Resources

General Information on the Sacrament of Marriage

Catechism of the Catholic Church
Click above to access the start of the content on this sacrament. Once on the website, hit ‘Next’ to proceed to the following article.


Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
Click on the link to access the contents page. Scroll down and click on the heading ‘The Sacraments at the service of Communion and Mission’. Then scroll down to read the questions and answers on the Sacrament of Matrimony.


American Catholic
This website offers links to articles on the sacrament as well as questions and answers related to Marriage.


Catholic Answers
A link to an article entitled ‘The Permanence of Matrimony’


May separated spouses receive Communion?
Link to an article by Fr. Vincent Twomey, SVD, courtesy of The Word magazine.



Marriage Preparation and Guidance

Accord
Website of the Catholic organisation in Ireland that seeks to promote the Christian view of marriage as well as helping those couples preparing for and experiencing marriage.


Getting Married
A website aimed especially at those couples that are preparing to get married.


Retrouvaille
Website for the programme that aims to help, heal and renew those couples who are experiencing difficulties in their married lives.


Preparation for the Sacrament of Marriage
A document produced by the Pontifical Council for the Family and dating from 27 May 1996. It is aimed at explaining the significance of the sacrament to those preparing for it.



Church Documents on Marriage and the Family

Humanae Vitae
Encyclical Letter of Pope Paul VI dating from 25 July 1968. It deals with the question of the regulation of births in marriage and addresses the proper and improper use of marriage and sex.


Familiaris Consortio
An Apostolic Exhortation of Pope John Paul II from 15 December 1981. It stresses the importance of the Christian family in the modern world.


Theology of the Body
An index page for the series of teachings on this subject by Pope John Paul II given over the course of numerous General Audiences. They address the many issues of human love in the plan of God.


The Truth and Meaning of Human Sexuality
These guidelines for education within the family were published by the Pontifical Council for the Family on 21 November 1995. They are designed to help Catholic parents transmit the values of love and chastity to their children, thereby witnessing to the vocation of marriage.


Christian Marriage – Bishops of Ireland
The contents of the Lenten Pastoral of 1969 on this subject.


Love is for Life
A Pastoral Letter of the Irish Bishops produced at Lent in 1985. It discusses the many aspects of marriage, family and sexual ethics from the Catholic perspective.

 
Difficulties

RECONCILIATION

God willed that a man and woman should be joined together in a permanent union. Living this reality can be difficult but sustained by faith and prayer it is certainly achievable. Jesus would not have reiterated his Father’s intention for marriage if it was beyond the realisation of men and women. Nothing is impossible with the help of God. If you are experiencing problems as a couple please feel able to approach members of the parish community to seek assistance. There are many individuals and groups who can offer support and advice. Please consult the resources section to access the websites of some organizations that may be in a position to help.

 

SEPARATED AND DIVORCED

In the event that joint living between spouses becomes practically impossible, for serious reasons, it can be legitimate to live apart. However, in such a scenario the marriage bond is not broken and therefore the persons are not free in the eyes of God to contract a new union. The Christian community should encourage reconciliation in such a scenario. Similarly, a spouse may find that he or she is unjustly abandoned and becomes the victim of an undesired civil divorce. Again, this does not rupture the marriage bond that has been validly sealed in Christ. People in these difficult situations remain in full communion with the Church and can participate wholly in its life provided they do not enter a new union while their legitimate spouse is alive.

A person who has been civilly divorced and remarries is in a different situation however. Ever faithful to Christ’s instruction, the Church teaches that the remarriage of persons divorced from a living, lawful spouse contravenes the plan and law of God. Such a person is not separated from the Church and is encouraged to live a life of faith, prayer and provide for the Christian education of their children. However, sacramental absolution or reception of Holy Communion are impossible while their new arrangement remains unregularized in the eyes of the Church.

 
Preparation

If you have decided to get married in Church then the parish community offers its congratulations to you. To succeed at anything in life it is necessary to prepare diligently. In relation to marriage there may be a lot of focus on the logistics of the wedding day. However, to be ready to live out marriage for life in conformity with God’s will it is important to understand its origins and purposes. The Church therefore encourages her members to appreciate that marriage is not a mere social convention or contract – it is a relationship established by God and made a sacrament by his Son. If we acknowledge this then we will see more clearly how marital love is an imitation of Christ’s love for us all. This in turn allows us to understand why the values associated with marriage are so important to its success. Fidelity, mutual respect and total self-giving between husband and wife are commitments that are integral to fulfilling the relationship established by God.

MatrimonyAn awareness of the spiritual significance of marriage and prayerful preparation for the reception of the sacrament will open you up to the grace God offers. This in turn will sustain you through married life. These benefits will not render you immune from the difficulties and worries every married couple faces. However, it will allow you to keep a perceptive on these problems and, united in faith and love for one another, you will find that obstacles are more easily overcome.

The parish encourages its members to wholeheartedly support those who are preparing for marriage and those who have recently received the sacrament. The example of couples who have lived happily together in service to God is a source of great encouragement to people starting out in this vocation. In a culture that increasingly lauds instant gratification and fulfilment it is all the more urgent to be close to those who are committing themselves to an irrevocable union of love in marriage. The general well-being of Christian society is closely bound up with the healthy state of married and family life. Please remember married couples and their families in your prayers.


Practical Advice

For couples planning to marry, please make contact with a priest of the parish at least three months in advance of your intended wedding date.

Couples preparing for marriage must undergo a pre-marriage course. This is designed to foster a proper understanding of the duties and obligations inherent in Christian marriage. This will be arranged in conjunction with the priest. Please consult some of the useful websites in the resources section.

Since 1 January 2004 the law in Northern Ireland requires that a couple apply for permission to marry. This is complied with by filling out a ‘Notice of Marriage’ that can be obtained from the local registrar’s office. The form can be returned to the Registrar of Marriages in the District 12 months before the wedding date but not later than 2 weeks before that date. For more information consult the website of the Northern Ireland Registrar by clicking here .

 
Introduction

It is a time of tremendous joy and expectation when a man and woman decide to commit to each other in marriage. There is understandable excitement surrounding the wedding day. Attention generally turns well in advance to arrangements regarding clothes, the reception and entertainment. Certainly all of these aspects are important for a communal celebration. However, our Catholic faith reminds us that the wedding day merely marks the beginning of a permanent journey of love in union with Christ. Marriage is of much greater significance than a mere contract. In fact it is a way of life and a form of vocation for those who are called to it. Moreover, marriage is a sacrament that confers grace on the man and woman who are joined together in Holy Matrimony. The fruits of this grace will strengthen them in experiencing married love in the manner its creator, God the Father, intended it to be lived. When the guests are assembled in Church on your wedding day remember that the most important person present with you is Our Lord Jesus Christ.

"The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between baptized persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament."
[Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1601]

God created man out of love and in turn calls him to love. Man is created in the image and likeness of God who is himself love. Since God created man and woman, their mutual love becomes an image of the absolute and unfailing love with which God loves man. Man and woman were indeed created for each other, for God said, ‘It is not good that man should be alone’ (Genesis 2:18). In blessing them God said ‘Be fruitful and multiply,…’ (Genesis 1:28). In marriage God calls a man and a woman to an intimate communion of life and love between them. Jesus recalled the Creator’s plan for an unbreakable union between them by describing the state of spouses joined in marriage: ‘So they are no longer two, but one flesh’ (Matthew 19:6).

MatrimonyThus we can see that marriage is not a purely human institution. It is God who is the author of marriage. Therefore, even if in civil law attempts are increasingly made to redefine and under-privilege marriage, Christians are always obliged to understand it in the way God intended it and to honour it accordingly. Catholics are called to live out marriage in fidelity to the goods and requirements of marital love as designed by God.

In his earthly ministry Jesus restored the initial order of marriage as willed by his Father. For example, Our Lord abrogated the permission given by Moses to divorce one’s wife. Instead, Jesus reaffirmed the original indissolubility of the union between a man and a woman. He determined that ‘what therefore God has joined together, let no man put asunder’ (Matthew 19:6). The initial quotation from Scripture recalls the wedding feast at Cana. This is the occasion on which Jesus performed his first sign. The Church sees this as confirmation of the goodness of marriage and the proclamation that henceforth marriage will be an effective sign of Christ’s presence.

Christ raised marriage to the dignity of a sacrament. It is through the sacrament that the spouses obtain the strength to live out their vocation together and remain true to the requirements of marriage. Their love for each other mirrors that which Christ, the Bridegroom, feels for his spouse, the Church. Our Lord gave himself totally and selflessly for his people on the cross and the Apostle Paul emphasizes this analogy when speaking of marital love:
‘Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her’ (Ephesians 5:25-26).


The sacrament of Matrimony signifies the union of Christ and the Church. It gives spouses the grace to love each other with the love with which Christ has loved his Church; the grace of the sacrament thus perfects the human love of the spouses, strengthens their indissoluble unity, and sanctifies them on the way to eternal life.
[Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1661] 


The Marriage Ceremony

The celebration of marriage between two Catholic faithful normally takes place during Holy Mass because of the connection of all the sacraments with the Paschal mystery of Christ. It is important to remember that in this sacrament it is the spouses who act as the ministers of Christ’s grace. They confer the sacrament of Matrimony upon each other by expressing their consent before the Church. It is the consent – freely and consciously given – that makes the marriage. It is the expressed wish of a man and a woman to give themselves definitively to each other with the goal of living a union of faithful and fruitful love. The priest (or deacon) receives this consent in the name of the Church and gives the blessing of the Church. Together with the witnesses the couple visibly expresses the fact that marriage is an ecclesial reality. Marriage is celebrated publicly because it is a liturgical act and a state of life in the Church.

The effects of the sacrament are two-fold:
1) It creates a bond
This bond between the spouses is perpetual and exclusive. Sealed by God himself a marriage concluded and consummated between baptized persons can never be dissolved.


2) It confers the necessary grace
This is designed to perfect the couple’s love and to strengthen their indissoluble unity. Through this grace Christ dwells within the couple and helps them to rise after they fall; forgive one another; bear one another’s burdens; attain holiness in married life; and welcome and educate children.



The Good and Requirements of Marital Love

A married couple is joined together in a deep personal unity. Beyond coming together in one flesh it leads to the forming of one heart and soul. This is a totality marked by the act of mutual self-giving, just as Christ offered himself entirely to his Church. Thus, Christian marriage entails the following necessary characteristics:

i) Unity and indissolubility
Love between Catholic spouses is undivided and exclusive. A husband and wife should accord each other equal personal dignity in mutual and unreserved affection. Spouses grow together in communion and this is completed by communion in Jesus Christ through the sacrament. A couple’s common faith and reception of the Eucharist deepens their bond still further.


ii) Fidelity
God’s love for us is definitive and irrevocable. Married couples share in this love and it sustains them in turn. By their own faithfulness a husband and wife serve as witnesses to God’s faithful love. God did not give his Son to us in part, nor did he promise to love us conditionally. So spouses, who strive to imitate God’s love between them, must follow this example for their good and the benefit of their children.


iii) Openness to fertility
From the beginning God wished to associate men and women in a special way with his own creative work. Hence, married love directs spouses to co-operate valiantly with the love of the Creator and Saviour, who through them will enrich family life. The education of children in the faith by parents reveals just how marriage and family constitute a vocation truly at the service of life.


The Christian home is the place where children receive the first proclamation of the faith. For this reason the family home is rightly called "the domestic church," a community of grace and prayer, a school of human virtues and of Christian charity.
[Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1666]

These are the virtues integral to Christian marriage. Yet because the sin of our first parents ruptured the communion between man and woman, the martial union is very often threatened by discord and infidelity. Among grave sins contrary to the sacrament of marriage are: adultery; polygamy; divorce and the refusal of fertility which deprives married life of the gift of children. However, through the grace conferred in the sacrament of marriage God has offered us the help, in his infinite mercy, to achieve marital union in accordance with his original divine intention.


Virginity for the sake of the kingdom

Not all persons are called to the vocation of marriage. Christ has invited many men and women to renounce the great good of marriage and to follow him in a way that manifests most clearly the absolute primacy of love of him and the expectation of his return. It is virginity for the sake of the Kingdom of heaven and like Marriage it is sustained by grace which comes from the Lord himself.

 
Resources

General Information on the Sacrament of Holy Orders

Catechism of the Catholic Church
Click on the link above to access the start of the content on this sacrament. Once on the website, hit ‘Next’ to proceed to the following article.

Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
Click on the link to access the contents page. Scroll down and click on the heading ‘The Sacraments at the service of Communion and Mission’. Then scroll down to read the questions and answers on the Sacrament of Holy Orders.

American Catholic
This web link offers articles on this sacrament as well as questions and answers related to Holy Orders.

Catholic Answers
A link to an article entitled ‘Call no man “Father”’?



Vocations

Armagh Priest
The Twitter link dedicated to those considering the diocesan priesthood in the Archdiocese of Armagh.

Conference of Diocesan Vocations Directors
A national website offering information and contacts for those interested in the priesthood in Ireland.

Vocations Ireland
The Umbrella body which takes responsibility for religious and missionary vocations in Ireland.

Fishers of Men
View the trailer to this promotional film on vocations to the priesthood. It was produced by Grassroots Films at the request of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. 

 

Church Documents on Priesthood

Sacerdotalis Caelibatus
An Encyclical Letter of Pope Paul VI promulgated on 24 June 1967. It affirms the validity of celibacy in the priesthood in the modern Church.

Ordinatio Sacerdotalis
A pronouncement by Pope John Paul II in the form of an Apostolic Letter on Reserving Priestly Ordination to Men Alone.

Letter to Priests
Address by Pope John Paul II on the occasion of Holy Thursday 2004


 
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