Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH is Catholic, I am Protestant. Seems close to outsiders, it's not close to us. He's agreed to let me raise children Protestant. Even both being Christian, it wouldn't work to raise them in both faiths.
You're just generically Protestant?
Anonymous wrote:DH is Catholic, I am Protestant. Seems close to outsiders, it's not close to us. He's agreed to let me raise children Protestant. Even both being Christian, it wouldn't work to raise them in both faiths.
Anonymous wrote:Merry Chrismukkah! We do both Christmas and Hannukah, both very light. Same with Passover and Easter. He celebrates Yom Kippur and the kids observe with him. I appreciate that Jesus is the link between both of our faith traditions and embrace them.
The kids will ultimately choose their own faith or none of the above, but the point of family is love. We give them that.
My philosophy is this: relax. It'll all work out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure whether to put this under relationships or religion, but I'll start out here. For the interfaith couples who two who genuinely believe and are members of different faiths (rather than couples with one person who genuinely believes & the other is of another faith in name only, but happily concedes all family religious matters to the more devout spouse), what have you agreed vis a vis the kids and how is that working out? We have an agreement that allows us both to fulfill our religious and ethical duties to our children, but its implementation in practical matters is obviously challenging at times - and it would be helpful to hear how others are navigating this. How do you determine family-wide traditions on holidays that are specific to one faith and not the other? How do you navigate choosing a school? Who gets to instruct your children on matters of religion aside from parents and clergy? If your collective social circle balances heavily more towards more one community than the other, what, if anything, do you do about that?
Thanks!
ps - divorce isn't of interest to either of us. We're in love and happy and just looking for more ideas to consider in how to balance the needs of all.
Dragging the kids to both services every week would be one way to turn them off on both religions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something's gotta give.
I'm catholic and DH is Jewish. I went to catholic school, and it was important to me to have our kids officially raised catholic. DH is more culturally Jewish and hasn't gone to temple regularly since shortly after his bar mitzvah.
Our kids go to ccd. We have an interfaith home in terms of exposure to both faiths and culture. We observe both Christian and Jewish holidays. Christmas tree and menorah.
We've been together for 20 years, and it works for us.
bc your husband isn't a religious Jew and he's letting you rule in that arena
That's why it works.
not a difficult situation to comprehend . . .
Anonymous wrote:Not sure whether to put this under relationships or religion, but I'll start out here. For the interfaith couples who two who genuinely believe and are members of different faiths (rather than couples with one person who genuinely believes & the other is of another faith in name only, but happily concedes all family religious matters to the more devout spouse), what have you agreed vis a vis the kids and how is that working out? We have an agreement that allows us both to fulfill our religious and ethical duties to our children, but its implementation in practical matters is obviously challenging at times - and it would be helpful to hear how others are navigating this. How do you determine family-wide traditions on holidays that are specific to one faith and not the other? How do you navigate choosing a school? Who gets to instruct your children on matters of religion aside from parents and clergy? If your collective social circle balances heavily more towards more one community than the other, what, if anything, do you do about that?
Thanks!
ps - divorce isn't of interest to either of us. We're in love and happy and just looking for more ideas to consider in how to balance the needs of all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shame that beliefs based on ancient myths have to get in the way of raising a 21st century family
What a shame you don't have a better outlet for your boredom/anger/isolation than trolling on a mom's chat board.
What a pity you can't get beyond 1950 with your "mom"
Religion does subjugate women - so . . . not a surprise.
Anonymous wrote:Something's gotta give.
I'm catholic and DH is Jewish. I went to catholic school, and it was important to me to have our kids officially raised catholic. DH is more culturally Jewish and hasn't gone to temple regularly since shortly after his bar mitzvah.
Our kids go to ccd. We have an interfaith home in terms of exposure to both faiths and culture. We observe both Christian and Jewish holidays. Christmas tree and menorah.
We've been together for 20 years, and it works for us.