Sir Alfred Stephen and divorce law reform in New South Wales, 1886-1892
Abstract
The laws governing marriage and divorce have always been of
the utmost importance to both the Church and to the State, for the
family is the foundation of morality. The Australian Colonies inherited
the English marriage laws, but not, after 1856, their divorce
laws. The English in turn based their laws on the Christian ideal of
marriage and the canon law. Until the Middle Ages, the simple consent
of both parties, without any religious ceremony, was deemed sufficient
to constitute a valid marriage. In the twelfth century the Church
raised marriage to the status of a sacrament, and held it to be absolutely
indissoluble. The Council of Trent made its celebration by a
priest essential for the validity of the marriage, and, at the same
time, reinforced the medieval idea that marriage was a formidable
barrier to spiritual purity when it reaffirmed the celibacy of the
priesthood and pronounced anathema on anyone who dared to say that
"the state of marriage is to be preferred to the state of virginity or
celibacy"
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