(Note from Fr. Hollowell: "This article first appeared in the magazine "Homiletic and Pastoral Review" in the February edition from 1988. It has been republished on this blog with the permission of "Homiletic and Pastoral Review")
Participation in Invalid Marriages
An article from Homiletic & Pastoral Review
February 1988
By Rev. Regis Scanlon
How long has it been since you preached or heard
from the pulpit that it is evil for a Catholic to marry in a ceremony not approved
by the Church? Perhaps fear of publicly embarrassing someone in the pews and
belief that these invalidly married Catholics may be in good conscience has
silenced preaching against invalid marriages. This new sympathy toward invalid
marriages is not without grave risks. Couples living in invalid marriages could
remain blind to the truth that they are really (objectively) living in adultery
or fornication and that "these are the sins which provoke God's
wrath" (Col. 3:5-6). The ultimate danger here is that invalidly-married
Catholics will not heed St. Paul's warning that "God will judge
fornicators and adulterers" (Heb. 13:4) and "those who do such things
(impurity) will not inherit the kingdom of God" (Gal. 5:19-21). A fact
that must not be ignored today is that a number of these Catholics die cut off
from the sacraments of the Church because they are still living in an invalid
marriage. The impossibility of reconciling a number of these invalid marriages
in the Catholic Church, along with the difficulty of abandoning an invalid
marriage once a family is formed, argues for a prompt and honest response to
these marriages right from the start. Should a Catholic attend such a wedding
ceremony? Should he attend only the reception following the ceremony, or just
send a gift or card? Or ought he do none of these? This article is an attempt
to evaluate certain pastoral answers to these questions recently adopted by
both pastors and laity in the United States.
Traditionally, Catholics did not participate in
invalid marriage celebrations because it was seen as approval to adultery or
fornication. As invalid marriages increased among Catholics, however, moralists
began to de-emphasize the danger of scandal from these celebrations. For
example, Msgr. Raymond T. Rosier, nationally known during the 1970s for his
syndicated column answering moral questions for Catholics, stated that
"Attendance at a wedding shower or giving a gift does not today mean
approval of marriage."1 Msgr. Bosler implied that this applies to parents
attending invalid weddings, since most relatives and friends would understand
and sympathize with the parents. Once more, according to Msgr. Bosler, ".
. . it is quite possible that more scandal might be given to Protestants by
what could appear to be a lack of love and interest in their child were the
parents to avoid the wedding."2
Parents must manifest disapproval
More than a decade later Fr. Frank Sheedy
offered another version of this new pastoral approach in "Ask Me a
Question" of the July 22, 1984 issue of Our Sunday Visitor. When Fr. Frank
Sheedy was asked about the possibility of parents being present for their
child's invalid wedding, he stated that "some pastors would permit a
presence in such a case as long as the child was clearly aware that the parents
disapproved of their action."3 According to Fr. Sheedy, attendance is
justified on the ground that one should not "irretrievably cut off the
relationship with a son or daughter."4 Two years later in the same column
of Our Sunday Visitor Fr. Sheedy commented more extensively on the wisdom of
attending an invalid marriage of a divorced person in these words: There are
three things that have to be considered here. One, we cannot cooperate in the
wrong of another. Thus it would be forbidden for a Catholic to take an active
part (bridesmaid, best man, etc.) in such a wedding. Second, one cannot give
seeming approval to an illicit act. Third is family harmony, which is
particularly important for parents and siblings. If the person is fully aware of
their disapproval of such a ceremony, I would permit parents and siblings to
attend so that family lines of communication may be kept open and the door not
closed. Other relatives and friends I would counsel to avoid the ceremony but
attend the reception. This way they let the person know that while not
approving of his or her actions, they still care for the person and do not want
to end the relationship. People who have followed this counsel tell me that it
works well. However, there may be a case where an uncle, aunt or godparent
might feel obliged to attend the wedding for the sake of family harmony. This
would be permitted as long as the Catholic relative was truly aware of personal
disapproval.5
This pastoral advice of Fr. Sheedy, which
permits Catholics to attend invalid marriages, is similar to the official
position of a number of dioceses in the United States. Fr. Charles Bober of the
Pittsburgh Diocese, for example, states that: There is a PastoralManual in use
within the Diocese of Pittsburgh. It states that "As a rule, Catholics
should not attend or participate in marriage ceremonies which are invalid.
However, when such attendance cannot be construed as approval and when there
are" serious reasons for attendance (such as retention of Christian ties
of family or friendship, or the founded hope of contact for future
reconciliation) such attendance may be justified."6
The present practice of Catholics attending
invalid marriages in the United States goes far beyond any limits set down by
recent pastoral moralists and diocesan statutes. If one scans the wedding
announcements in the societal section of one's home-town newspaper, he will
find Catholic names listed time and again as best men, bridesmaids, formal
attendants, and ushers at weddings not approved by the Church. Reports of
Catholics being ridiculed by family members for not attending invalid marriages
of relatives indicates that a type of reverse legislation has taken root. The
unwritten rule now seems to be that the Catholic must attend the invalid
wedding of a loved one, and the exception, for which the Catholic will receive
much flack, is to avoid these celebrations. Let us evaluate this new pastoral
approach permitting parents to attend the invalid marriages of their children
by examining the theories of Msgr. Bosler and Fr. Sheedy.
Bible reflects two types of scandal
In order to clearly understand the question
about scandal in relation to attending invalid weddings, one must first recall
that there are two types of scandal mentioned in Sacred Scripture. There is the
scandal arising out of evil mentioned by Jesus Christ in a well-known passage
from the Bible: "Scandals will inevitably arise, but woe to him through
whom they come. He would be better off thrown into the sea with a millstone around
his neck than giving scandal to one of these little ones" (Luke 17:1-2).
Then, there is the scandal from good actions which comes from Christ himself
(Luke 2:34). This second type of scandal involves the truth that, like Christ,
all Christians must suffer and die rather than yield to sin to attain eternal
life. This is the scandal of the cross (Matt. 16:21-27). About this kind of
scandal Jesus says: "Blest is the man who finds no stumbling block in
me" (Matt. 11:16). In today's materialistic and permissive society, the
only absolute imperative seems to be the avoidance of pain. Following the
sexual revolution, too many Catholics in the United States believe that it is
wrong to require children to suffer for the sake of chastity and purity.
Because parental avoidance of weddings usually involves both parents and
children in the pain of misunderstanding and rejection, parental avoidance of
weddings is a "cultural heresy."7 Consequently, Msgr. Bosler fears
that avoidance of a child's invalid wedding by parents, out of fidelity to
Christian Law, will be interpreted by others as a lack of love and interest in
their child.
Msgr. Bosler, however, confuses the scandal of
the cross with the scandal of evil. For it has never been the Christian
philosophy of love to yield to impurity and infidelity in the face of
misunderstanding so that others might not feel rejected. If it had been, John
the Baptist would have never enraged the feelings of Herodias at the cost of
his own life over the matter of her adultery (Mark 6:14-29 and Matt. 14:1-12),
nor would Saints Agnes and Maria Goretti have been honored as Christian Martyrs
for infuriating their suitors by rejecting their sexual advances. In other
words, if the early Christians had compromised Christ's teaching on chastity to
spar the feeling of others, Christianity would have never made it to the
twentieth century. Scandal arising from following the Law of Christ is not only
permitted, it is even desirable! Karl Rahner was correct when he stated that in
our pluralistic modem world people should be encouraged to give witness to
Christianity "even if their environment is scandalized."8
Msgr. Hosier's theory, that parental attendance
at invalid weddings does not mean approval nor cause scandal, hinges entirely
upon his claim that even if the parents attend these invalid wedding
celebrations, friends and relatives will still understand that the parents
disapprove of the invalid marriage. Msgr. Bosler probably thought that the
faith of Catholics in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s was so
strong that almost all Catholics believed that marrying invalidly was evil. The
difficulty with Msgr. Hosier's theory today is that recent parochial studies
following the sexual revolution show that many Catholics in the United States
no longer believe that marrying invalidly is evil. Consequently, it makes
little sense today to claim that relatives and friends of Catholic parents who
attend invalid marriages will understand that these parents disapprove of these
marriages.9
Some approve invalid marriages
What is even more damaging to Msgr. Hosier's
theory is the fact that the change among Catholics from disapproval to approval
of invalid marriages surfaces about a decade or so after Msgr. Bosler first
began advising Catholics through the public media to attend the invalid
marriages of then- loved ones. It is most difficult to believe that this change
on the part of Catholics toward approving invalid marriages is not in some way
linked to Catholics attending invalid marriages for the past ten years or more.
It certainly appears that Msgr. Bosler was wrong when he advised that attending
invalid marriages does not mean approval and does not cause scandal. Whatever
credibility Msgr. Hosier's theory had decades ago, it certainly has less today!
Proof that Msgr. Hosier's (no scandal) theory has lost its appeal is that
recent moralists, like Fr. Sheedy, insist that the children be made
"clearly aware" that the parents disapprove of the marriage before
the parents attend the wedding celebrations. Obviously, the need for
clarification implies that scandal will be caused. The explanation to the child
by the parents is supposed to cancel or wipe out the scandal from parental
attendance at the wedding celebrations. The problem here, however, is that it
is impossible for parents to make the child "clearly aware" of
parental disapproval of the invalid marriage when the child knows full well
that the parents are attending the wedding celebrations.
One should recall St. Anthony of Padua's sound
advice about teaching morality when he stated that "actions speak louder
than words."10 It may be possible for parents to convince then: son or
daughter that they disapprove of the invalid wedding, but these parents will
not convince their child that they seriously disapprove. Any high school
teacher knows that the only way to inform students that you are serious about
anything is to back up words with action. Similarly, the only way for
parents to convince their child that they seriously disapprove of the invalid
marriage is to avoid the wedding celebrations altogether. If one
follows Fr. Sheedy's pastoral advice, however, not only will actions supporting
parental disapproval be lacking, but, instead, the parent's actions will
contradict their words of disapproval. When words and actions collide, the best
that can be hoped for is that the child will be confused, and the worst that
can happen is that the child will be more influenced by the actions than by the
words. The same must be said for Fr. Sheedy's advice that the friends and
relatives might avoid the wedding ceremony, but attend the wedding reception.
Recall that Fr. Sheedy required, as a necessary condition for parental
attendance of the wedding celebrations, that the child be "fully,"
"truly," or "clearly aware" of parental disapproval.
Inconsistency, whether it be in words or actions, can never be a basis for
clarity.
We cannot cooperate in a sin
But there is something more than scandal that is
fundamentally wrong with attending an invalid wedding celebration. Fr. Sheedy,
himself, stated that, first of all, "we cannot cooperate in the wrong of
another." It would be illicit, then, to formally cooperate in the evil act
of adultery or fornication by cooperating in an invalid marriage. Thus, as Fr.
Sheedy says, "it would be forbidden for a Catholic to take an active part
(bridesmaid, best man, etc.) in such a wedding." Fr- Sheedy, however, must
be limiting his consideration of the couple's formal act of adultery or
fornication just to the formal exchange of invalid marriage vows since he
limits formal cooperation in this act of adultery or fornication just to being
a formal member of the wedding party. But the formal act of adultery or
fornication of an invalidly-marrying couple certainly includes the attempted
consummation of these invalid wedding vows in the couple's act of sexual
intercourse on the night of the wedding. It is precisely the promise of this
act which makes the invalid wedding ceremony evil.
Now, according to sound traditional moral
theology, if one "concurs" in the will and attention of another doing
an evil act, or, if one's own action "influences" the evil act of
another, then, one is formally cooperating in evil. "Consequently, anyone
who concurs in the will and intention of an invalidly marrying couple to have
sexual intercourse on the night of their wedding, or anyone who influences such
an act of sexual intercourse, is formally cooperating in adultery or
fornication. It is obvious, however, that: giving away the bride; throwing rice
and kisses; giving hugs and handshakes of support; sending congratulatory cards
and gifts; and even singing and dancing at the following reception all concur
in the will and intention of the couple to complete their wedding vows with the
act of sexual intercourse on the night of their wedding. Because these actions
all encourage the invalidly-marrying couple to some degree (be it ever so
slight) to consummate their invalid marriage on the night of their wedding,
they all influence the couple's act of adultery or fornication. All who
knowingly do such things, therefore, are formally cooperating in the evil act
of adultery or fornication. Some Catholics believe that they are justified in
attending an invalid marriage because they intend to support the invalidly-marrying
couple, but not the invalid marriage, itself. But these Catholics intend to
support the invalidly marrying couple by means of supporting (attending) the
invalid marriage. And to do so is to adopt an old pagan theory that the end
justifies the means, which was rejected by St. Paul (Rom. 3:8) and by Pope Paul
VI in his encyclical, Humanae Vitae, when the Pope stated that "it is not
licit, even for the gravest reasons, to do evil so that good may follow
therefrom."l2 Against the theory that one can have a good reason to
formally cooperate hi evil, Genicot said that "formal cooperation hi sin
is always illicit." and Bernard Raring stated that "It is never
permitted, directly or indirectly, to cooperate in an act which is in itself
evil, even though one anticipates the very greatest good as a result of the
act."13
End does not justify means
Sometimes the wrong of formal cooperation in a
specific evil act can be more easily seen when it is paralleled with formal
cooperation in another act which is more obviously evil - like abortion. What
pastor or moral theorist, for example, would advise a disapproving husband or
parent to show up at the abortion clinic to hold his wife or daughter's hand
and comfort her through the ordeal of abortion to support her (but not the
abortion!), or to avoid irretrievably cutting off his relationship with her?
Yet, this parallels the pastoral advice to Catholics which states that they
should attend the invalid marriage of their loved ones to support them or to
avoid irretrievably cutting off their relationship with them.
Influencing, supporting, concurring in, or
celebrating the evil act of adultery or fornication by formally cooperating in
an invalid marriage out of a so-called motive of love is also inconsistent with
the gospel. No one loved sinners more than Jesus Christ, yet he avoided their
evil acts entirely. While Jesus Christ did not shun Mary Magdalene, he
certainly did shun her sin of impurity, and he ordered her to do the same when
he said: "But from now on, avoid this sin" (John 8:11). If a Catholic
attends an invalid wedding of a loved one, attends the reception following the
ceremony, or just sends a congratulatory card or gift, he cannot claim he is
acting out of love, because, as St. Paul states, "Love does not rejoice in
what is wrong but with the truth" (1 Cor. 13:6). Love is always honest!
The idea of a Christian cooperating in the evil
act of adultery or fornication by attending an invalid marriage seems so
contrary to correct reasoning and Sacred Scripture that one wonders why so many
Catholics today attempt to justify it. Fr. Sheedy expresses the main reason
when he stated that one should not "irretrievably cut off the relationship
with a son or daughter." When Catholic parents have to say "no"
to their children and break the unity and peace of the family, the Catholic
parents often feel that they are the ones who are doing something wrong and
un-Christian. It is at these times that the reason must prevail over emotion.
Catholics must recall that, while honesty and chastity are absolute moral
values for which a Christian may even have to give his life (St. John the
Baptist, St. Agnes, St. Maria Goretti, etc.), filial friendship or family unity
is not. Our Lord, himself, has said: Do not suppose that my mission on earth is
to spread peace. My mission is to spread, not peace, but division. I have come
to set a man at odds with his father, a daughter with her mother,
daughter-in-law with her mother-in-law: in short, to make a man's enemies those
of his own household. Whoever loves father or mother, son or daughter, more
than me is not worthy of me. he who will not take up his cross and come after
me is not worthy of me. (Matt. 10:34-38)
As painful as it is, invalidly-marrying couples
must clearly understand that insofar as they reject the moral teaching of Jesus
Christ concerning the sixth commandment, it is Christ's will mat they be
separated from then- parents, the Christian community, and even Christ himself.
In the same way the parents must understand that it is Christ's will that the
parents embrace the cross of division rather than lay it down in a false
gesture of moral unity. As the primary teachers of their children in the
Catholic faith, parents have the solemn responsibility to clearly teach to
their children the truth that sin separates one from Christ. So if the
invalidly-marrying son or daughter interprets parental avoidance of the wedding
celebrations as a sign of her separation from the Christian community of her
parents, then this is good - because it is the truth! Again, there is no way to
clearly communicate this truth to an invalidly-marrying son or daughter other
than by avoiding the wedding celebrations altogether. What must not be
overlooked here is that it is the rejection of the gospel by the invalidly-marrying
son or daughter that is the primary cause of separation, not Christ or the
parents. The claim on the part of pastoral moral theorists, therefore, that
parental attendance at invalid weddings is justified on the grounds that the
parents should not "irretrievably cut off' their children must be rejected
as false and as bad psychology. The notion of parents "irretrievably
cutting off' their son or daughter merely by following their own conscience
turns out to be a case of inverted logic. Who is cutting off whom? No one is
demanding that the parents shun their invalidly-marrying child, but only that
they shun the marriage. As long as Mom and Dad keep the lines of communication
open from their side, no one is being irretrievably cut off. If a son or
daughter, however, refuses to associate with the parents following the wedding,
he or she is cutting off the parents, not vice versa. It is downright immoral
to make the parents feel guilty for following their consciences, especially
when their consciences are formed according to Christ and his Church. It is the
children who are out of step with the gospel, not the parents. Let up put the
responsibility for the break-up where it belongs. The very justification
offered by those who favor the new pastoral approach fosters immaturity in the
young by stripping them of responsibility for their own actions.
Adults suffer moral defeatism
Although the new pastoral theorists do not state
it, they could be yielding to popular pragmatic parental thinking which goes something
like this: "My son (or daughter) is going to marry outside the Church
anyway, so we might as well make the best of a bad situation." While this
course of action may appear to be a benevolent act of diplomacy and prudence,
it presumes that the son or daughter will do evil. This attitude fits so well a
culture in which numerous minor seminaries, aspirancy convents, and Catholic
schools have close even though these institutions had more students than when
they originally opened. The main problem here is not with the young, but with
the adults who are suffering from moral defeatism. Contrary to popular opinion,
it is possible for a son or daughter to master their sexual desires and
heroically follow Christ's teaching on chastity and marriage. It is even
possible for a son or daughter to call off a marriage prior to the wedding
ceremony, or to reverse it soon after. But this is likely to occur only when
parents struggle with their children to get them to do good and avoid evil
because they expect their children to succeed. If pastors and moral theorists
are to reverse the plague of invalid marriages among Catholics in the United
States today, they must avoid a pastoral approach in these matters that
"throws in the towel" on the moral life of our children. Rather, the
pastors and moral theorists must adopt an approach which encourages adults to
hope in the young by giving them the opportunity to be responsible for their
own moral actions. But for this to be possible, both parents and children must
be made clearly aware of the evil of invalid marriages and the immorality of
formal cooperation in these celebrations. This means that pastors must engage
in some tough preaching and teaching from the pulpit This will be somewhat
unpopular, but part of the pastor's job is preaching the word is "... to
stay with the task whether convenient or inconvenient" (2 Tim. 4:2). This
is surely part of the burden of the gospel, but the young are worth it!
Footnotes
1 Raymond T. Bosler, What a Modern Catholic
Believes About Moral Problems (Chicago: The Thomas More Press, 1971), p. 73.
2 Bosler, p. 71.
3 Fr. Frank Sheedy, "Ask Me a
Question," Our Sunday Visitor (July 22, 1984), p. 11.
4 Fr. Frank Sheedy, "Ask Me a
Question," Our Sunday Visitor (July 22, 1984), p. 11.
5 Fr. Frank Sheedy, "Ask Me a
Question," Our Sunday Visitor (May 11, 1986), p. 18. My underline.
6 Charles Bober, "Questions for Fr.
Bober," Pittsburgh Catholic (June 6, 1986), p. 4.
7 Daniel E. Pilarczyk, "On Preaching
Heresy," America (February 22, 1986), p. 135.
8 Karl Rahner and Herbert Borgrimler,
Theological Dictionary (New York: Crossroads, 1981), p. 465.
9 James S. Young, "The Divorced in the
Parish Community Today," New
Catholic World (November/December, 1985), pp.
272-275.
10 St. Anthony of Padua, Sermon, 1,226, in The
Liturgy of the Hours, vol. 3 (New York: Catholic Book Publishing Co., 1975), p.
1470.
11 Ed. Genicot, S.I. etlos. Salsmans,
S.l.Jnstitutiones Theologiae Moralis, Caput 11 §6,235, Notiones, editio
decimaseptima ed. A. Gortebeck, S.I. vol. 1 (Brussels: Uitgeveriz Universum,
N.V. 1951), pp. 184-185; Bernard Raring, C.SS.R., The Law of Christ, vol. 1
trans, by Edwin G. Kaiser, C.PP.S. (Westminister, MD: The Newman Press, 1963),
p. 293.
12 Pope Paul VI, "On the Regulation of
Birth (Humanae Vitae)" No. 14 (Washington, D.C.: United States Catholic
Conference, 1968), p. 9.
13 Genicot, Asserta. 1, p. 185; Haring p. 293.
Interesting analysis. Coming from the perspective of a presumed Catholic family, the morality seems pretty clear-cut. I think where you get into some interesting (and difficult) situations is when you have Protestant (or even non-Christian) family members entering into questionable marriages. For example, one or both persons are divorced. Since there is (for the most part, at least) no Protestant equivalent of annulment, it would seem like a Catholic would be always forbidden from attending any marriage of a civilly divorced Protestant (as long as the spouse survives). This could make things difficult in particular situations in which , were the original marriage Catholic, grounds for annulment may have existed. Thankfully I've not been invited to any such weddings since becoming a Catholic. If nothing else, this highlights the sad state of affairs in in having our separated brethren being separated in such a way.
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