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anon49823460
Guest
Do anyone have a ‘good’ marriage in this situation? If so, could you pass on any advice? Thanks!
This sounds like religion isn’t the issue here.This is discouraging, looks like the GhostMan is right. I just think that this situation, Catholic Husband and Evangelical Wife is a unique situation and extremely difficult to deal with. The Evangelical Wife is taught that a husband should act a certain way and if he doesn’t she loses all respect for him and the marriage dissolves to just trying to survive.
Dh & I have been married for 18 years, I was the evangelical when we met, he was catholic. He converted…we married…had kids…searching…all of us became Lutheran…now we (kids and I) are converting to catholicism and dh is returning to the faith.
So not only has our marriage worked, it has been a path for me to come to the Church.
I also agree with the Ghostman.
I can’t imagine not being married to a Catholic girl. I think about all the things we have shared spiritually for the last 32 years and how that has helped us stay bonded and united. We live only a few blocks from our parish, so we walk to Mass holding hands when the weather is good, we have family traditions around the Christmas Eve Mass. We nurtured our son together in the Faith, and we even join together with the rest of the parish at spring cleaning time mopping and dusting.
Would our marriage work if mixed? Probably, but it would have been less, and that is what you should know. There is no one here that can argue a mixed is better then a 100% Catholic marriage.
Speaking as the wife in a situation like this…please do not give up…I am begging you here.There is much in common between the two religions that you mentioned, but to the really devout the chasm is huge: Overwhelming, soul-crushingly vast, in my experience.
If you can avoid this, do it. If you can’t avoid it - endure it.
Thank you, I am thrilled to be on this journey!!!I am happy for you Mholoth (and hubby) welcome!!!