S
Sillara
Guest
Actually, catharina, no one said anything about divorce. Separation is another matter, and it is a right given to the injured spouse in the catechism. It is laudable to stay with the adulterous spouse, but it is NOT required. And it is not the adulterous spouse’s choice to make.
There are many reasons why I have reached my belief concerning telling or keeping secrets: the adulterer keeps something (the fact that the adultery occurred) between him and his partner in adultery, keeps a secret shared with his lover and from his spouse. He keeps a HUGE aspect of his future life (having to deal with, one hopes, the guilt, having to deal with the lifestyle alterations necessary to prevent it from happening again, and so forth) from his spouse. He who has already wronged his spouse with the original adultery now adds the further wrongs of continued deceit and of robbing the injured spouse of his right to make the decision about the continuation of the conjugal life. By not telling, the adulterous spouse is making that decision on behalf of the spouse whom he has already injured. I just don’t get how that is better.
There are many reasons why I have reached my belief concerning telling or keeping secrets: the adulterer keeps something (the fact that the adultery occurred) between him and his partner in adultery, keeps a secret shared with his lover and from his spouse. He keeps a HUGE aspect of his future life (having to deal with, one hopes, the guilt, having to deal with the lifestyle alterations necessary to prevent it from happening again, and so forth) from his spouse. He who has already wronged his spouse with the original adultery now adds the further wrongs of continued deceit and of robbing the injured spouse of his right to make the decision about the continuation of the conjugal life. By not telling, the adulterous spouse is making that decision on behalf of the spouse whom he has already injured. I just don’t get how that is better.