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MW 9 September 2015

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maltatoday, WEDNESDAY, 9 SEptEmbEr 2015 5 News A ONE NIGHT STAY AT HILTON WITH DINNER AT BLUE ELEPHANT We are nearly at 100,000 LIKES! Like our page and create an online account with wwww.maltatoday.com.mt to be in a chance to win. Executive lounge facilities include: î3ULYDWHFKHFNLQ FKHFNRXW î%UHDNIDVWLQWKHORXQJH î$IWHUQRRQ7HDZLWKFDNHVDQGSDVWULHV î3UHGLQQHUGULQNVLQFOXGLQJFDQDS«VDQGDOFRKROLF drinks î7HDFRIIHHDQGQRQDOFRKROLFGULQNV available throughout the day 7+(5220 $FFRPPRGDWLRQLQRQHRIRXU&RQWHPSRUDU\([HFXWLYH5RRP including breakfast and Executive Lounge facilities Church's new annulment procedures to affect thousands of Catholics PoPe Francis has substantially and significantly altered the process for Catholics seeking marriage annul- ments in the church, eliminating sometimes lengthy and redundant judicial procedures and empow- ering local bishops to make judg- ments on their own in "particularly evident" cases. The changes were announced at the Vatican yesterday, with the release of two formal documents known as motu proprios signed by the pope. The main change is a decisive del- egation of power from the church's central command, to bishops. In a short introduction to the new changes, Francis explained that he wanted to balance the church's timeless worry to provide for the salvation of souls with "the enor- mous number of faithful that… too often are detached from the ju- ridical structures of the Church at the cause of physical or moral dis- tance." "In total harmony with these de- sires, I have decided to give with this motu proprio arrangements that do not favour the nullifying of marriag- es but the promptness of the proc- esses," Francis stated, so that "the heart of the faithful that wait for the clarification of their state may not be oppressed for a long time by the darkness of doubt." An annulment in the Catholic church is a decree from a church tri- bunal that a marriage between two persons was invalidly contracted. Such a decree is often sought by per- sons who are seeking to celebrate a different marriage. The changes announced by Francis modify the procedures for obtaining annulments in two key ways: elimi- nating a sometimes lengthy process requiring a second judgment on all annulment decisions; and allowing local bishops a so-called "shorter" process to personally judge on cases considered particularly straightfor- ward. Francis gave examples of when a bishop might be able to decide an annulment on his own authority without using the normal process of the church tribunal. Included in those examples: When there was a clear lacking of faith on the part of one of the persons con- senting to the marriage, when one person was in another undisclosed relationship at the time of marriage, or when one party procured an abortion – indicating that they were not open to the procreation of life. The changes also allow any first appeals of annulment decisions to be made at the local level instead of at the Vatican. The Pope said he wanted to offer the new process to bishops so that it can "be applied in cases in which the accused nullity of the marriage is sustained by arguments particu- larly evident." "It has not escaped me how an abbreviated judgment might put at risk the principle of indissolubility of marriage," the Pope said. "Indeed, for this I wanted that in this proc- ess the judge would be composed of the bishop, that in the strength of his pastoral office is, with Peter, the best guarantee of Catholic unity in the faith and discipline." The changes are to go into effect on 8 December, the opening day of the upcoming Jubilee Holy Year for Mercy and the 50th anniversary of the closing of the Second Vatican Council. Francis's decree for the Latin rite churches effectively updates and changes canons 1679-1691 in the church's Code of Canon Law. The pope also attached to that decree 20 new "procedural rules" for bishops dealing with annulment cases, saying he wanted to offer them as "other instruments" for tools in their work on those matters. Among other significant changes in the decrees: Francis also man- dates that annulment procedures be made free of charge around the world, and also asks that bishops create some sort of structure in their dioceses that can guide and help separated Catholics consider- ing divorce and/or annulment. Francis has called two back-to- back synods for 2014 and 2015, to focus on issues facing families in contemporary society. The discus- sions have centred partly on the Catholic church's pastoral practice towards those who have divorced and remarried without first obtain- ing annulments, who are currently prohibited from taking communion in the church. Reform of the annulment process also comes with unusual speed for the Vatican, as the pope only first appointed a commission to study the matter in August 2014. Pope Francis: two motu proprios alter the process of marriage annulment

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