Pope Francis 'fast track' annulments: An act of mercy for women?
The new process, revising judicial rules in place for centuries, will eliminate the automatic review required of any annulment granted and make 'fast track' annulments possible.
The new process, revising judicial rules in place for centuries, will eliminate the automatic review required of any annulment granted and make 'fast track' annulments possible.
Pope Francis announced another major pastoral shakeup for the globe鈥檚 1.3 billion Roman Catholics on Tuesday, streamlining centuries-old procedures and making it easier, and cheaper, for couples to get an annulment of marriage.
The announcement comes after an already-contentious year, as many Catholic bishops and theologians have been seeking ways to bring Catholics who divorce and remarry back under the pastoral care of the church. Since marriage is a sacrament, those who break the sacred bond and then remarry are denied communion and considered to be living in a state of adultery, according to church teachings.
In two pastoral letters released by the Vatican on Tuesday, Pope Francis said, 鈥渢he impulse for reform is fed by the enormous numbers of the faithful who 鈥 are too often alienated from the juridical structures of the church.鈥
The pope鈥檚 announcement is an administrative and procedural move, but it is also part of his radical reemphasis on the church鈥檚 pastoral ministries, especially for those often alienated by Catholicism鈥檚 moral teachings. Over the past 2-1/2 years, Francis has startled many of the faithful by focusing more on the church鈥檚 messages of mercy and forgiveness 鈥 including for politically-charged issues such as homosexuality and abortion 鈥 rather than its moral condemnations.
Last October, church officials began to discuss various聽theological issues surrounding family life, including the status of divorced and remarried Catholics. Many questioned, too, the status of same-sex relationships that, though morally problematic according to teachings, often include 鈥渕utual aid to the point of sacrifice鈥 and constitute 鈥渁 precious support in the life of the partners.鈥 It was a theological observation and did not change any point of Catholic doctrine.
And while the moral status of divorced and remarried Catholics will remain on the agenda for the bishops鈥 synod on family life this fall, many see the streamlined annulment procedure as an act of mercy for women.
鈥淚t is a democratizing move focused on easing the course of reintegration into the church for women, in particular,鈥 Candida Moss, a professor of New Testament and Early 海角大神ity at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, told the Religion News Service. 鈥淗is actions are propelled by compassion and pragmatism: He recognizes the dangers of spousal abuse and the reality that many modern marriages are undertaken without full consideration.鈥
Nearly a quarter of American Catholics have been divorced, and of these about 26 percent seek annulments, according to a recent survey by Pew Research. So it is likely that the issue will remain a central topic as church leaders prepare for the this year鈥檚 global bishops synod on family life, which will meet in the Vatican this October.
But the pope鈥檚 move to streamline the annulment process may have more to do with other regions of the world. Though they make up only 6 percent of global Catholics, American couples accounted for nearly half of the 50,000 annulment hearings around the world in 2014.
鈥淭here鈥檚 already a pretty efficient streamlined process here in the United States, so this will actually have the least impact on American Catholics,鈥 says R. Andrew Chesnut, the Bishop Walter F. Sullivan Chair in Catholic Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. 鈥淭his really is aimed at the global south 鈥 most particularly Africa and the pope鈥檚 native Latin America.鈥
鈥淎nd I think it鈥檚 from his own pastoral experience back in Argentina, where he saw both how prohibitively costly and how Byzantine the process could be 鈥 it alienated a lot of parishioners from the church,鈥 Professor Chesnut continues.
The new process, revising judicial rules in place for centuries, will eliminate the automatic review required of any annulment granted. It will also provide a 鈥渇ast track鈥 option that allows a local bishop to grant an annulment if both spouses request it, or do not oppose it.
As the pope has pushed the church in new pastoral directions, he has often used his administrative powers to achieve many of his ends. Last week, the pope bypassed the traditional power of bishops to handle excommunications after abortions, empowering all local priests over the next year to forgive and reinstate women who have had abortions and are 鈥渃ontrite.鈥 Abortion is considered a mortal sin and usually results in automatic excommunication for all of those who sought or participated in the procedure.聽
The pope also has declared 2016 to be a rare 鈥測ear of jubilee,鈥 in which the church emphasizes mercy and universal pardon for sins.
Annulments are granted for a number of reasons, including one spouse who never intended to be faithful, impotence, or emotional immaturity at the time of the marriage vows, among others.
Annulment rulings in the US can take up to a year, and cost nearly $1,000, according to reports. The pope said on Tuesday that the process should be free, 鈥渋nsofar as possible, as consistent with the right and decent compensation of the employees of the tribunal.鈥