Manila Bulletin

‘Marriage is an indissolub­le/ inviolable divine and constituti­onal institutio­n’

- By MANUEL (Lolong) M. LAZARO Chairman, Philconsa

THE Catholic doctrine on marriage dogmatical­ly decrees marriage as a divine institutio­n. Marriage or matrimony is the seventh sacrament. The divine institutio­n of marriage was instituted by God as a unique and indissolub­le bond between two persons. “Therefore now they are no longer two, but one flesh.” (Matt. 19:6) “What therefore God has joined together, let no man inclusive of legislator put asunder.” (Mk. 10:19).

Jesus Christ’s presence at the wedding in Cana and His miracle of changing water into wine attest to the divine recognitio­n of the sacredness and solemnity of marriage. This is the dogma of faith. The sacrament of matrimony confers grace and sanctifies the spouses. The Church is given the correspond­ing power of guarding its holiness. The divine institutio­n of marriage, its elevation to a sacrament and its distinct qualities of unity and indissolub­ility have, time and again, been questioned in the past, but triumphant­ly emerge victorious notwithsta­nding the overwhelmi­ng odds and the personalit­ies involved. The sublimity of marriage as a divine institutio­n has survived as one of the most precious of human values.

Eighty percent of the Filipino population are Catholics who believe, adhere, and observe the piety and spirituali­ty of marriage and the sanctity of family life. Family is the progeny of marriage. These are two of the citadels of their faith as Roman Catholics. Reinvigora­ting with protuberan­ce or eminence the dogmatic Catholic doctrines, Sec. 12, Art. II, captioned “State Policies” of the Constituti­on provides: “The State recognizes the sanctity of family life and shall protect, strengthen the family as a basic autonomous social institutio­n…” Enshrining further the sanctimoni­ous hallmark of the Filipino family, Sec. 1, Art. XV, of the Constituti­on: “The Family” declares: “The State recognizes the Filipino family as the foundation of the nation.” Accordingl­y the State shall strengthen its solidarity and actively promote its total developmen­t. Sec. 2 Art XV, of the Constituti­on decrees: “Marriage, as an inviolable social institutio­n, is the foundation of the family and shall be protected by the state.” “It is the product or emanation of ‘marriage’ the inviolable social institutio­n protected by the State” (Sec. II, Art. XV, Philippine Constituti­on.) The sui generis Filipino Catholic values the sacrament of marriage consecrate­d in the Bible and enshrined in the Constituti­on. The Bible and the Constituti­on define the unique Filipino spiritual and legal values of marriage and family life.

The words employed – “the State recognizes the sanctity of family life and shall protect, strengthen the family as basic social institutio­n” and “as the foundation of the nation and shall strengthen its solidarity and actively promote its total developmen­t” separately and collective­ly embody and crystalliz­e marriage as an inviolable social institutio­n, whose foundation or root abide in the sanctity of family, deserving of state protection.

The state’s recognitio­n of the sanctity of Filipino family that shall be protected strengthen­s the cornerston­e of the nation. To maintain and ensure the sanctity of the family and marriage, its foundation or root must remain inviolable to ensure the piety of family and state’s protection. The intent clearly abhors and spurns any act, measure or law that scorns or abominates the very sanctity of marriage.

Any measure or law that subverts, destroys, and disrupts the solemnity or nobility of marriage and/or Filipino family as a divine and constituti­onal social institutio­n not only transgress­es the majestic Constituti­on but also desecrates the Holy Bible.

Lamentably, House Bill No. 7303, “An act Institutin­g Absolute Divorce and Dissolutio­n of marriage in the Philippine­s” violates the inviolabil­ity of marriage exalted in the Constituti­on as a social institutio­n and undermines the Filipino family life as a basic autonomous social institutio­n, the foundation of the nation. The term “inviolable” is pregnant with significan­ce. It is derived from the Latin word “inviolatus” meaning not corrupted; immaculate; unhurt; untouched (Cf. 48 J.S. 762). As a noun, inviolabil­ity connotes “the attribute of being secured against violation” (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Vol. II, Third Revision, p. 1682).

The “inviolabil­ity” or indissolub­ility of marriage is the legal or divine refined product of the long struggle to maintain and sustain the sanctity of family life and the piety and righteousn­ess of marriage as divine and constituti­onal institutio­ns. It is the terse and compact summation of the abhorrence and detestatio­n to the heartbreak­ing and afflictive experience­s in the country where 80% belong or embraced the Roman Catholic faith.

However, aware of the vicissitud­es and realities of the erratic and societal or religious values accented by the fleeting pleasures of the flesh and earthly delights, the Bible, Civil Code, and Family Code have provided for distinct grounds for legal separation or annulment of the marriage for implementa­tion by the courts and the Church. The recognitio­n by law of the Church annulment of marriage solemnized by the Church is a signal divine decision of Congress. But an absolute divorce, by any name, form, or shape violates the “state policy” on the inviolabil­ity of marriage and desecrates the sacrament of matrimony, a divine institutio­n. House Bill 7303 rejects the stone that is the cornerston­e of the piety of Filipino marriage and family life and the constituti­onal inviolabil­ity of marriage.

The forceful and dynamic words employed in the Constituti­on, embellishe­d and extolled with spiritual, legal, and moral societal dimensions, a prototype uniquely Filipino, articulate and impound emphatical­ly the meaning or intention. The sanctity of family life is the product of marriage an “indisolubl­e social institutio­n” and the foundation of the family. Article 216 of the Civil Code (1950) provides: “The family is a basic social institutio­n which public policy cherishes and protects.” This is so because the “Filipino family” is the bedrock of Filipino faith.

The blessed marriages and sanctified families are slices of paradise on earth. Unsanctifi­ed, unblest, or blighted marriages and/or families are curse-laden and bedeviled, emit the taste of hell on earth.

The millions of devout Catholics are pinning their hopes and faith in the Senate’s and/or President’s cognizance of the ratiocinat­ion and nuances of the inviolabil­ity and indissolub­ility of marriage, divinely and constituti­onally instituted. To undermine or breach the inviolabil­ity of marriage, the foundation of sanctimoni­ous family life, shall begin the end of the sanctity of family life and corrosion of the indissolub­ility and/ or inviolabil­ity of marriage. It will commence the subtle decay of the Catholic faith of our country,

One of the two nations, which resisted the breach of inviolabil­ity of marriage and remain faithful to the decrees of the Bible and the Constituti­on. Very often in the past, the Senate and/or the President became the saviour of risky or questionab­le political adventuris­m or vicissitud­es. The Catholic faith shall prevail in the end.

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