Tough not to become a thread hack on this one…you guys are all hacks, you know that? Nothing could be nerdier than discussing doctrine/church teaching online with all the Catholic computer geeks.

I love it.
What FCGeorge has brought up has touched a chord with me. I feel the same way as him. I think there have been way too many annulments on silly details. It’s created a lot of confusion. There’s no bones about it that St. Monica’s marriage was invalid. But that’s not the point. St. Monica was doing the best that she saw fit to do. She was seeking to please the Lord. This is what the Lord wants. He wants us to love Him and continue on His paths of truth in as much of the way we can understand. This is not about perfect interpretation of the law. The disciples were dummies. Nice! This is not to excuse their faults, or to excuse the teachings of the church, but if a person is seeking to please Christ, I believe they will be with Him. Ultimately, this is what it’s about.
Then I remember Moses telling his people that divorce was OK. I remember Jesus teaching that this was because our hearts are hard. Jesus went on to teach what the Church now upholds. Both Christ and Moses’s teachings are for our sake–not Christ’s sake. They are there because He loves us and wants the best for us.
St. Monica’s life inspired me. I saw her virtue, and I continued to set her life as an example for me. I love her and talk to her often. Her husband was a public official like mine. He suffered from angry outbursts, like mine. And he had a “sexual addiction” if you will, like mine. I even visited her chapel at the Vatican, wondering where her image was. I took a seat, prayed the devotionals, looked up, and then saw her overpowering, larger-than-life statue. But shockingly, her compassionate gaze, etched in stone, was fixed directly at me. From then on I knew she was intercessing in heaven for my family. Like crazy. ha ha.
I would often struggle about leaving my husband. I was confused. I looked at Monica’s life, and wondered what I should do. I faced my hub’s violence and sexual betrayals over and over. I sought to be gentle and compassionate with him. And I did, and it helped. We went to marriage counselors, and he would get better for a while. I stayed for 11 years. But one day, I decided to leave because of the escalation in violence, the fear my children had, and for our safety. Unfortunately my husband still refuses to commit to impulse control counseling.

( No one knows St. Monica’s exact situation. It’s not good to assume. I don’t see her as having the opportunity to leave, since things were different, socioeconomically, especially for women. I don’t know how violent her husband was, bless her. Perhaps God put her there to suffer for the sake of 3 conversions. Should someone throw their body into a rosebush because St. Francis passionately did so?

I strongly feel what I did was right, though. There has been no indication otherwise, even when seeking the counsel of many different conservative priests. I was seeking to do Christ’s will and please Him. How can we lump every incident under the law with complete objectivity? It requires discernment, faith, reason, love. Many would say I should have left my husband at first sign of abuse. I am glad I did not, even to this day. Many would say I should not have brought 6 children into such an unhealthy situation. I’ve come to understand that God is much more powerful than I am. And because of Him in His goodness and mercy, my children are very strong, mature and devout for other children their age. They have a deepness that I wish I had before getting married.