Citations
The Nullity of Marriage for Reason of Incapacity to Fulfill the Essential Obligations of Marriage, 1984
sonata of canon writings with false premise and false conslusions
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Vatican II never stated "gift of self" is canon law terminology for invalidating marriages
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analysis of disastrous results from inaccurate use of terminology
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properties of marriage are permenance and exclusivity
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Introduction
As judge and editor, Edward M. Egan is authoritative expert to define terms in canon 1095 2°, & 3°.
Canon 1095 describes people who are incapable of contacting marriage because of a grave lack of discretion of judgement (2°), or because of causes of a psychological nature (3°). These in-capabilities are defined by the canon law legislator, but they can be improperly defined by those who expect annulments for reasons contrary to the universal teaching of the Roman Catholic Church.
Can. 1095 The following are incapable of contracting marriage:
1° those who lack sufficient use of reason;
2° those who suffer from a grave lack of discretionary judgement concerning the essential matrimonial rights and obligations to be
mutually given and accepted;
3° those who, because of causes of a psychological nature,
are unable to assume the essential obligations of marriage.
In 1982, Edward Egan was one of six canonists who reviewed the new Code of Canon Law with His Holiness, Pope John Paul II, before its promulgation in 1983. Cardinal Egan, originally from Chicago, completed his seminary studies at the Pontifical North American College in Vatican City and was ordained in 1957. In 1958, he received a Licentiate in Sacred Theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University. In 1964, he earned a doctorate in Canon Law Summa Cum Laude from the Pontifical Gregorian University. From 1971 to 1985 he served in Rome as a judge of the Tribunal of the Sacred Roman Rota. He was also a professor of Canon Law at the Pontifical Gregorian University.
It is hard to argue with Edward Egan's authoritative qualifications to explain canon law. He both helped write it in 1983, and he served on the equivalent of the Supreme Court for the Catholic Church for fourteen years. Egan wrote this article below, explaining the incapacity to content to marriage, for the scholarly journal of Vatican's Tribunal of the Roman Rota in 1984.
Bibliography
Egan, Edward M. "The Nullity of Marriage for Reason of Incapacity to Fulfill the Essential Obligations of Marriage." Ephemerides Iuris Canonici Vol. 40. No. 1-4 (1984): p 9-34.
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Contents
I. That to which one gives consent in marriage is marriage and nothing else.
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II. One consents to
marriage by giving to and receiving from another of the opposite sex not
the right to marriage nor even the right to a marriage relationship, but
rather the exclusive right to conjugal acts, as long, as both parties are
alive.
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III. If "per absurdum" it were necessary for a valid marriage that the partners exchange
a right to a successful marriage relationship, only a perpetual, irremidiable
incapacity to posit such acts as might foster that relationship would render
the marriage invalid.
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IV. Nor does marriage
consent consist in or require the giving of oneself to one's partner or
the receiving of one's partner for oneself.
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V. If, again, "per absurdum", it were thought to be necessary for a valid marriage that
the partnere give themselves to each other, any question in marriage nullity
case as to whether they gave or were able to give enough of themselves
would have to be treated according to the approach proposed above regarding
the giving of a right to a succcessful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship.
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VI.No diocesan tribunal is empowered to declare
a marriage invalid by appealing to a "jurisprudence" according
to which valid marriage consent requires the exchange of a right to a successful,
conjugal, interpersonal relationship, no matter in what terms that right
might be described.
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VII.Only two groups of psychic afflictions have
thus far been established by canonical jurisprudence, in the precise and
proper sense of this formula, as realities on the basis of which a diocesan
tribunal may declare a marriage invalid for reason of incapacity in either
Partner or both to fulfill the essential obligations of marriage, namely
(I): satyriasis in males and nymphomania in females, because of which the
afflicted is after marriage even for a time incapable of fidelity to his
or her Partner, and (2) sexual dysfunctions or aberrations, because
o f which the afflicted is after marriage irremediably incapable of the
marriage act.
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The Nullity of Marriage for Reason of Incapacity to Fulfill the Essential Obligations of Marriage
Page 9
Every year tens of thousands of marriages
are declared invalid by tribunals of Roman Catholic dioceses, especially
in the English-speaking world, because of an alleged incapacity, distinct
from impotence, in one or both of the partners to fulfill the essential
obligations of marriage. Evidently, no other ca put nullitatis matrimonii
even approaches this one in the frequency with which it is being invoked
in ecclesiasticcal marriage nullity cases today. Thus there would appear
to be no need to justify a discussion of it here. Indeed, one wonders why
it has occasioned so little literature over the past two decades in which
it has become so dominant. For among issues canonical, it would seem to
have no equal, first, in terms of its enduring impact upon the lives of
large numbers of the faithful, but also in terms of its implications regarding
the solidity of Catholic teaching in matters as fundamental as marriage
and family life.
The method which we will follow is
that which was adopted in a similar piece published in 1983 in the Ephemerides
iris canonize, under the title, «The Nullity of Marriage for
Reason of Insanity or Lack of Due Discretion of judgement » (vow. XXXIX,
pp. 9-54). We will therefore propose a series of principles and conclusions
in thesis form and comment on them one by one. Again, all footnotes
and bibliographical apparatus will be eschewed, since what we have to say
we wish to present without interruption, without presuming to involve others
in our affirmations, and without seeming to suggest that what has been
left obscure here might be clarified in books or articles elsewhere. The
author of these pages has written and published many Rote decisions concerning
incapacitas
adimplendi necessaria matrimonii onera, all embellished, at times profusely,
with references to tracts on law and
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psychiatry in various languages. He
now wishes to cut through whatever is accessory, peripheral, or merely
decorative in this matter and focus upon what Rota judges have in other
contexts rather grandly called «ipse argumenti nucleus» .
I. - That to which one
gives consent in marriage is marriage and nothing else.
Over the past several years, a new genre
of Canon Law essay has come into being. The format has been repeated so
often as virtually to constitute an art form, something on the order of
the sonnet or the sonata. The author opens by announcing with evident pleasure
that a wondrous, new discovery has recently been made regarding the nature
of marriage. The discovery is this: Whereas theologians and canonists
had for centuries held that Titius and Titia consent to conjugal acts on
their wedding day, in our more enlightened times we have come to know that
to which they actually consent is rather marriage itself.
The opening theme or premise having
been exposed and developed, the author then moves on to drawing a series
of conclusions from his and our discovery. And the conclusions, in
a variety of formulations, come more or less to these : (1) The «merely
physical» , «carnal» , even «animal» view of marriage which
so long stalked the unhappy path of Catholic theological and canonical
thinking has at last been abandoned; (2) In its place we are now to admit
a more «spiritual» , «human» , and «personal» understanding
of marriage in which the central issue is the relationship between the
partners, their mutual fulfillment, «completion» , integration,
and enrichment; (3) Hence, we are finally in a position to acknowledge
that a marriage in which such a relationship has not been achieved or at
least could not have been achieved in appropriate measure is invalid and
susceptible of being declared such by tribunals of the Roman Catholic Church.
Faced with commenting on this kind
of thing, one hardly knows where to begin. For not only is the premise
false, there does not even seem to be any reason why the conclusions might
flow from it were it other than false. Be that,
page 11
as it may, in this first section of
our paper we address ourselves only to the premise by asserting that, if
in the history of Catholic Theology and/or Canon Law anyone of stature
ever seriously suggested that the object of marriage consent might be something
other than marriage, that individual was not only mistaken but also at
odds with the explicit assertions or at least manifest assumptions of both
Thomas Aquinas (see, for example, his Summa theologiae, Suppl.,
quaest. XLVII) and Thomas Sanchez (see, for example, his De sancto Matrimonii
Sacramento, lib. II, disput. XXVIII, n. 4), of both Francis Suarez
(see, for example, his Opera omnia, Parisiis: Vives, 1856-1878,
tom. XIV, p. 783, n. 9, and tom. XV, P. 452, n. 18) and Francis Schmalzgrueber
(see, for example, his Jus ecclesiasticum universum, lib. IV, pars
I, tit. I, nn. 262263), of both John De Lugo (see, for example, his Tractatus
de Sacramentis in genere, disput. VIII. sect. VIII, _n. 129, and Tractatus
de justitia et jure, disput. XXII, sect. VII, nn. 159-16o) and John Prior
(see, for example, his decision of July 18, 1911 in S. R. Rotae Decisiones,
vol. III, decis. XXXII, n. 2), indeed, of both Peter Lombard (see, for
example, his Sententiae in quattuor libris distinctae, lib. IV,
dist. XXVIII, cc. 3-4) - and even the much-maligned Peter Cardinal Gasparri
(see, for example, his commentary on « his>) Canon 1134 in Tractatus
de Matrimonio, 2nd ed., vol. II, n. 1,191).
In our estimate, therefore, the new
discovery mentioned above is neither new nor a discovery. Who marries
does so by consenting to something which has never been in doubt among
Catholic theologians or canonists, and that something is marriage and nothing
else.
II. - One consents to
marriage by giving to and receiving from another of the opposite sex not
the right to marriage nor even the right to a marriage relationship, but
rather the exclusive right to conjugal acts, as long, as both parties are
alive.
Marriage is a reality which has been
constituted by the Divinity and which is not available to substantial alterations
by lesser beings. Thus, if Titius and Titia give to and receive from each
other, «until death do them part » , a moral faculty,
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denied everyone else, to perform together
acts which may by their very nature result in procreation, they marry.
If they do anything else, they do something other than marry. Or
at very least, no one has to date been able to identify any element or
elements which might be added to or subtracted from the traditionally recognized
object of that right which must be given and received by a couple when
they consent to marriage, without ending up with something which is simply
not marriage.
But perhaps you object that in some
quarters an addition has in fact been made, inasmuch as some now hold that
Titius and Titia, in order to marry, must also exchange the right to a
conjugal interpersonal relationship. Indeed, we believe we hear you
remarking with rising voice and perhaps a hint of impatience that, in the
most advanced of quarters, it is currently being taught that the conjugal
interpersonal relationship in question must be not only conjugal, interpersonal,
and relational, but also one or another or all of such agreeable qualities
as fulfilling, a completing, integrating, and enriching, if marriage in
the full sense of the word is to be had.
Let us treat the first addition first.
To do this, we must ask our reader to permit us a momentary brush with
Scholastic clarity. The word, «marriage» has two meanings
in virtually all languages, to wit : (1) the act of consent that is elicited
when a male exchanges with a female, and vice versa, the exclusive and
perpetual right to conjugal acts and which moralists and canonists have
for centuries styled «matrimonium in fieri», and (2) the
relationship that uniquely and inevitably results from these acts of consent
and which the selfsame moralists and canonists have for centuries styled
«matrimonium in facto essei».
It makes no difference whether
the first of these «marriages » is termed an act of conjugal consent,
a conjugal contract, or even a conjugal covenant, just as it makes no difference
whether the second is termed a conjugal union, a conjugal society, or even
a conjugal interpersonal relationship. For each set of three is but a group
of synonyms whose denotation is identical. When we say «marriage» ,
we mean either (I) the act of consent which in our Western culture is
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commonly played out before a public
official by a blushing lady with a bouquet in her hands and a nervous gentleman
with a boutonniere on his lapel, or (2) the condition or state of life
which is to be lived out by the afore-mentioned lady and gentleman from
the moment of consent forward.
With all of this in mind, we do not
hesitate to affirm that it is patently absurd to suggest that, in order
to consent to marriage (in order to effect a valid matrimonium in fieri),
one must give and receive the right to marriage (one must give and receive
the right to a matrimonium in facto esse). And should anyone
require reasons for anything so obvious, perhaps from the many at hand
we might simply choose the fact that there exists no such thing as a right
to marriage which is capable of being given or received. Titius enjoys
the right that he not be impeded from legitimate efforts to marry, and
so does Titia. Still, neither can give anyone the right to marry him or
her or even receive such a right from another. To speak, therefore, of
a «ius ad coniugalem relationem inter ersonalen» necessarily
being exchanged in order to marry validly is to use words which may sound
appealing or intriguing at first but which, upon a moment's reflection,
must be dismissed as devoid of any identifiable link with reality. In short,
if by «conjugal interpersonal relationship» you mean the state
or condition of being married, that is, matrimonium in facto esse,
no right to it is or need be given or received in order that a valid act
of marriage consent, matrimonium in fieri, be realized. Indeed,
no right to it is even available, to be given or received at least on this
side of Alice's looking-glass.
Our imagined objector (Oh, that he
were only imagined!) will surely not be satisfied with this. We can almost
hear him in our mind's ear protesting : «The conjugal interpersonal
relationship of which I speak is not to be reduced to a mere matrimonium
in facto esse. It is something much finer, much nobler, much more precious,
spiritual, human, and personal. It is the shared fulfillment of the parties,
their mutual completion and integration in virtue of their actualized `complementarity
', nay more, their truest, most profound, and most intimate enrichment» .
In the face of such rhetoric, many
over the past twenty years have simply retreated in confusion and disarray.
« Who» ,
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they seemed to plead, «would
even dare to challenge anything so high-sounding, so compassionate, so
` personalist ', so modern ?» .
Any thoughtful canonist, we would
hope. For while everyone of us, canonist or not, earnestly desires that
all married couples achieve the kind of fulfillment, «completion» ,
integration, and enrichment to which reference is made above, if they do
not or even cannot, it does not follow that their marriages are invalid.
And the reason is crystal clear: Between a marriage that is unsuccessful
or could not be other than unsuccessful because of certain qualities in
one or both of the spouses, and a marriage that is invalid, there is simply
no correlation. If there were, the divorce courts of the world could be
closed down and replaced with offices that do nothing more than pronounce
invalid those marriages which have proved to be unhappy for lack of fulfillment,
«completion» , integration, enrichment, and the like, or at least
those marriages in which the couple, when they married, were for reasons
of character, temperament, tastes, aspirations, and the like, quite unable
- in the current patois - to «make a go of it» .
In this vale of tears, however, there
are many members of both sexes who know what marriage is (no question,
therefore, of ignorance of the essential notes of marriage), who are not
insane (no question, therefore, of lack of use of reason), who consider
the wisdom of entering their marriage with at least that minimum measure
of deliberation which something as serious as marriage demands (no question,
therefore, of lack of due discretion of judgement in the precise and
proper sense o f this formula), who are under no psychological compulsion
to enter their marriage (no question, therefore, of lack of internal freedom),
who are psychologically capable of the marriage act (no question, therefore,
of psychic impotence, again in the precise and proper sense of this
formula), who are capable of standing by their commitment to perform
that act only with the other party as long as he or she be among the living
(no question, therefore, of incapacity to fulfill the essential obligations
of marriage, yet a third time in the precise and proper sense of this
formula), but who nevertheless, because of nature, nurture, or both,
offer no guarantees, evoke the
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gloomiest of forecasts, or - if you
insist are morally certain to fail, as regards conjugal fulfillment, completion,
integration, enrichment, or any other word or combination of words that
may be conjured up to signify a successful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship.
Nor has any legal system in history,
whether civil or religious, ever even suggested that such persons necessarily
marry invalidly. On the contrary, the marriages of such persons, when they
have proved to be utterly unsuccessful, are either said to be dissolved
in those societies which admit of divorce or pronounced by a public authority
no longer to require cohabitation. In brief, they are universally
understood to be valid and unsuccessful, two qualities which, in the juridical
traditions of all civilized communities known to us (from our study, for
example, of G. Prader's Il matrimonio nel mondo, Padova, 1970),
are quite autonomous or - to put it another way devoid of a relevant «inter-real»
relationship.
Are we then saying that a man, for
instance, who ignores his wife totally except in the marriage act (the
extreme case which, like all extreme cases, is regularly brought forward
only in extremis) is validly married? On the basis of such a meager
species facti, we confess we do not know. Still, most willingly do we concede
that, if at the time of his marriage the man in question were truly incapable
of a more relational behavior, his marriage was undoubtedly invalid for
reasons very much prior to and very much more basic than incapacity to
fulfill relational obligations. There are, you see, in the real world no
men (and neither are there any women), who know what marriage is, are not
insane, can sufficiently consider the wisdom of marrying, marry freely,
are capable of the marriage act and capable too of honoring their commitment
to the permanence and exclusivity of marriage, but who are somehow unable
to relate to a spouse except in intercourse. Such beings can be imagined,
like unicorns or mermaids ; but they do not exist.
« Very well» , you reply,
«let us abandon the extreme case. What about those persons whose
relational abilities are remarkably limited ? Are their marriages valid
?»
Again, we do not know, since the
species
facti is again inadequate. Nonetheless, we are confident we can
provide an
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answer that will serve for all possible
questions of this sort; and the answer, practically identical to the one
just proposed, is as follows: If the individual about whom we are concerned
knows what marriage is, is not insane, can sufficiently consider the wisdom
of marrying, marries. freely, is capable of the marriage act and capable
too of honoring his or her commitment to the permanence and exclusivity
of marriage, there can be no serious question of insufficient relational
capacity to marry. For a human being is an entity that relates to other
human beings as a unit and not in virtue of a «faculty > or whatever,
which is apart from intellect, will, emotions, and body, and whose distinct
function is to relate. Accordingly, when both partners at the time
of their marriage enjoy that fundamental, though considerable, soundness
of intellect; will, emotions, and `body` which precludes ignorance of the
essential notes of marriage, lack of use of reason, lack of due discretion
of judgement, lack of internal freedom, psychic impotence, and incapacity
to fulfill the essential obligations of marriage (all in the precise and
proper sense of these formulae), whoever accuses their marriage of invalidity
for lack of sufficient capacity to relate is simply operating outside the
limits of reality, given the substantial unity of the human person because
of which all human acts of the same individual - whether acts of knowing,
willing, relating, or anything else - are performed in virtue of the same
healthy or unhealthy intellect, will, emotions, and - according to the
nature of the act - body. In short, if you are just one person and you
can do all that, you can do this too.
We hasten, of course, to observe
that by «sufficient capacity to relate» we mean that minimum relational
ability in the absence of which a marriage would be clearly invalid for
defectus
habilitatis ad debitam nectendam consuetudinem (to invent a formula
which, because of its utter uselessness, cries to be forgotten), just as
by (sufficient capacity to deliberate) we mean that minimum deliberative
ability in the absence of which a marriage would be clearly invalid for
de
fectus debitae iudicii discretionis. We do not therefore have in mind
that ideal measure of geniality or congeniality which might ensure or at
least render highly probable a harmonious marriage relationship.
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Thus in resume: If a male and a female
can consent to marriage by exchanging a permanent and exclusive right to
perform the marriage act, they can marry validly; and there is no point
whatever in attempting to complicate the matter by claiming that they must
also be able to exchange a right to marriage (nonsense) or even a right
to a marriage relationship which is understood to mean a successful marriage
relationship, even if this never be said out loud. For, while there are
things in life which can be effectively obscured through artfully manipulated
absurdities and tautologies, marriage in its essentials is not among them.
It is just too common and everyday a reality.
III. - If "per absurdum" it were necessary for a valid marriage that the partners exchange
a right to a successful marriage relationship, only a perpetual, irremidiable
incapacity to posit such acts as might foster that relationship would render
the marriage invalid.
Rights and obligations go hand in hand.
I have a right that you do or do not do something; you have an obligation
to do that something or not to do it. Thus it is that obligations are either
affirmative
(to do something) or negative (not to do something).
Curiously, however, the two kinds
of obligations bind the persons obligated in different ways, inasmuch as
an affirmative obligation binds throughout its duration but not at every
moment, whereas a negative obligation binds not only throughout its duration
but at every moment as well.
...
page 20
IV. - Nor does marriage
consent consist in or require the giving of oneself to one's partner or
the receiving of one's partner for oneself.
The tendency toward Manicheanism will
probably never be totally eradicated. For when we look about us, we see
so much that is evil in things corporal that we cannot easily escape the
temptation -- and a temptation it is - to identify the carnal with the
bad or at least suppose the two to be somehow by nature linked.
Small wonder then that in an era
of widely diffused pornography, erotic theater, «adult» cinema,
and other similar outrages, even some Catholics find themselves strangely
embarrassed by the physical aspects of the «Great Sacrament» of
Matrimony and anxious, therefore, to «humanize» it and «personalize»
it, and thus to «spiritualize» it, by eliminating from their understanding
of marriage, or at least drastically muting, whatever is of the body. Nor
are they without allies, largely unwelcome, in this enterprise, such as
certain groups of feminists who consider the corporal dimensions of marriage
to be manifestations of male domination and certain groups of male homosexuals
who consider them a focus for discrimination in their regard.
...
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...
If a poet pens, something of this
sort, we may be charmed, just as if a pastor preaches something of this
sort, we may be inspired. For the acts to which married people bestow upon
each other a right are so intimate, human, and personal, that we can almost
think of marriage as though it entailed a gift of the married couple themselves,
one to the other. «Almost » , that is, poetically or rhetorically
as opposed to philosophically, juridically, precisely.
When Shelley announced that from
the throat of a skylark «there proceeds a rain of melody» like
that which comes from «rainbow clouds so bright to see» , his ornithology
was shaky, to say nothing of his climatology. His poetry, all the same,
was splendid. When Paul of Tarsus caught the attention of the Athenians
by pretending to explain to them the origins of a sculptured deity in their
main city square, his Comparative Religion was flawed. His pastoral eloquence,
however, was masterful. Still, what is permitted the poet and the pastor
is rightly denied - among others - the jurist, except, of course, when
the jurist be a canonist who occasionally has the good sense to set aside
his toga and ascend either Parnassus or the pulpit.
The Pastoral Constitution, «On
the Church in the Modern World» , of the Second Vatican Council or more
than one occasion referred to marriage as a mutual gift of self by the
married ; and lest perchance anyone fail to appreciate the patently non-legal
character of these references., the Fathers of the Council reminded one
another over and again on the Council floor, at Commission meetings, in
observations (modi) submitted to the Council secretariat, and in
responses to the
page 23
observations from the Council secretariat,
that they were not in their Pastoral Constitution speaking in «juridical
terms or categories» .
Nevertheless, their references were
seized upon as a substitute for the excessively corporal, physical, and
animal understanding of marriage that was alleged to be found in traditional
Canon Law; marriage came to be defined in juridical contexts as an exchange
of and by the married couple; Shelley became an ornithologist; Paul, a
professor of Comparative Religion; and «Gaudium et spes»,
a legal document.
Nor is this the first time that churchmen
have gotten themselves into this kind of thing. Some three hundred years
ago, a number of theologians, and canonists were unbending, in their desire
to read the Old Testament as though it were a textbook of physics; and
we are still apologizing to Signor Galileo who, though he had never heard
what German Scripture scholars of the last century had to say about the
necessity of interpreting literature of all kinds according to its proper
literary genre, certainly had the sense to intuit the wisdom of that insight
on his own, even if some of his contemporaries did not.
...
page 24
...
V. If, again, "per absurdum", it were thought to be necessary for a valid marriage that
the partnere give themselves to each other, any question in marriage nullity
case as to whether they gave or were able to give enough of themselves
would have to be treated according to the approach proposed above regarding
the giving of a right to a succcessful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship.
We are once again in the Land of Oz,
and we hope that there will be a wizard on hand to assist us too. For this
entire discussion about giving oneself and receiving the self of another
in order to marry is so foreign to the rudiments of philosophy and law
that we fear we might stray from the «yellow-brick road» .
Nonetheless, we push on, not because the discussion has any merit of itself,
but rather and only because the incapacity to give oneself sufficiently
in marriage is considered a serious basis for declaring marriages invalid
in the tribunals of certain Roman Catholic dioceses, however difficult
this may be for some people to believe.
Oneself is a unit which is not susceptible
of division except in its purely material component. Consequently, if to
marry, one had to give himself or herself to another (and receive that
other in return), he or she would inevitably be faced with a situation
of «all or nothing at all» , to borrow the title of the once-popular
love song. Fifty percent, even eighty or ninety
page 25
percent, of self would not do.
Indeed, any partial giving would have as much meaning as marrying just
a little or, for that matter, marrying a whole lot : none at all.
Thus, when a judge in a marriage
nullity case inquires of the parties or witnesses how much of self Titius
or Titia gave or were capable of giving his or her partner on their wedding
day, he must be understood to be investigating something in the language
of the common folk which he intends later in his ruminations and final
decision to formulate in terms which are philosophically and juridically
defensible. And ordinarily that something will be the right to a
conjugal interpersonal relationship in the sense of a successful, conjugal,
interpersonal relationship.
If such be the case, what the judge
is in fact asking is how fulfilling, how «completing» , how integrating,
how enriching, how intimate, how profound, how happy, in a word, how successful
a conjugal relationship Titius or Titia wanted or were capable of achieving
when they were married, questions which we have already indicated to be
in our estimate quite pointless in a marriage nullity case if the parties
at the time of their marriage knew what marriage is, were not insane, etc.
For, given the unity of the human person, such parties, even though their
marriages may prove to be unhappy for any number of reasons, can safely
be presumed to have been endowed on their wedding day with at least that
minimum capacity to relate without which a marriage might be declared invalid
for lack of relational capacity.
And the same goes for all other «incapacities»
which in their final analysis come down to an incapacity to exchange the
right to a successful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship. About
this, however, we must add a few lines of explanation. The matrimonium
in facto esse of which we spoke above can be expressed in Latin (and
all other languages too) by a multitude of near synonyms, among them, «relatio
coniu galis», «unio coniugalis» , «communio
coniugalis», «societas coniugalis» , «consortium
coniugale», and «Vinculum coniugale» . All may
also signify a successful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship and regularly
signify precisely this when accompanied by a positive, «up-beat»
adjective or prepositional phrase, the most familiar example, after «relatio
coniu galis»
page 26
adorned by «interpersonalis»
, being «consortium coniugale» , adorned by «totius
vitae» .
Hence the necessity of insisting upon accurate
terminology in marriage nullity cases concerning psychological incapacities,
lest we slide from meaning to meaning in one and the same context with
such disastrous results as in the following imagined decisio iudicialis:
«In order to marry validly, one must be capable of a conjugal interpersonal
relationship and a consortium totius vitae. This supposes a capacity to
effect such a relationship or consortium by acts of concern, regard, support,
and so forth. In this case, we find clearly demonstrated in the testimonies
and documentation that Titius is a dour, stubborn, ungracious fellow, the
kind whom our psychological consultants are wont to call ' psychopathic
'. Accordingly, in line with the new insights from ' Gaudium et spes', we declare Titius ' marriage to Titia invalid for incapacity to effect
a conjugal interpersonal relationship and consortium totius vitae» .
Let us gloss this paragraph step by step. First,
it is true that, in order to effect a valid matrimonium in facto esse,
one must be capable of effecting a matrimonium in facto esse. It
is also a pointless tautology, unless conjugal interpersonal relationship
and «consortium totius vitae» already in the first sentence
of our example mean something more than just marriage, that is, something
more than matrimonium in facto esse, pure and simple. Second,
it is false, however, that, in order to effect a valid matrimonium in
facto esse, one must enjoy the capacity to effect a happy matrimonium
in facto esse; and in the second sentence of our example, this is what
is being alleged, thanks to a slide (in our estimate, not a very adroit
one) from the first meaning of the two formulae to the second. Consequently,
if Titius is the psychopath that he is said to be, it would not follow,
as implied in the third sentence of our example, that he could not effect
a matrimonium in facto esse; it would follow only that he probably
would not be likely, and perhaps not even able (about this we will not
cavil here), to effect a happy matrimonium in facto esse, some thing
quite different, as <all the folks out there> know full well.
Thus, to sum up, the question about giving self (and receiving the self
of another) in marriage is at most an exercise in
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rhetoric. If, however,
it must be lent a juridical significance, the best we can offer is a variation
on the theme of exchanging the right to a successful, conjugal, interpersonal
relationship. And the same holds true for all other variations on the same
theme, for example, the exchanging of a right to a consortium totius
vitae, which at times means nothing more than consortium coniugale,
id est matrimonium in facto esse, and at times means consortium
coniugale, id est matrimonium in facto esse faustum sine potius beatun,
which is obviously a good deal more.
But there is a codicil to be attached to
all this confusion. Some of our readers are undoubtedly aching to
object : « Wait a minute. I never for a moment thought it enough
to give a part of oneself in order to marry validly. It is indeed
a matter of all or nothing at all'. You have made it too easy for yourself
by discussing here how much has to be given. To marry, I insist, one must
bestow his entire self (consortium ' totius ' vitae) upon his or
her spouse and accept the spouse's entire self as well.
We agree most enthusiastically that, if self had
to be exchanged in marriage, it would have to be the whole self; and we
thought we had made that clear in Section IV. Here, however, in this Section,
we wished to deal with the position of those who seem to be satisfied with
the exchange of just an appropriate measure of self in marriage, whatever
in the world that could possibly be thought to mean. We are delighted,
however, to be afforded the occasion to repeat that in our judgement the
giving of self, which could not be other than total if it could be at all,
is a philosophical and juridical absurdity even if total, and to add that
it would also be psychologically unhealthy.
When Titius and Titia marry, they remain distinct
individuals two human beings who may in the best of conscience enjoy distinct
rights and obligations, pursue distinct goals and avocations, entertain
distinct hopes and expectations, in brief, continue to be what all married
couples are even after their marriage, distinct persons. In fact,
if after their marriage, Titius and Titia were somehow to begin to blend
into each other so that everything they thought, willed, felt, and did,
was becoming one, we would hope that relatives and friends would have the
charity to help them to the
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office of a capable and experienced psychiatrist.
Marriage is not meant to absorb or even diminish the person or the individuality
of the married. And Titius and Titia would do well never to forget
it if they expect to realize not just a relatio coniugalis or a
consortium
coniugale but rather a coniugalis relatio interpersonalis and consortium
totius vitae in the second, hardly ever explicitly articulated, but
always thoroughly understood meaning of these formulae.
VI. - No diocesan tribunal is empowered to declare
a marriage invalid by appealing to a "jurisprudence" according
to which valid marriage consent requires the exchange of a right to a successful,
conjugal, interpersonal relationship, no matter in what terms that right
might be described.
A diocesan tribunal is to interpret the law by
applying its clear norms to particular cases. A diocesan tribunal is to
supply for norms which are not to be found in written form or custom by
appealing to norms about similar matters, general principles of law, the
jurisprudence and practice of the Roman Curia, and the constant and common
opinions of those learned in the law. When there exists no norm, either
in written form, in custom, or in the afore-mentioned sources of supply
on the basis of which a marriage might be declared invalid, a diocesan
tribunal is obligated before God and the People of God to declare that
the nullity of the marriage in question has not been proved.
The jurisprudence
of Canon Law which alone constitutes a valid source of supply for missing
norms is the jurisprudence of the Roman Curia. Such jurisprudence is not
to be found in one or another or even necessarily in many decisions of
a particular tribunal. It is rather that jurisprudence, or more accurately
: those rules and conclusions in the decisions of the tribunals of the
Roman Curia, which are repeated in many decisions, over a period of time
proportionate to the gravity and novelty of the matter, constantly, and
pacifically, that is, without challenge in other decisions of the same
tribunal.
There exists no canonical jurisprudence in the precise and proper
sense of this formula according to which valid mar-
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riage consent requires
the exchange of a right to a successful, conjugal, interpersonal relationship,
an exchange of the spouses in whole or in part, or any other exchange which
is in fact, even if not in expression, the same as one of these. For; no
matter whether one holds that in a sufficient number of decisions of a
tribunal of the Roman Curia it has been affirmed that any or all of these
exchanges are required for a valid marriage, and affirmed over a sufficiently
long period of time, it nevertheless remains an «existential reality»
that such affirmations have always been and still are under challenge by
other decisions of the same tribunal. All of this we have set down
in this Section without citations, embellishments, illustrations, diplomatic
«escapes» , or even a smile. It is all either utterly clear and
true, or it is not. If it is ....
VII. - Only two groups of psychic afflictions have
thus far been established by canonical jurisprudence, in the precise and
proper sense of this formula, as realities on the basis of which a diocesan
tribunal may declare a marriage invalid for reason of incapacity in either
Partner or both to fulfill the essential obligations of marriage, namely
(I): satyriasis in males and nymphomania in females, because of which the
afflicted is after marriage even for a time incapable of fidelity to his
or her Partner, and (2) sexual dysfunctions or aberrations, because
o f which the afflicted is after marriage irremediably incapable of the
marriage act.
... It is enough for our purposes that the reader understand
that there are psychic afflictions which can interfere with capacity to
fulfill the
...
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...
essential obligations of marriage and which ones have to date
been identified by canonical jurisprudence, properly so-called, as having
this effect. Still, there are two observations to be made in this
regard in order further to illustrate our fundamental theme and perhaps
even to pull together some loose strands.
... in marriage nullity cases having to do with satyriasis or
nymphomania, there is never any need to prove the affliction incurable,
whereas, in cases having to do with psychic impotence, or any other impotence
for that matter, proving the incurability of the condition is necessary
to prove the nullity. ...
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The order, then, is as follows : first, see if
the person in question did not know what marriage is ; second, see if he
or she lacked the use of reason ; third, see if he or she lacked due discretion
of judgement ; fourth, see if he or she were under psychological compulsion
; fifth, see if he or she were psychically impotent ; sixth and last, see
if he or she were incapable of fidelity.
...
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...
The lawyer in the latter case is among the most
gifted and diligent at the Rota. He was therefore not surprised by the
decision and even took the time to inform the Ponens of this fact. He added,
however, that he had hoped for what he termed a <(breakthrough )), that
is., a decision in which it might be formally recognized that a marriage
can be invalid for reason of incapacity not only as regards exclusivity
but also as regards s permanence. We are persuaded that the lawyer is seeking
his breakthrough in vain For, as we see it, if a person be capable of honoring
a marriage commitment to exclusivity, he is capable of honoring it either
throughout the life of the marriage, that is to say, permanently, or not
at all. Still, we admit that in our judgement the lawyer is at least conducting
his search for new examples of incapacity to fulfill the essential obligations
of marriage in the proper venue, namely, among the true objects of that
right which must be exchanged in order to consent to marriage validly.
And we let the matter rest there.
Final Note
The bona matrimonii are in the usual language
of Canon Law three components of the object of the right which Titius
and Titia give to and receive from each other when consenting to marriage; or more accurately: the object of the right (the marriage act whose
natural outcome is offspring, the bonum prolis) plus two necessary qualities
(properties) of that right (permanence, the bonum sacramenti, and exclusivity,
the bonum fidei). They came to be called the «bona» (« goods »)
of marriage because during the first flourishing of Manicheanism, certain
Catholic theologians felt constrained to justify the carnal aspects of
marriage in the eyes of some of the brethren by appealing to three - what
shall we
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say ? - «more spiritual» benefits of marriage, to wit : children,
«sacramental» permanence, and faithfulness. (Plus ca change, lus c'est
la meme chose !)
These bona matrimonii, however, are not the purposes
(ends) of marriage, even though the purposes of marriage may at times be
called its «goods», for example, in these words from « Gaudium
et spes » : « (H) oc vinculum sacramentale intuitu boni, tum coniugum
et prolis, tum societatis, non ex humano arbitrio pendet». Accordingly,
it is of the utmost importance that, when in marriage nullity cases we
speak of the bona matrimonii, we make it altogether clear which ones we
have in mind. For, if we do not, we may come up with something as outrageous
as this : « It is universally acknowledged that, if a person be
incapable of giving and receiving the bona matrimonii, he is incapable
of marriage. But we know from the Pastoral Constitution, 'On the Church
in the Modern World', that the good of the couple, the bonum coniugum,
is among the bona matrimonii. Anyone, therefore, who is not able to see
to the good of his or her marriage partner marries invalidly ».
We are almost ashamed to dignify this kind of thing
with analysis. We shall, however, swallow our pride and do our duty. First,
the bona matrimonii about which there exists the afore-mentioned universal
agreement are those bona prolis, sacramenti et fidei which make up the
object of the right exchanged in marriage, and not the purposes of marriage.
Second, we hardly needed Vatican II to inform us that the good of the couple
is a bonum matrimonii in the sense of one of the purposes of marriage.
We knew that, if not from other sources, at least from a century of debate
as to whether the bonum coniugum is a secondary purpose of marriage or
a purpose co-equal with the other commonly recognized purpose, procreation.
Third, the bona matrimonii in the sense of the purposes of marriage are
not the object of the right which must be exchanged in marriage consent,
even if one of them, procreation, has a ring very similar to bonum prolis.
In marriage, you see, Titius does not give and receive a right to procreation;
he rather gives and receives a right to acts whose natural outcome is
procreation. And neither does he give a right to the well-being of his
spouse. If he gives anything in this con-
page 34
nection, the most it could be is
the right ;to acts which favor that well-being.
All of which, we sincerely hope, pulls away the
mask from the entire bonum coniugum approach to marriage nullity. For in
the final analysis, incapacitas quod ad bonum coniugum attinet is nothing
more than incapacitas iungendae coniugalis relationis interpersonalis and
incapacitas ineundi consortii totius vitae in a new, and perhaps the most
unconvincing, guise. When, therefore, Titius is said to have been incapable
of the bonum coniugum, what is meant - though never said - is that he was
incapable of doing those thing whereby Titia might be fulfilled,
«completed», integrated, enriched, etc., by the marriage; and about this
we have already spoken at length. Nonetheless, we beg our reader's indulgence
if we insist upon saying it all again in one unconscionably long sentence.
If Titius knows what marriage is, is not insane, can sufficiently consider
the wisdom of marrying, marries freely, is capable of the marriage act
and capable too of honoring his commitment to the permanence and exclusivity
of marriage, in virtue of the substantial unity of the human person, he
will also be able to perform, at least in the minimum measure required
and at least for a while, such acts, in addition to intercourse, as will
be conducive to his own and Titia's fulfillment, «completion»,
integration, enrichment, etc., in their marriage, that is to say, such
acts as will be conducive to their well-being as husband and wife. Consequently,
there is no more need in marriage nullity cases to become involved in
discussions about the bonum coniugum than there is need to become involved
in discussions about conjugal interpersonal relationships or consortia
totius vitae, unless, of course, you are «developing » the theological
doctrine of the indissolubility of Christian marriage into something heretofore
quite unknown.
EDWARD M. EGAN
Rev.nus D.nus Eduardus Egan, evectus ad sacrum
ordinem Episcopalem, promotus ad sedem titularem Alleghenensem, nominatus
est Auxiliaris Em.mi D.ni Card. Ioannis O'Connor, Archiepiscopi Neo-Eboracensis.
Fausta omnia ei ominamur. Admultos annos.
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