04Apr2026
  • Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo
  • [email protected]
TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySoundcloud
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Contact Us
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Contact Us
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
logotype
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife’s sister? And is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband’s brother?
Home All Categories Encyclopedias Encyclopedia of Canon Law (Legislative Theology) Personal Status Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife’s sister? And is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband’s brother?
Personal Status
24 March 20090 Comments

Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife’s sister? And is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband’s brother?

popeshenoda podcast
متصفحك لا يدعم تشغيل الصوتيات.

⬇️ تحميل المحاضرة

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III explains that marriage to a deceased spouse’s sister, or marriage to a deceased spouse’s brother, is ecclesiastically forbidden and biblically prohibited; the impediment is present in both the Old and New Testaments as well as in the Church’s laws and apostolic teaching.

Biblical evidence

  • The speaker cites passages from Leviticus and Deuteronomy that list forbidden marriages, affirming that the Israelite law regarded such marriages as uncleanness in certain chapters.

  • He also refers to New Testament examples: the Lord’s discussion with the Sadducees about the resurrection, and the story of John the Baptist rebuking Herod for taking his brother’s wife, indicating that the prohibition extended into the New Testament.

Old and limited exceptions

  • The speaker mentions the one case in the Torah (the levirate law in Deuteronomy 25) where a brother takes his brother’s wife if the brother died without offspring, but clarifies that this was for a specific historical context and does not apply to our present-day civil or practical circumstances.

Fathers’ and Church laws

  • He affirms that the teachings of the Church Fathers (such as the rules of Saint Basil) and recognized fathers, and the councils of the Church, set texts forbidding this sort of marriage and consider it ecclesiastically illegitimate, with spiritual penalties and exclusion from communion until the forbidden marriage is annulled.

Spiritual and practical reasons for the ban

  • The ban is spiritual and moral: to preserve the chastity of the family and the clear boundaries of kinship roles.

  • The practical and historical reason: the prohibition also aimed to prevent crimes that could occur for the sake of marriage (murder or poisoning), as historical examples showed, and to protect modesty, rights, and inheritance.

Practical conclusion

  • The practical outcome is that this marriage is ecclesiastically forbidden, while it may not always be civilly prohibited under every secular law, the Church rejects it because it preserves family sanctity and spiritual order.

  • The speaker encourages listeners to refer to Church laws and the teachings of the Fathers for detailed questions.

For better translation support, please contact the center.

Audio Section Chastity Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife's sister? And is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband's brother? Prohibition
9 Likes
Ecclesiastical Canons

Ecclesiastical Canons

20 March 2009

Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife's sister? Is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband's brother?

24 March 2009

منشورات ذات صلة

مقالات قداسة البابا
Personal Status
23 January 1976

Annulment of Marriage, and Divorce

By Essam Raoof
Personal Status
22 February 1999

Reasons for invalidity, part 2

By Mounir Malak

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive by Date
الاقسام
Related Topics
  • Christian Teachings on Marriage and Divorce
    Christian Teachings on Marriage and Divorce
    25 June 2010
  • Is it permissible for a man to marry his deceased wife’s sister? Is it permissible for a woman to marry her deceased husband’s brother?
    24 March 2009
  • Impediments to marriage
    17 March 2009
Tags
Al-Ahram Newspaper Al Keraza Magazine Audio Section Church Creation Divinity Education Eternity Faith Forgiveness giving Grace Holiness Holy Spirit Hope Humility Incarnation Knowledge Love Marriage Mercy Monasticism Obedience pastoral care Peace Prayer Preaching priest Priesthood Purity Redemption Repentance Responsibility Resurrection Salvation Service Sin spirituality Steadfastness Teaching Trinity Unity Video Section Watani Newspaper Wisdom

Quick Links

Encyclopedias Photo albums E-Books Graphic Designs Contact us

Encyclopedias

Comparative Theology Spiritual Theology Liturgical Theology Pastoral Theology Theoretical Theology

Contact the Center

Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo

[email protected]

www.popeshenouda.org.eg

TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySpotify
logotype

© All rights reserved to Foundation of His Holiness Pope Shenouda III for Heritage Preservation

Privacy Policy

Terms and Conditions