We started watching Jane the Virgin
Aug. 31st, 2024 09:13 pmthen decided to take a break because none of us were up for a cancer plot, and now I'm racing to finish it before it goes off Netflix on the 5th.
Now, this is a telenovela/sitcom so there is no possible way to sum up the entire show in the course of one post, but the protagonist, Jane, is a more-or-less devout Catholic. By season 5, where I am, she's mostly given up on a fully stringent approach to her own personal chastity, but while she is technically having sex before marriage she is doing it with the man she intends to marry. That'll be her second marriage, her first husband having tragically died a few years back.
Except he just came back from the dead with a whopping case of soap opera amnesia. And Jane spends quite some time agonizing over getting a divorce because "Catholics don't" which - yeah, no, Catholics do, they just don't then turn around and remarry within the Church afterwards.
But for all her back and forthing over getting a civil divorce, at no point does it seem to occur to her to take this question to her priest, whom you'd think would be the obvious first stop.
(Okay, so she eventually admits her issue is less with her religion and more with her doubts that she really wants to divorce him... but all the same, this does seem like the sort of thing you ask your priest.)
I wonder if an annulment is a possibility in her situation. It seems like it ought to be - she married Michael, and then in good faith started up a new (well, sorta new) relationship after his apparent death, and now Jason has appeared in her husband's body but without his memories or personality and of course she never intended to marry Jason, she doesn't even know him.
But I don't know what the Catholic Church's position is on this matter. I did try googling, but all I found was people who probably know no more than I do. Well, that's unsurprising - this isn't the sort of thing likely to come up in real life, is it?
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Now, this is a telenovela/sitcom so there is no possible way to sum up the entire show in the course of one post, but the protagonist, Jane, is a more-or-less devout Catholic. By season 5, where I am, she's mostly given up on a fully stringent approach to her own personal chastity, but while she is technically having sex before marriage she is doing it with the man she intends to marry. That'll be her second marriage, her first husband having tragically died a few years back.
Except he just came back from the dead with a whopping case of soap opera amnesia. And Jane spends quite some time agonizing over getting a divorce because "Catholics don't" which - yeah, no, Catholics do, they just don't then turn around and remarry within the Church afterwards.
But for all her back and forthing over getting a civil divorce, at no point does it seem to occur to her to take this question to her priest, whom you'd think would be the obvious first stop.
(Okay, so she eventually admits her issue is less with her religion and more with her doubts that she really wants to divorce him... but all the same, this does seem like the sort of thing you ask your priest.)
I wonder if an annulment is a possibility in her situation. It seems like it ought to be - she married Michael, and then in good faith started up a new (well, sorta new) relationship after his apparent death, and now Jason has appeared in her husband's body but without his memories or personality and of course she never intended to marry Jason, she doesn't even know him.
But I don't know what the Catholic Church's position is on this matter. I did try googling, but all I found was people who probably know no more than I do. Well, that's unsurprising - this isn't the sort of thing likely to come up in real life, is it?
Data from India’s historic moon mission supports long-standing lunar theory
Sainsbury Wing contractors find 1990 letter from donor anticipating their demolition of false columns
Under industry pressure, IRS division blocked agents from using new law to stop wealthy tax dodgers
Millions of American Women Have a Condition Doctors Rarely Test For
Insight: Why mpox vaccines are only just arriving in Africa after two years
'Very serious' mosquito virus prompts US towns to close parks
Doctors saved her life. She didn’t want them to
For Years, He Has Saved Lives in Rural America. Who Will Take His Place?
How a US health agency became a shield for polluters
With men at the front lines, women watch over Ukraine’s night sky for Russian drones
In Myanmar’s jungles, young volunteers train hard to fight junta
The deforestation on farms that ‘people don’t even know’ is happening
Infiltrating the Far Right
Israeli settlers are seizing Palestinian land under cover of war - they hope permanently
Israel recovers the bodies of 6 hostages in Gaza