Canonum De Lex Ecclesium
Canons of Ecclesiastical Law

one heaven iconIV.   Faith

4.3 Dogma

Article 117 - Marriage

Canon 4238 (link)

Marriage is a dogma and legal concept formed in the 16th Century of forming a temporary testamentary trust or Cestui Que Vie Trust whereby a man and a woman enjoin and convey their rights as one to the Roman Cult or franchise subsidiary as Trustee with the husband, wife and any future children as beneficiaries until death, divorce or dissolution of the trust.

Canon 4239 (link)

Marriage is not the same as the ancient union of weddian, also known as wedlock and matrimony from the ancient Latin matrimonium meaning wedlock. Instead Marriage is created from two Latin words mari meaning Sea or Holy See and ago meaning managed, administered. Hence marriage literally means “managed by the Holy See”.

Canon 4240 (link)

The origin of Marriage dates back to the original and first marriage in 1250 between the poor Lombard and rich Venetians to create the Holy See through a ceremony on a bucentaur off St Mark’s Square between the doge and Pope Innocent IV whereby the Papal Ring was thrown into the Sea and the words "Desponsamus te, mare, in signum veri perpetuique domini" (We wed thee, sea, in the sign of the true and everlasting Lord") declared Venice and the (Holy) sea to be indissolubly one. Thus every Marriage is also symbolically a vow of allegiance to the Holy See.

Canon 4241 (link)

As the ceremony of Marriage has been deliberately corrupted, the term Marriage is reprobate, suppressed and not permitted to be revived.