the Church. |
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341. What new
element did Christ give to Matrimony? |
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Christ not only restored
the original order of matrimony but raised it to the dignity
of a sacrament, giving spouses a special grace to live out
their marriage as a symbol of Christ’s love for his bride
the Church: “Husbands, love your wives as Christ loves the
Church” (Ephesians 5:25). |
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342. Are all obliged
to get married? |
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Matrimony is not an
obligation for everyone, especially since God calls some men
and women to follow the Lord Jesus in a life of virginity or
of celibacy for the sake of the Kingdom of Heaven. These
renounce the great good of Matrimony to concentrate on the
things of the Lord and seek to please him. They become a
sign of the absolute supremacy of Christ’s love and of the
ardent expectation of his glorious return. |
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343. How is the
sacrament of Matrimony celebrated? |
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Since Matrimony
establishes spouses in a public state of life in the Church,
its liturgical celebration is public, taking place in the
presence of a priest (or of a witness authorized by the
Church) and other witnesses. |
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344. What is
matrimonial consent? |
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Matrimonial consent is
given when a man and a woman manifest the will to give
themselves to each other irrevocably in order to live a
covenant of faithful and fruitful love. Since consent
constitutes Matrimony, it is indispensable and
irreplaceable. For a valid marriage the consent must have as
its object true Matrimony, and be a human act which is
conscious and free and not determined by duress or coercion. |
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345. What is required
when one of the spouses is not a Catholic? |
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A mixed marriage
(between a Catholic and a baptized non-Catholic) needs for
liceity the permission of ecclesiastical authority.
In a case of disparity of cult (between a Catholic
and a non-baptized person) a dispensation is required for
validity. In both cases, it is essential that the spouses do
not exclude the acceptance of the essential ends and
properties of marriage. It is also necessary for the
Catholic party to accept the obligation, of which the
non-Catholic party has been advised, to persevere in the
faith and to assure the baptism and Catholic education of
their children. |
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346. What are the
effects of the sacrament of Matrimony? |
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The sacrament of Matrimony
establishes a perpetual and exclusive bond between
the spouses. God himself seals the consent of the spouses.
Therefore, a marriage which is ratified and consummated
between baptized persons can never be dissolved.
Furthermore, this sacrament bestows upon the spouses the
grace necessary to attain holiness in their married life and
to accept responsibly the gift of children and provide for
their education. |
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347. What sins are
gravely opposed to the sacrament of Matrimony? |
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Adultery and polygamy are
opposed to the sacrament of matrimony because they
contradict the equal dignity of man and woman and the unity
and exclusivity of married love. Other sins include the
deliberate refusal of one’s procreative potential which
deprives conjugal love of the gift of children and divorce
which goes against the indissolubility of marriage. |
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348. When does
the Church allow the physical separation of spouses? |
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The Church permits the
physical separation of spouses when for serious reasons
their living together becomes practically impossible, even
though there may be hope for their reconciliation. As long
as one’s spouse lives, however, one is not free to contract
a new union, except if the marriage be null and be declared
so by ecclesiastical authority. |
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349. What is the
attitude of the Church toward those people who are
divorced and then remarried? |
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The Church, since she is
faithful to her Lord, cannot recognize the union of people
who are civilly divorced and remarried. “Whoever divorces
his wife and marries another, commits adultery against her;
and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she
commits adultery” (Mark 10:11-12). The Church
manifests an attentive solicitude toward such people and
encourages them to a life of faith, prayer, works of charity
and the Christian education of their children. However, they
cannot receive sacramental absolution, take Holy Communion,
or exercise certain ecclesial responsibilities as long as
their situation, which objectively contravenes God's law,
persists. |
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350. Why is the
Christian family called a domestic church? |
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The Christian family is
called the domestic church because the family manifests and
lives out the communal and familial nature of the Church as
the family of God. Each family member, in accord with their
own role, exercises the baptismal priesthood and contributes
toward making the family a community of grace and of prayer,
a school of human and Christian virtue and the place where
the faith is first proclaimed to children. |
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Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church.
© 2005 Liberia Editrice Vaticana,
00120 Citta del Vaticano
www.vatican.va |
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