Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH is not imposing his need for spiritual life on his DW. It is the same as if he chose to go to the gym on Sunday morning. I don't understand why OP and some of the other PPs think this is such a big deal.
Because they are intolerant, controlling and close-minded and cannot abide that anybody should be different from them. Their way or the highway. They are Right and Elect and everybody else is Wrong and damned. Yeah they are secular, but they are still acting like Puritan fanatics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, why don't you and the kids go with dh to church, before you decide it's so horrible??? At least try it.
Instead, go with DH to mass on a Saturday evening, keep the kids at home, get a sitter, go to dinner afterward and discuss your concerns between the two of you. Catholicism is a big, big commitment, and a lot of work, which is one of the reasons that I left.
I wouldn't say that it is a big commitment and a lot of work. I'm no longer Catholic but when I was I just went when I felt like it.
+1. You people are hilarious. The church doesn't threaten or harass you if you don't come to Mass.
But, if you don't go to mass and follow Catholic tenents then the church doesn't consider you Catholic and you're not allowed to fully participate. I don't get why people think they're Catholic if they don't follow the teachings of the church.
Okay, here's a tip for folks out there - atheists and people if any religious background should probably not marry.
Anonymous wrote:DH is not imposing his need for spiritual life on his DW. It is the same as if he chose to go to the gym on Sunday morning. I don't understand why OP and some of the other PPs think this is such a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:I did this to my husband (became Catholic). And my husband, the atheist, has been wonderful. He completely supports me in my journey. I love the man so much. It is wonderful to be married to somebody who loves me and wants me to be able to have freedom of thought. He just asks that I love and respect him.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Here is what I know from my years of marriage to my DH. He attended Catholic schools, as did his parents and grand-parents and he strongly identifies with the Church culturally. He is of Polish-American heritage, so the Catholicism also plays into his strong sense of Polish - American ethnic identity. He says he strongly believes in what he sees as the Church's social mission - to educate the ignorant, feed the hungry, clothe the naked, take care of the sick, etc. He is conflicted about issues like abortion (not birth control though), and can see how there is a human rights argument to be made for protecting the unborn, as well as the aged and sick when it comes to issues like euthanasia. As far as the whole marriage equality thing goes, he has friends who are gay, says gay marriage is a civil not a religious matter and that no one - gay or straight - needs to be married in the Church.
I grew up in a basically atheist family and have no religious upbringing or background. I just don't understand what he would find he needs in the Church. I am able to get along without God.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, he never goes for a run on Sunday mornings. He's not a runner! And while Mass is an "hour," he wants to go to a specific Mass - the one at 11 am - rather than 7 AM. Realistically, with going to and from, he is gone two hours. I sleep in until 9:30, so he could go earlier.
Honey if you're already sleeping in until 9:30 on Sunday mornings, you'll get very little sympathy from most of us on this board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, he never goes for a run on Sunday mornings. He's not a runner! And while Mass is an "hour," he wants to go to a specific Mass - the one at 11 am - rather than 7 AM. Realistically, with going to and from, he is gone two hours. I sleep in until 9:30, so he could go earlier.
He's not a runner, but he is Catholic. You need to respect that. I was raised a Jesuit, I always attend the 10:30 mass because I go to a church on a Jesuit college campus and that is the mass that has all the music majors participating. They have the university choir and the musicians. It makes mass more enjoyable. Some parishes have a certain priest assigned to each mass and your husband may have a preference that way.
Honestly, you sound like a terror of a wife and if you'd like to divorce him, I've been looking for a catholic man to date. Send him my way.
Anonymous wrote:I can completely understand what the OP is saying. It would bother me if, after a long time being married, my husband made a big decision like this (yes, it's a big decision) that impacted me, and left me out of it. There's a lot going on here, and just because it's church doesn't mean he gets to unilaterally made decisions that affect other people in the house and changes the dynamics of one of only two weekend days. Add to that the extra issue of the fact that is a religious issue where perhaps she thought they saw eye to eye on it only to discover they don't, that's a lot to digest.
Anonymous wrote:Actually, I find it interesting that my DD thinks that gay marriage, transsexualism, etc. cannot be questioned. I challenge her every day not to be doctrinaire and close-minded but to be able to logically defend her belief and to speak her truth with "gentleness and reverence."
As far as the admonition not to take communion if you are not Catholic or not in a state of grace, what is wrong with that?