Meet "Private Judgment Patricia."
(The name says everything. As you'll
see.)
Patricia is a regular at her local
traditional chapel.
Ten years of marriage. Several children. A
domestic life that has grown heavy.
And lately... she's been doing a lot of
reading.
Blog posts mostly.
The kind with titles like "5 Signs
Your Husband Is Controlling"...
And "How To Recognize Emotional
Abuse Before It's Too Late"...
She's also been seeing a counselor.
A modern one.
The kind who hands her a checklist on the
third session.
And suddenly...
Everything her husband does gets a label.
He expects order in the home? Controlling.
He requires obedience from the children? Authoritarian.
He demands respect as head of the
household? Emotionally abusive.
He leads with a firm hand according to the
laws God Himself established? Toxic masculinity.
Never mind that the Church has always
taught that the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the
Church.
(Ephesians 5:23)
Never mind that order, obedience, and
respect within the family are not abuses...
They are obligations.
Sacred ones.
But Patricia has a new vocabulary now.
And a new community to validate it.
In chapel community groups.
In private conversations after Mass and at
brunch.
In the quiet, incense-heavy circles where
bad ideas are not immune.
And somewhere in those conversations, a
conclusion forms.
"There's no bishop here. No
tribunal. No Ordinary to answer to."
"So I will judge this myself."
On a Tuesday morning, Patricia moves into
her own residence.
She sits her husband down.
Looks him in the eye.
And tells him she is not asking for a
divorce.
"I would never do that," she says.
"We're still married. I just cannot
live under your roof anymore."
"I cannot continue to submit to
your will."
Then she opens her Bible.
Ephesians 5:25.
"Husbands, love your wives as
Christ loved the Church."
She slides it across the table.
"You don't love me the way Christ
loved the Church," she says.
"Because I don't FEEL loved anymore."
And there it is.
The feeling.
The blog post.
The counselor's checklist.
All of it weaponized to justify walking out
the door...
While technically keeping her hands clean
of the word "divorce."
And she begins her new life as an
independent woman.
Patricia's story is not an isolated
incident.
It is a mirror reflecting a widespread and
growing error.
Many spouses in traditional circles have
come to believe that the current state of the Church grants them a "private
right" to separate on their own accord.
Especially when the modern world has handed
them a ready-made excuse wrapped in therapeutic language.
So long as nobody files paperwork... it
isn't really a sin.
This is a grave theological and canonical
mistake.
Catholic teaching is unequivocal:
Marriage is a public sacrament.
Its bond is indissoluble by any human
power.
And the right to separate is never a matter
of private whim — never a matter of hurt feelings — and never a matter of
therapeutic checklists...
Even, and perhaps especially, in a time of complete
modernism.
The Public Nature of the Sacramental
Bond
The foundational error in the
"self-separation" of some ill-informed Sede’s is the belief that
marriage is a private contract that can be rescinded when the parties feel it
has "failed." On the contrary, the Church teaches that marriage is an
intensely public act with profound social and sacramental consequences. The
contract of marriage between two baptized persons was raised by Christ Himself
to the dignity of a Sacrament (Code of Canon Law, Canon 1012; Moral and
Pastoral Theology, Henry Davis, S.J., Vol. 4, p. 64). Because it is a
Sacrament, the marriage bond falls under the exclusive and independent
jurisdiction of the Church, not the state, and certainly not the private
judgment of the spouses (The Sources of Dogma, Heinrich Denzinger, n. 1500a;
Moral Theology: A Complete Course Based on St. Thomas Aquinas, John A. McHugh,
O.P. and Charles J. Callan, O.P., Vol. 2, n. 2785).
When a couple stands before a priest and
witnesses, they do not merely make a promise to each other; they enter into a
"lasting conjugal union... raised to the dignity of a Sacrament" (A
Commentary on the New Code of Canon Law, Charles Augustine, O.S.B., Vol. 5, p.
4). This union is modeled on the relationship between Christ and His Church,
which is perpetual and unbreakable (Moral Theology, Heribert Jone, O.F.M. Cap.,
n. 744; Ephesians 5:22-32).
The Grave Obligation of the Common Life
and the Conjugal Debt
The Church’s law regarding the "common
life" is a rigorous obligation. Spouses are bound sub gravi (under
pain of grave sin) to live together and maintain the community of life (Moral
Theology, Heribert Jone, O.F.M. Cap., n. 128; Moral and Pastoral Theology,
Henry Davis, S.J., Vol. 4, p. 147).
This "common life" or cohabitatio
is demanded by the very nature of the marriage promises (Moral Theology: A
Complete Course Based on St. Thomas Aquinas, John A. McHugh, O.P. and Charles
J. Callan, O.P., Vol. 2, n. 2626).
Furthermore, we must recognize the gravity
of the marital obligations themselves. To separate means to refuse the marriage
debt, which is a mortal sin (A Catechism for Adults, Rev. William Cogan, 1958,
p. 143).
The rendering of marital dues is an
obligation of justice; to refuse marital relations for a whim or minor
inconveniences is to violate a grave contract and expose the partner to sin
(Moral and Pastoral Theology, Henry Davis, S.J., Vol. 4, p. 202). Leaving the
domestic roof without a legitimate and certain cause is defined as the
"delict of desertion" (Catholic Encyclopedia, "Divorce,"
Vol. 5).
The 1917 Code of Canon Law is explicit:
"Married people are bound to preserve a community of conjugal life unless
a just cause excuses them" (Code of Canon Law, Canon 1128; Cohabitation
and Separation of Married Persons, Rev. Culvar Bernard Alford, p. 1).
The Strict Standard for Permanent
Separation (Adultery)
The Church allows for permanent separation
only in the case of adultery, and this is hedged with strict evidentiary
requirements. The adultery must be "morally certain" and not
"condoned" (Code of Canon Law, Canon 1129; Moral and Pastoral
Theology, Henry Davis, S.J., Vol. 4, p. 149).
In this context, "certainty"
refers specifically to the carnal act itself. It is not sufficient to point to
"kissing" or even "fellatio" as grounds for permanent separation.
While these are grave sins of impurity, the legal ground for separation
requires the consummated act of infidelity (A Commentary on the New Code of
Canon Law, Charles Augustine, O.S.B., Vol. 5, p. 225). "Moral
certainty" requires objective proof, such as:
- Direct Evidence: Witnessing the act
itself.
- Confession: A voluntary and
definitive admission.
- Biological Proof: The birth of a
child that cannot biologically be the husband’s (Moral Theology: A
Complete Course Based on St. Thomas Aquinas, John A. McHugh, O.P. and
Charles J. Callan, O.P., Vol. 2, n. 2831; Moral Theology, Heribert Jone,
O.F.M. Cap., n. 763).
Unbearable Cruelty vs. Modern
"Incompatibility"
A frequent excuse for temporary separation
in traditional circles is "mental cruelty" or "misunderstandings."
However, the Church’s standard for saevitia (cruelty) is absolute. As
William J. Doheny notes:
“Unbearable Cruelty Which Renders Conjugal
Life Insupportable [is a ground for temporary separation …] The Latin term saevitia
means excessive or unbearable cruelty, harshness, extreme severity, fierceness,
and barbarity. What is called cruelty, by way of travesty, in modern divorce
courts could not be viewed as saevitia, in the sense of canon 1131 §1.
Hence, the so-called incompatibility of
temperament, divergence of views, and the like would not be considered
sufficient to invoke separation” (Canonical Procedure in Matrimonial Cases,
Volume II, Informal Procedure, William J. Doheny, 1944, p. 634).
Frequent quarrels are likewise
insufficient. Marion Gibbons clarifies that the Holy See does not regard them
as a "just cause":
“Frequent
quarrels, in themselves, are not regarded by the Holy See as a ‘just cause’
even for a temporary separation, as is clearly seen from a decision of the Rota
in the year 1928… In this case the alleged cause in modern parlance would have
been termed ‘incompatibility of temperament’… The Sacred Rota declared that the
frequent quarrels were due to avarice rather than ‘implacable hatred,’ and
refused to grant a temporary separation inasmuch as a ‘just cause’ was not
present” (Domicile of the Wife Unlawfully Separated from her Husband, Marion
Gibbons, 1947, p. 62-63, citing Roman Rota, coram Florczak, June 30, 1928).
The Roman Rota explicitly states that
“[L]ight injustices from abusive words or the incompatibility of the
personalities of the spouses which make cohabitation troublesome cannot be
considered as sufficient causes to separate the spouses” (Roman Rota, coram
Florczak, June 30, 1928, par. no. 2).
Physical and Spiritual Peril
Temporary separation is permitted for
"grave bodily or spiritual danger" (Code of Canon Law, Canon 1131,
§1). Physical peril includes severe beatings or threats to life, not merely a
"stern" husband. Spiritual peril involves being forced into mortal
sin, such as "onanistic" practices (contraception) or being forced to
provide children with a non-Catholic education (Moral and Pastoral Theology,
Henry Davis, S.J., Vol. 4, p. 147; The Kingship of Christ and the Conversion of
the Jewish Nation, Rev. Denis Fahey, p. 110).
Non-Catholic education refers to formal
acts like enrolling children in secular schools where "immoral
doctrines" like radical feminism are mandatory, or taking them to
heretical services (The Casuist, Vol. 5, p. 1; A Commentary on the New Code of
Canon Law, Charles Augustine, O.S.B., Vol. 5, p. 363). In these cases, the
spouse may separate only while the danger persists and must resume life as soon
as it ceases (Canon 1131, §2).
The Duty of Reinstatement and the
Restoring of Cohabitation
The modern "self-separation"
movement ignores the right of the deserted spouse to demand the restoration of
the union. When one partner leaves on their own authority, they commit a
"spoliation" (spolium) of the other’s rights.
“Either of the pair leaves the other of his
or her own authority; for the one who is thus left is unjustly deprived by the
other of his conjugal rights… the rule is, that the ecclesiastical judge, upon
due application by the injured party, should, speaking in general, forthwith decree
reinstatement—that is, restore him or her to his or her conjugal rights by
obliging the party that left of his or her own accord to return” (Elements of
Ecclesiastical Law: Vol. II, Fifth Edition, Rev. Sebastian Bach Smith, 1887).
This is not a matter of personal
"space," but of legal and moral restitution. The deserting consort
should be "entreated to return" and the judge may use judicial
actions to force that return if the reason for departure was unjust (Canonical
Procedure in Matrimonial Cases, Doheny, 1944, p. 659; The Canonical Procedure
in Separation Cases, James P. King, 1952, p. 90).
The Jurisdiction Trap: The Role of the
Ordinary and Civil Filing
The central error of
"self-separation" is the belief that a lack of an Ordinary grants a
wife jurisdiction over her own case. This is false. Even if a marriage were
truly invalid, "no priest, however certain he may be of the status of such
a case, can pass judgment on it" (The Casuist, Vol. 5, p. 15).
Furthermore, to file for civil divorce
without the Bishop’s permission is a grave sin. In the United States, Article
126 from the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore stated it was a "grave sin
to file for civil separation (or divorce) without first having the Bishop’s
permission". This requirement is maintained in Canon 1692 §2, which
specifies the Bishop "can grant permission to approach the civil
forum" only after weighing special circumstances. Without this, the party
is practicing "ecclesiastical anarchy."
Consequences: Custody, Support, and the
Harm to Children
When a separation occurs, the Church’s laws
on the effects are clear and prioritize the innocent party.
- Custody: "After the
separation, the children are to be placed in charge of the innocent
party" (The New Canon Law, Stanislaus Woywod, 1918, p. 231; Canon
1132).
- Support: If a husband causes the
separation, "he is bound to support her [the wife] for the rest of
her life... in the same manner he was supporting her before the separation
took place" (The Canonical Separation of Consorts, Rev. Eugene
Forbes, 1948, p. 239). The "guilty" party does not get to walk
away from their financial obligations. […] If the
mother were the cause, they [the children] were to be raised by the father
at the mother’s expense, especially in a case where she was wealthy” [pages 239, 241]).
The harm to children is the most
catastrophic consequence. Separation deprives them of the "stable
environment" necessary for moral development, often turning them into
"orphans of living parents".
Conclusion: Fidelity as a Counter-Revolutionary
Act
In an age of "no-fault divorce" and "fickle whim," the traditional Catholic family must be a sign of contradiction (Encyclical Letter Arcanum, Pope Leo XIII). The "story of Patricia" must end not in an apartment of her own, but in a humble return to the domestic roof. Fidelity in the desert requires a traditional obedience to the husband as head of the family and to the unbreakable laws of the Sacrament. To leave a husband on one's own accord is to follow the path of the world; to stay and carry the Cross of Matrimony is the only path to the Kingdom (Moral Theology: A Complete Course Based on St. Thomas Aquinas, Vol. 2, n. 2787).

Dear Introibo,
ReplyDeleteThank you for this article. Divorce is no use in the Philippines because we are still Catholic despite the Novus Ordo scum here in the country.
Meanwhile, you may check out my post about the militant priest of Cebu, Father Julian Bermejo. Please always remember him in your prayer and mass intentions: https://tradmasscebu.blogspot.com/2026/03/prayer-for-cause-of-fray-julian-bermejo.html
A good post to re-establish the truth on things becoming obscure. "Keep what you have" and don't disregard these things because of the weight of the current situation (Apoc. 2:25).
ReplyDeleteFr. Ojeka wrote something I consider to be a companion piece to this one: https://frtjojeka.blogspot.com/2026/03/womens-nagging-vs-mens-refusal-or.html
Don't forget about the relationship of the monster (mother) in law. I'm perfectly happy with my marriage, but my mother in law is a nut.
ReplyDeleteDivorce destroys children in ways untold. The fact that anyone would divorce their husbands on a whim is a level of evil I cant understand.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ozson for an outstanding writing . Our world is sinking fast and everything like marriage is coming apart. As an middle aged person who has never had any success of finding someone to marry, it breaks my heart to see how far things have gone. As Anon 9:57 AM stated , divorce destroys children in ways untold. The number of men and women choosing to stay single is on the uprise. God bless
ReplyDelete