S
St_Gabriel
Guest
St Gabriel;2737000:
Right back for you!Amen! He’s the head of my household too!
Prayers that you can stay strong and that your marriage will be all that God wants it to be![]()
Jesus I trust in you! Amen
St Gabriel;2737000:
Right back for you!Amen! He’s the head of my household too!
Prayers that you can stay strong and that your marriage will be all that God wants it to be![]()
Jesus I trust in you! Amen
Conversion is not a requirement of the Church as all conversions must be freely chosen.My priest, who did the pre-cana here in Sweden, a Brit, told me there is NO reason for my hubby to convert from Lutheran-Protestant to Catholicism
Wow, that’s just… well… looking on the bright side I suppose.because there isn’t THAT big a difference; compared to if I were marrying a man of Islam faith.
That’s nice, it doesn’t change the Church’s teaching or my stance.I’m quite happy with my marriage and we’re a very happy couple. Our marriage is picture perfect, regardless if he’s non-Catholic.
People who post on a *Catholic *internet forum, hopefully would expect Catholic teaching on it. And, yes, debate is part of the package.Prepare yourself for an assault with words.
(not from me!)
I just read an article on Pope John Paul II about how the Church and inter-faith marriages.That’s nice, it doesn’t change the Church’s teaching or my stance.
This is one of the most misused passages in Scripture, and I’m surprised it took almost 60 posts to surface.Yea, it’s a shame. I guess Matthew 7:12 means nothing to some Catholics.
So you do not agree with “The Golden Rule”?This is one of the most misused passages in Scripture, and I’m surprised it took almost 60 posts to surface.
Unfortunately for those who like to pull this verse out of context, it does not stand up to scrutiny either within the context of the passage it resides in nor when viewed with the Gospels in their entirity.
I saw an interesting statistic once (can’t remember where). It looked at the likelihood of children becoming practicing Catholics. The least likely was if the mother practiced and the father didn’t. More likely was if both parents were observent. Shockingly (to me at least), most likely was if the father was practicing and the mother not.
Shows how much a father’s behavior influences his children.
I know it was like that for me. My father went to church on Christmas and Easter, and rarely otherwise. My Mother took us every week. Even though I never really disagreed with anything about Catholicism, my practice dropped off in my teens. Thank god my wife brought me back.
God Bless
Snide remarks? Not from that post! I see them coming from you, tho.People who post on a *Catholic *internet forum, hopefully would expect Catholic teaching on it. And, yes, debate is part of the package.
However, your snide remarks are uncalled for. If you have something to say to someone, you should say it directly. Etiquette and forum rules both dictate such.
Sure you are. You’re in the middle group. Both were practicing when you grew up. Rember, statistics like this are just averages of the population.My parents were both Catholic (Mom died in 2004) and dad is still of course… but fell away from the faith when Mom died. Dunno what he thinks now.
Anyway, my Mom was the MOST devout religious Catholic I ever met besides my paternal grandmother.
I never was religious or interested in it until my Mom got ill with leukemia in 1998. So… I guess I am not one of these in the statistics.
If both father and mother attend regularly, 33 percent of their children will end up as regular churchgoers, and 41 percent will end up attending irregularly. Only a quarter of their children will end up not practicing at all. If the father is irregular and mother regular, only 3 percent of the children will subsequently become regulars themselves, while a further 59 percent will become irregulars. Thirty-eight percent will be lost.
If the father is non-practicing and mother regular, only 2 percent of children will become regular worshippers, and 37 percent will attend irregularly. Over 60 percent of their children will be lost completely to the church.
Let us look at the figures the other way round. What happens if the father is regular but the mother irregular or non-practicing? Extraordinarily, the percentage of children becoming regular goes up from 33 percent to 38 percent with the irregular mother and to 44 percent with the non-practicing, as if loyalty to father’s commitment grows in proportion to mother’s laxity, indifference, or hostility.
Before mothers despair, there is some consolation for faithful moms. Where the mother is less regular than the father but attends occasionally, her presence ensures that only a quarter of her children will never attend at all.
Even when the father is an irregular attender there are some extraordinary effects. An irregular father and a non-practicing mother will yield 25 percent of their children as regular attenders in their future life and a further 23 percent as irregulars. This is twelve times the yield where the roles are reversed.
Where neither parent practices, to nobody’s very great surprise, only 4 percent of children will become regular attenders and 15 percent irregulars. Eighty percent will be lost to the faith.
Oh good, I fit in somewheresSure you are. You’re in the middle group. Both were practicing when you grew up. Rember, statistics like this are just averages of the population.
God Bless
Yes, we should treat others nicely. However, Matthew 7:12 is not “the Golden Rule”. The “golden rule” appears **nowhere **in the bible. Matthew 7:12 has nothing to do with “treating others as you would like to be treated”.So you do not agree with “The Golden Rule”?![]()
It was not a marriage - but thank you for your kind comment nonetheless. It was invalid. It was not a marriage that didn’t work - there never was a marriage to begin with. But I understand what you where trying to say.It’s such a shame that your first marriage didn’t work out.
Yes I was trying to be polite. I’m sorry that your relationship there, with a Non-Catholic man didn’t work out to what you may have wanted it to be.It was not a marriage - but thank you for your kind comment nonetheless. It was invalid. It was not a marriage that didn’t work - there never was a marriage to begin with. But I understand what you where trying to say.
~Liza