Anonymous wrote:Why would you want to attend services if you consider yourself agnostic? Your husband wants nothing to do with religion, neither do you, so why even go to service? If you at some point change your mind great, but attending religious services seems pointless if you don’t hold any part of the actual faith. If there are cultural things you want to do with your children incorporate those like every family does, but you don’t need a house of religion to achieve cultural traditions. Religious temples, churches, etc are for worship not “cultural tradition training” for non-believers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this all about you?
Are you interested in being somewhat culturally involved in his familys cultural catholicism?
How is this an issue now
OP here. He is actively against catholicism, so no, that is not of interest to either of us...
DP. Your thread title says “interfaith” so what do you mean by that? Is your husband interested in being culturally Christian, with a tree etc? Catholicism is not the be-all-and-end-all in Christianity. Would you tolerate that?
I guess interfaith was a misnomer - he has no interest in Christianity, culturally or religiously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this all about you?
Are you interested in being somewhat culturally involved in his familys cultural catholicism?
How is this an issue now
OP here. He is actively against catholicism, so no, that is not of interest to either of us...
DP. Your thread title says “interfaith” so what do you mean by that? Is your husband interested in being culturally Christian, with a tree etc? Catholicism is not the be-all-and-end-all in Christianity. Would you tolerate that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this all about you?
Are you interested in being somewhat culturally involved in his familys cultural catholicism?
How is this an issue now
OP here. He is actively against catholicism, so no, that is not of interest to either of us...
Anonymous wrote:Is this all about you?
Are you interested in being somewhat culturally involved in his familys cultural catholicism?
How is this an issue now
Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from anyone who is doing this. I was raised as a conservative Jew, husband was raised catholic but is now atheist. Spiritually I am agnostic but I identify as culturally Jewish. DH is onboard with the idea of a culturally Jewish household, but I can’t figure out what this would look like without his participation. During my 20s I basically disconnected from religious life behind observing major holidays with family, and I would like to try to get back into things. One thought was reform synagogue, but he has no interest in going or learning and it feels strange for me to go somewhere to try to build community without him. We don’t have kids yet but they id like for them to grow up celebrating the holidays in our house. Am I naive to think that any of this is possible without his active participation?