I am assuming that you mean "invalid" marriage, and that the marriage was annulled, as might happen on rare occasions in the Roman Catholic Church. If a marriage is annulled, it is declared to have been "invalid" right from the start, and can be considered as if it never happened. In this case a woman can certainly marry. Re-marry is the wrong term except in the eyes of the civil law, perhaps, which might or might not recognize the annulment. In the eyes of the church (staying with this example) she was in fact never married. So there is no conflict between church and civil law, as long as a civil divorce took place if it was required by the state.
I have never heard of "limited" in reference to divorce. You are or you are not divorced. Once divorced, you are free to remarry anywhere.AnswerA 'limited divorce' in Kentucky is actually a legal separation. The right to co-habitation is terminated but the marriage is not legally dissolved and the parties cannot remarry.
A:If they have been divorced and there is no legal impediment to their remarrying, yes, non-religious people are free to remarry.
As long as you were legally divorced from your first two spouses you are free to marry again in the United States. Remember that you can only be married to one person at a time. You cannot remarry until that marriage has been dissolved legally.
There is no limit on the number of times a person can be married. However, the person can not divorce a spouse to marry another unless an annulment is obtained. If the spouse dies, the person is free to marry again.
Jesus tells us in Mark 10:10-12 - "When again in the house the disciples began to question him concerning this. And he said to them: "Whoever divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery against her, and if ever a woman, after divorcing her husband, marries another, she commits adultery."However, this statement is qualified by the principle found in Matthew 5:32 and 19:9, where he shows that divorce is wrong "except on the ground of fornication."So if she has Scriptural grounds for divorce, she is Scripturally free to remarry.
Biblically, a divorced woman can remarry if her husband divorced her without moral cause Or if she divorced her husband for infidelity. Once her ex-husband remarries or dies, she is also free to remarry.
The question's a little vague. Usually your previous husband's death certificate would suffice as proof that you are in fact no longer married and free to remarry.
There is no legal definition for an "unanswered" divorce decree. Once a decree has been entered the marriage is legally dissolved and after a statutory waiting period that varies in different jurisdictions the parties are free to remarry. A decree does not need to be "answered".
You do not need an anulment to remarry, you just need to be divorced. An anullment is a legal process by which the court deems the marriage to never have happened. Many people get an anulment for religious reasons but the majority of marriages end in just a divorce and not an anulment as well.
Biblically, a divorced woman can remarry if her husband divorced her without moral cause Or if she divorced her husband for infidelity. Once her ex-husband remarries or dies, she is also free to remarry.
* No. Once divorced is finalized you are free to marry whomever you wish.
Yes. If the Catholic man's ex spouse was living he could not get married in the church, unless the marriage was decreed invalid and annulled. However, if the ex spouse dies, death ends the marriage ( until death do us part) and he is free to remarry in the Catholic Church