Certainly not, otherwise there would be no divorces, since the vast majority of married couples have had sex.
The Answer is NO. A married Catholic cannot have a second wife till the time the first marriage is annulled.
The church frowns on divorce whether Catholic or not, and recognizes the protestant marriage as valid unless it is annulled. Thus the protestant, if remarried, cannot enter the catholic church unless previous marriage is annulled. If the protestant has NOT remarried, then he/she CAN enter the roman catholic faith, but cannot remarry unless previous marrige is annulled. A lot also depends on the person's previous spouse faith and form of marriage if spouse was Catholic. A sit down with priest would be advised.
You cannot get married if you are already married. A church may be willing to bless your marriage.
No, teens under the age of 18 are minors and cannot be married secretly because a marriage certificate has to be filed with Vital Statistics. If the teens lie about their age and the person marrying them does not bother to check for proper ID, then the marriage can be annulled by the parents.
Currently, divorce is not okay with the church. Annulment is however. In order for a marriage to be annulled, one must prove there was one of several causes- abuse, adultery refusal to copulate, etc. If one goes through the annulment process, and it is approved, they may then remarry. A divorced person may try to have their marriage annulled later; but unless it is, they cannot remarry in the church.
If you were married in the Catholic Church and marriage ended in a divorce but not annullled, then, no, you cannot remarry in the Catholic Church. If you are Catholic and were married outside the church by say a justice of peace and marriage ended in a divorce but not annullled, then, yes you can remarry in the Catholic Church, with proper paperwork and oath commitments.
It would not be necessary to have the marriage annulled because the marriage would never be allowed to take place. Minors cannot cross state lines without parental consent with the intent to avoid thea age restrictions of their state of residency even if special circumstances exist. Doing so is a federal violation, (18 United States Code 2243 thru 18 United States Code 2423). Minors who use fraudulent documents to obtain a marriage license are guilty of committing a misdemeanor a marriage made under such circumstances would not be legal.
Some states allow you to receive temporary alimony while the case is pending in court, however, you cannot receive alimony after the annulment has been granted. This is because an annulment declares the marriage to be "void" and erases it as if it never existed under the law. Spousal support cannot be awarded if no valid marriage existed. If you believe you will need spousal support, you may prefer to file for divorce or legal separation as alimony may be awarded in both of these cases.
Your divorce cannot be annulled. A decree of annulment dissolves a marriage as though it never took place. Your decree of divorce terminated your married legal status permanently. As part of that decree the parties were forever released from any claims of the other. The only way to undo a divorce is to get remarried.
No, it would be called 'bigamy' and it's a crime. In the United States you can only be married to one person at a time. Your second marriage would be invalid.
a man cannot be married to two women, your marriage is probably already invalid.
You're always welcome in the Catholic Church. However, if you've received a civil divorce and are married to someone else without having your first marriage annulled, you cannot receive the Sacraments because the Church still views your first marriage as valid and you, therefore, as living in a state of serious (mortal) sin.