Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’d like to hear from practicing Catholics. Thanks.
I hope you don't think that all practicing Catholics will take your side.
Of course not, but they also wouldn’t start spitting invective at the yearning to raise their kids with some faith foundation, however they choose to live the rest of their lives. There’s a billion of us, so I expect variety of response
Anonymous wrote:Please no Catholic bashing.
Both of us raised Catholic, though very lukewarmly, married in Church, baptized our kids, Catholic school. About 4 years ago I embraced my faith and returned to Church and Sacraments. My husband not so much. It is very hard because he will come to Mass if asked but won’t go to Confession, and still receives, and won’t make an effort to take kids without me. It’s hard because I feel my kids pick up on his attitude. Please, aside from prayers to St Monica , share how I can have grace for my husband but also raise my kids in the value that Sunday Mass is non negotiable. This is coming up because he took half our kids out to visit family and instead of finding a Mass (it’s CA, there are tons), they’re doing vacay stuff. I don’t mean to be a holy roller but it’s hard for me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’d like to hear from practicing Catholics. Thanks.
No, you want the answer to be that it is ok for you to force your adult husband into a religion that he isn't interested in at the same level as you.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’d like to hear from practicing Catholics. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’d like to hear from practicing Catholics. Thanks.
I hope you don't think that all practicing Catholics will take your side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Each of you is your own person.
How dare you push your indoctrination on him?
He is an adult. If he doesn't want to go, he doesn't have to.
And you changed the rules.
You, by your own omission, decided to become more religious. Well, that is your right, but you have no right to force that on another adult.
I basically agree with the above, but also I think I see your point of view. You wish your husband felt the way you do about religion, but he doesn't - and you won't change him. He didn't change you, right? Give it up.
By the way, growing up, my father took us to mass every Sunday while my mother stayed home and read. She said it was her only peaceful time of the week. She also was raised Catholic and practiced in the sense of going to confession and communion once a year.
Eventually, we kids grew up. My brother is a self-professed "nothing', after staying Catholic for a while, to make his wife happy. My sister is an evangelical Christian and I'm an atheist. You never know how kids are going to turn out.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I’d like to hear from practicing Catholics. Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Each of you is your own person.
How dare you push your indoctrination on him?
He is an adult. If he doesn't want to go, he doesn't have to.
And you changed the rules.
You, by your own omission, decided to become more religious. Well, that is your right, but you have no right to force that on another adult.