Fr. Jonathan Morris asks to be laicized

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I have been married for 30 years, I know and understand what you are saying.

However, this is not a perfect world. And sometimes people attempt to make commitments only to realize that it was not at all what they wanted or needed.

I have been in that place of discernment a couple of times during my marriage. My husband has too.
We were able to work things out, but we did separate for a few months.

I have not watched the interview, but I have heard bits & pieces of it. It almost sounds as if he should not have been ordained at all, but was pushed into it by his superiors.

We would call a marriage where one party was ā€œforcedā€ an invalid attempt at marriage and an annulment would probably be easily had. Why should we not feel the same way about this poor man?
 
I am glad you and your spouse persevered and have found better days.
 
Yes, the video is in my post. I can play it from my laptop. Maybe your Kindle has some kind of adblock or something that affects videos coming up?
 
I will see if I can google it. Usually, videos appear when people post them.
 
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If DH pulled a stunt like that, I would never beg him to stay, but I would still expect to be supported in the manner to which we were accustomed.

Ain’t no way I’m supporting somebody else’s little midlife crisis.
unfortunately the courts get to decide the level of support you will get. Rarely do you live at the same level as before unless you are the main breadwinner making the most bucks.
 
unfortunately the courts get to decide the level of support you will get. Rarely do you live at the same level as before unless you are the main breadwinner making the most bucks.
And yet another reason I won’t give the go-ahead to anybody to leave their marriage because they don’t ā€œfeel it anymoreā€
 
Two good recent pieces on Jonathan Morris, from Catholic World Report and OnePeterFive. I thought the Catholic World Report one was especially interesting as it’s written by a seminary formator.


 
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Wow, that OnePeterFive article was eye-opening!
So sad that this is what was/is going on. Like a cult for certain.
 
I had seen a segment of the interview with Martha McCullen. What struck me is how he wanted to leave the seminary before ordination, and instead of being taken seriously, he was pushed to ignore the issue to not tell and was convinced to be ordained or he’d let people down.

That’s not the way to treat a vulnerable person.
 
The thing is, I’ve read almost the exact same stuff about Opus Dei, even though their founder is a canonized saint instead of an evil child molester.

I’ve also read about it in connection with some religious orders and with the Neocat Way. It seems to be a not uncommon model and I would imagine that the people who are most affected are those who are less independent at a young age and less able to reject the authority figure’s statement that they’re hellbound if they leave the group, etc.

In all these groups there also seem to be people who don’t have complaints or say they found the group spiritually helpful. So it’s pretty confusing.
 
These types of organizations cause so much suffering to their members, but then there’s also the ripple effect of when they lose their faith and encourage others to do so, also. :confused:
 
Just to play devil’s advocate, there are some who would put the entire Church also in the category of ā€œThese types of organizationsā€.

As for ā€œwhen they lose their faith and encourage others to do soā€, the question is, do they ALL lose their faith?
There are certainly lots of Opus Dei members running around professing great faith.
The Legion of Christ and Regnum Christi also still seem to be around and active.
The Legion of Christ webpage alone is pretty impressive and exciting looking. One would hope they have changed their formation tactics.

These organizations very likely result in a positive experience for some people, whether it’s because some of the formators and leaders aren’t as awful as the ones we read about, or maybe somebody else just is a better fit or adapts to it better.

Hard to judge.
 
On a slightly off-topic, I’ve noticed that some of the most virulent anti-Catholics are ex-seminarians.

To me it shows that bad formation can have a runaway cascading effect.
 
They probably went into seminary with some idealized concept and discovered everybody in there was a rotten sinful hypocrite instead. I’ve known one or two of those guys.
 
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