If you are a widow and he isn't married, yes.
you can marry your second cousin - it's within the second degree of kindred
Yes, your mother who is widowed can marry your father-in-law who is also widowed. This does not mean your mother or the father-in-law has forgotten or stopped loving their deceased mates, but companionship is important for a couple and hopefully both sides of the family will be happy for your mother and father-in-law.
Answer: The Catholic widow is free to marry. You are also free to marry in the Catholic Church. This is because your first marriage was not a Catholic one and, according to Church law, it should have been. It will be simple matter of speaking to your local pastor and filling out a form to be sent to the diocese.
If your sister-in-law is your wife's sister, her sister's daughter could be your daughter, whom you may not marry. She may also be the daughter of another sister-in-law. Then you could marry her, but many people would find such a marriage objectionable.If your sister-in-law is your brother's wife, her sister and the sister's daughter are not related to you and you could marry the daughter.All this depends, of course on your no longer being married to you wife, either because she has died or you are divorced.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church has no special rules for people of different nationalities, nor do they have rules that would affect civil law.
If your brother-in-law is your spouse's brother, then his father is your father-in-law - because he is your spouse's father. If your brother-in-law is your sister's husband, then his father is not your father-in-law.
Generally no, but New Jersey has no law restricting it.
sureANSWER: Well, NO if the Catholic man desires that his marriage be recognized by the Catholic Church. Until he married IN the Catholic Church -- and that means his marriage would be "blessed" -- he is living in sin as if he and his civil-law wife were never marriage but instead just living together.
If your brother-in-law is your spouse's brother, then his father is your father-in-law. If you brother-in-law is your sister's husband, then his father is not your father-in-law, and is not related to you in any way..
The singular possessive of father-in-law is father-in-law's. "This is my father-in-law's house."
Catholic AnswerOf course not, Jesuit priests are Catholic priests and may not adminster the holy sacraments outside of Church law (Canon Law). Canon Law stipulates that a couple must be married in a sacred space - it must be a church, chapel, Cathedral, etc. that has been consecrated by a Bishop.
No, of course not. Unless there is some specific legal bar to communications, you can talk to anyone you choose.
Penelope promised to marry one of the suitors when she finished weaving a shroud for her father-in-law, Laertes. However, she unraveled it every night to delay the marriage.