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Pope says annulment process should be cheaper and more efficient

byCNS
6 November 2014 - Updated on 1 April 2021
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Pope Francis

Annulment discussion: Pope Francis greets the crowd as he arrives to lead an October 4 prayer vigil for the extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the family in St Peter's Square at the Vatican. Pope Francis has said participants at the October 5-19 synod had expressed a desire to "streamline the process" of judging requests for annulments. Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

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Pope Francis
Annulment discussion: Pope Francis greets the crowd as he arrives to lead an October 4 prayer vigil for the extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the family in St Peter’s Square at the Vatican. Pope Francis has said participants at the October 5-19 synod had expressed a desire to “streamline the process” of judging requests for annulments.
Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

POPE Francis said the Church’s marriage annulment process should be more efficient and perhaps even free of charge, and he decried any attempts to exploit it for profit.

“Some procedures are so long and so burdensome, they don’t favour (justice), and people give up,” the Pope said. “Mother church should do justice and say: ‘Yes, it’s true, your marriage is null. No, your marriage is valid.’ But justice means saying so. That way, they can move on without this doubt, this darkness in their soul.”

The Pope made his remarks on November 5, in a meeting with diocesan officials and canon lawyers enrolled in a course offered by the Roman Rota, the Vatican tribunal primarily responsible for hearing requests for marriage annulments.

Pope Francis said participants at the October 5-19 Synod of Bishops on the family had expressed a desire to “streamline the process” of judging requests for annulments, and he noted that he had recently established a special commission to do so.

As an example of the burdens faced by those seeking annulments, the Pope recalled that a tribunal he oversaw as Archbishop of Buenos Aires exercised jurisdiction over dioceses as far as 240km away.

“It is impossible to imagine that simple, common people should go to the tribunal. They have to take a trip, they have to miss days of work, also the cost, so many things,” the Pope said. “They say, ‘God will understand, I’ll move on this way, with this burden on my soul’.”

Pope Francis warned that annulment cases must not fall within the “framework of business”, which he described as an all-too-frequent occurrence.

“I am not talking about anything unusual. There have been public scandals,” he said.

Apparently referring to his time in Buenos Aires, the Pope recalled: “I had to dismiss one person from the tribunal, some time ago, who said: ‘I’ll handle both proceedings, civil and ecclesiastical, for 10,000 dollars’.”

Noting that some participants at the synod had called for making the annulment process free of charge, Pope Francis said “we will have to see”, but added that, “when the spiritual is attached to an economic interest, this is not from God”.

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