Anonymous wrote:I should have said before that we do generally attend my church, so all the comments about us going separately are wrong. It's also been over 15 years since I attended any other church, so I'm not church hopping.
I just feel badly that whenever I tell him it's not going to happen, it ends up becoming a fight.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol. one believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the other believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the masses are essentially identical, as both date to the Nicene council.
One is Catholic. The other is Catholic after Henry VIII wanted a divorce but didn't want to go all Martin Luther or John Calvin.
The Church of England had substantial theological differences prior to that.
Yes, the masses are essentially identical, which is why my DH assumed I'd have no issues becoming RC. That does not mean the beliefs are the same, however similarly we worship.
-OP
you going off to one church on Sunday while your husband goes to another one is not going to make for a healthy marriage. that is stupid. A church is supposed to be a community. One of you needs to compromise.
or you should both just go episcopalian or lutheran. IT IS ALL THE SAME THING. Just read the friggin bible and stop obsessing over silly differences created by old white guys in the 1500s and 1600s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's his reason for wanting you to convert?
He had bought into the marketing and fear. Her DH is worried for her soul.
OP: this, pretty much.
Religion is very personal. Meh doesn't have responsibility for your soul; you do. Tell him to back off. He is way out of bounds.
I think this is bullshit. A family is much more personal than religion. Asking someone to convert from Jew to Islam to Athiest to Christian is one thing. Anglican to Catholic is a small thing for family unity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol. one believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the other believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the masses are essentially identical, as both date to the Nicene council.
One is Catholic. The other is Catholic after Henry VIII wanted a divorce but didn't want to go all Martin Luther or John Calvin.
The Church of England had substantial theological differences prior to that.
Yes, the masses are essentially identical, which is why my DH assumed I'd have no issues becoming RC. That does not mean the beliefs are the same, however similarly we worship.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol. one believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the other believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the masses are essentially identical, as both date to the Nicene council.
One is Catholic. The other is Catholic after Henry VIII wanted a divorce but didn't want to go all Martin Luther or John Calvin.
The Church of England had substantial theological differences prior to that.
Yes, the masses are essentially identical, which is why my DH assumed I'd have no issues becoming RC. That does not mean the beliefs are the same, however similarly we worship.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:lol. one believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the other believes Jesus is the son of God and follows the new testament. the masses are essentially identical, as both date to the Nicene council.
One is Catholic. The other is Catholic after Henry VIII wanted a divorce but didn't want to go all Martin Luther or John Calvin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's his reason for wanting you to convert?
He had bought into the marketing and fear. Her DH is worried for her soul.
OP: this, pretty much.
Religion is very personal. Meh doesn't have responsibility for your soul; you do. Tell him to back off. He is way out of bounds.
I think this is bullshit. A family is much more personal than religion. Asking someone to convert from Jew to Islam to Athiest to Christian is one thing. Anglican to Catholic is a small thing for family unity.
It's actually a very big difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's his reason for wanting you to convert?
He had bought into the marketing and fear. Her DH is worried for her soul.
OP: this, pretty much.
Religion is very personal. Meh doesn't have responsibility for your soul; you do. Tell him to back off. He is way out of bounds.
I think this is bullshit. A family is much more personal than religion. Asking someone to convert from Jew to Islam to Athiest to Christian is one thing. Anglican to Catholic is a small thing for family unity.
Anonymous wrote:When we met and married, I was in the process of changing from another mainline Protestant denomination to Anglicanism. My soon to be husband, being Roman Catholic, was all for it. I felt that was a little strange, but now I understand - he has been hoping all this time that I would be led to Catholicism. It's been 10 years and he has suddenly become very insistent about it.
The problem is - that's never going to happen!
He's very, very pushy about it and it becomes an argument almost every Sunday. Our children were both baptized Protestant and now he thinks that was wrong as well.
How do I convince him I'm not going to convert?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's his reason for wanting you to convert?
He had bought into the marketing and fear. Her DH is worried for her soul.
OP: this, pretty much.
Religion is very personal. Meh doesn't have responsibility for your soul; you do. Tell him to back off. He is way out of bounds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's his reason for wanting you to convert?
He had bought into the marketing and fear. Her DH is worried for her soul.
OP: this, pretty much.