Last month, I posted the story of a Catholic school teacher who lost his job because he remarried without an annullment.

That wasn’t the end of the story.

According to the Des Moines Register, he’s fighting back:

Tom and Molly Girsch had less than a week of wedded bliss before their lives were thrown into a turmoil that tested their marriage, faith and livelihood.

The simple civil ceremony performed before a handful of friends and family members in their backyard Aug. 4, 2006, launched the Waterloo couple’s new life together.

It also began the end of Tom Girsch’s three-decade career as a teacher and coach at Columbus High School, a Catholic school in Waterloo.

Over the next year, Girsch would negotiate a revised contract, the Cedar Valley Catholic Schools’ board would take two votes on whether he could stay, and the archbishop would weigh in on the controversy. In the end, for lack of a church annulment, the social studies teacher would be forced to resign.

“The wedding was supposed to be a happy thing,” said Molly Girsch. “We had been lucky (in love) once before, and we were overjoyed we could be lucky again.”

Molly, 52, was a widow and a substitute teacher at Cedar Valley Catholic Schools. Tom, 59, divorced in 1997. They met through a mutual friend about 10 years ago and were friends before they began dating.

“We didn’t think the marriage was going to cause trouble,” said Tom Girsch. “But a few days after the ceremony, I got called to the office. When I walked in, (school officials) offered congratulations on my marriage and said they were happy for me. Then they asked if I ever got an annulment. I said I hadn’t. Then they asked if I was aware that they could terminate me.”

About half of U.S. Catholics, by the 20th anniversary of their first marriage, have divorced, according a 2002 study. The church does not make public the number of annulments granted.

While the Catholic Church recognizes that some marriages fail despite the best efforts of the couple, it views marriage as a sacred covenant that cannot be broken by civil divorce. While parishes give support to divorced Catholics, they may not remarry with church blessing unless they receive an annulment – a determination by church officials that their first marriage was invalid. Annulments do not nullify the first marriage, but are granted under the criteria that some element of the marital bond, while presumed to be present, actually was lacking when the parties married, according to the Metropolitan Tribunal for the Archdiocese of Dubuque.

When school officials suggested that if Girsch sought an annulment he might be allowed to continue to teach, he said he told them he’d have to check with his former wife, current wife and his family. He asked for some time, but by the end of the day, school officials notified him that he had 48 hours to resign or be terminated.

The difference between the expectations for Catholic teachers and teachers of other faiths centers around the Roman Catholic Church’s beliefs concerning the sacraments and supporting the precepts of the church, according to Jeff Henderson, Dubuque Archdiocese superintendent of schools.

“In the Catholic Church, teachers are referred to as witnesses and examples of faith,” Henderson said. “By contract, a teacher also agrees to conduct himself as a moral person, … to be a community leader and faithful citizen of the church and state, and act accordingly at all times.”

News of the school board’s ultimatum spread quickly.

“It was like a tidal wave of e-mail in the Catholic community,” said Kathy McCoy, a friend of the Girsch family. “Tom got thousands of supportive e-mail messages from students, current and past, from all over the world.”

Cedar Valley officials were also hearing from people, according to George Scully, a Waterloo Catholic. Scully said he believes that uproar led the school and archdiocese to negotiate a revised contract with Tom Girsch.

The agreement, signed Sept. 7, 2006, specified that Tom would immediately seek an annulment through the Metropolitan Tribunal of the Archdiocese of Dubuque. If the annulment wasn’t granted, he would submit his resignation, which the school board could accept or reject. He also agreed to work with the school board to “heal the wounds that may have been created by the situation.”

Although many Catholics receive annulments, Girsch’s request was denied. The annulment proceedings are secret.

That’s just the tip of the iceberg.

There’s much more in the Register article, including details about how the community and people in the church have reacted to these events, so continue at the link.

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