Family & Relationships3 mins ago
Annulled Marriage
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Hi, are children who were born from a marriage that was later annulled considered illigitimate?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Rosetta, I didn't consider you were being confrontational, just wasn't sure what you meant by 'an example'.
A declaration of nullity has no bearing on the legitimacy of any children born from the presumed valid union because the presumption of validity is always the position of the Church towards all marriages. The Church upholds the children of marriages where at least one of the partners believed, at the time of marital consent, that it was a real marriage.
In addition, �legitimacy� is a civil term and thereby rendering all children born under a civil marriage legitimate.
A declaration of nullity has no bearing on the legitimacy of any children born from the presumed valid union because the presumption of validity is always the position of the Church towards all marriages. The Church upholds the children of marriages where at least one of the partners believed, at the time of marital consent, that it was a real marriage.
In addition, �legitimacy� is a civil term and thereby rendering all children born under a civil marriage legitimate.
Annulment can occur for many reasons, including:
One of them was already married at the time of the wedding
One of them was two young to be legally married
One was drunk or drugged at the time of marriage and was not capable of understanding the vows
One was mentally incompetent at the time of the marriage
One was forced or coerced into the marriage
They were too closely related to be legally married
One was sexually impotent at the time of the marriage
Children born during such a marriage are legitimate, and remain legitimate
One of them was already married at the time of the wedding
One of them was two young to be legally married
One was drunk or drugged at the time of marriage and was not capable of understanding the vows
One was mentally incompetent at the time of the marriage
One was forced or coerced into the marriage
They were too closely related to be legally married
One was sexually impotent at the time of the marriage
Children born during such a marriage are legitimate, and remain legitimate
Sometimes mixed faith marriages are annulled by opposing faiths.....it's actually divorce in UK Registry. If the marriage was registered under UK law, even if mixed faiths, the children are legitimate in law.
Annulled by a faith, eg christianity, the person is then free have a church wedding, which is not normally allowed for divorcees (only blessings). Makes no difference to the legitimacy of children.
Annulled by a faith, eg christianity, the person is then free have a church wedding, which is not normally allowed for divorcees (only blessings). Makes no difference to the legitimacy of children.
Yes, I think there is a confusion between marriages that can be annulled at law, as in the examples I gave, and marriages that are lawful but have resulted in divorce.
Where divorce is considered 'shameful' to that person's religious beliefs, they can petition their faith leaders to declare the marriage null and void in the eyes of their church, meaning they can marry again in that church (or mosque, synagogue, temple, whatever religion it may be).
In that instance the first marriage still must legally ended in divorce before the second marriage can take place.
Where divorce is considered 'shameful' to that person's religious beliefs, they can petition their faith leaders to declare the marriage null and void in the eyes of their church, meaning they can marry again in that church (or mosque, synagogue, temple, whatever religion it may be).
In that instance the first marriage still must legally ended in divorce before the second marriage can take place.