There is no law preventing a Catholic marrying a non catholic.
AnswerYes, provided the Catholic Church grants an annulment of the marriage after the divorce becomes final.
Before a Catholic marries a non-Catholic, the Catholic must (for the marriage to be considered proper by the Catholic Church) agree to raise any children as Catholics.
Both persons' first marriages must be annulled by Church, and then the couple must marry with a Catholic ceremony. If either of the first marriages are found valid by the Church and are not annulled, then the Catholic and divorced non-Catholic cannot validly marry in the eyes of the Church.
No... unless you are fourth cousins. Sorry
If the Catholic woman marries a Orthodox man without a dispensation from the Church the marriage is ipso facto invalid, thus no annulment process needs to be begun - the marriage is plainly invalid.
Yes
He is a non-practicing catholic
charles was a royalists and he marries a catholic to unite cathoilcs and protesstants together
Only if you have converted to Catholicism, been catechized, baptized, and received First Holy Communion in a Catholic Church.
Yes, he is a non-practicing catholic.
The choice of religious upbringing is entirly up to the parents. Children can shift their church of preference when they are in their late teens. ANSWER Well YES because the Catholic has an obligation to raise his/her children in the Catholic Faith and practice that faith himself/herself. Where a Catholic chooses to marry does not negate his/her obligation. However, a Catholic may not marry a non-Catholic in a non-Catholic church/ceremony. A priest would at least need to be present and also administer the vows. Otherwise, there is a question as to whether The Church would accept such a marriage as a Sacramental Marriage. Would need to consult RCC Canon Law re: this matter for the exact answer.
If she marries a Hindu boy, than definetely she has to live in a Hindu custom or she can live in her own custom subject there is some understanding that need to be shared. Basically she is coming into the boy's house and you don't expect the whole family will have to forgo the Hindu custom. If she marries outside the church, that is, not validated by a catholic priest or deacon, she can still be Catholic. Her marriage may not be recognized, but her being Catholic is fine. She can be married in a Hindu ceremony and still be considered a valid catholic marriage if she gets church approval and takes an oath to raise the children as catholic, which her husband has to witness.