I
iloveangels
Guest
This is actually correct. We have way too many heretics of our own to be throwing rocks at other people.
Actually, it’s a toss-up. The religion of the family is likely to come around to that of the person in the pair who actually takes religion the more seriously and actually practices their religion. Looking at it from a distance, it’s as likely that the couple will become non-Denominational as that they will become Catholic. The OP probably has more insight on this than anyone here because he’s the one whose seen whether this girl actually lives out a version of Christianity or not, or if it’s just pressure she’s getting from someplace or big talk.I am sorry. My previous posts were not intended to be disrespectful at all. I have a great deal of respect for the RC. religion. I am simply saying that if you marry an RC, you will likely lose your faith tradition in your family. That might not matter to you. The RC party will have to get a ‘dispensation’ (apparently this is God’s willl) to marry you, on condition that should the marriage bear fruit, that party has the responsibility to try to raise them in the RC Church. If that party fails to get that dispensation, then the RC Church (and therefore God?) will view your marriage as invalid.
As for the above user who talked of Protestant beliefs being heretical (and the standard replies) a careful reading would point to the fact he very deliberately used the term 'heresy follower to make sure he was not erroneously charging us with the sin of heresy.
Marriage is NOT, I repeat NOT, a conversion strategy. Bad idea.Agreed. You know, if one thinks about it from a Catholic perspective, it seems to me that mixed marriages might be a good way to bring non-Catholics into the CC. I have no data to back up if that happens with great frequency, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it does.
Jon
Now, I didn’t say it was a conversion strategy, did I? What I said was that it happens that those who do marry a Catholic may very well join the Catholic Church. I was responding to the poster who said Catholics shouldn’t marry someone who is not Catholic because he/she believes we are heretics. Of course one shouldn’t marry are a conversion strategy.Marriage is NOT, I repeat NOT, a conversion strategy. Bad idea.
You marry a person because you love them and want to live a whole life together, not so you can change them and make them into something you want them to be.
We have enough divorced Catholics. Don’t be adding to the statistic.![]()
It’s a mixed bag. Sometimes the Protestant spouse becomes a great Catholic, and other times the best you can get is a “do it my own way” pseudo-Catholic.Agreed. You know, if one thinks about it from a Catholic perspective, it seems to me that mixed marriages might be a good way to bring non-Catholics into the CC. I have no data to back up if that happens with great frequency, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it does.
Jon
Yes, and sometimes the Catholic becomes Protestant. There are no guarantees.It’s a mixed bag. Sometimes the Protestant spouse becomes a great Catholic, and other times the best you can get is a “do it my own way” pseudo-Catholic.
Agreed. You know, if one thinks about it from a Catholic perspective, it seems to me that mixed marriages might be a good way to bring non-Catholics into the CC. I have no data to back up if that happens with great frequency, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it does.
Jon
Thanks for sharing a real life experience. Hope this will give some idea to the OP on what a mixed marriage will pass through, though two marriages can never be the same.Alex:
I’ve been married to my Catholic spouse for nearly 10 years. We eloped and that worked out well for us. There were various reasons why we didn’t have a church wedding, but one of the reasons was that it just wasn’t that important to us.
You need to be real honest about what you expect from your spouse in terms of practicing faith in the future.
My husband will NEVER, EVER, EVER worship in a protestant church with me. My situation’s a bit more complicated because he’s the non-practicing person in the relationship. Still, if I want him to go to church with me, then it’s going to be a Catholic Church. There is just no way a Catholic will seriously worship in a Protestant church for any length of time.
Before RCIA, I didn’t get that. I thought like you…a church is just a church like any other church on the block. Now that I’m going through it, I totally get the reasoning.
If you accept that the Catholic Church is really the church that was given to us by Jesus through St. Peter, then why would you accept anything less than the church that Jesus, himself, gave us?
Anyway…until we had our son, I was okay going just kind of floating around in my non-denominational Christian bubble and he was happy sleeping in on Sundays (and so was I actually!)
Now that my son’s around elementary school age, it’s very important to me that he’s educated in faith. It’s really not that important to my husband, so the responsibility is something that I need to take on.
In light of the dynamic, I finally checked out my parish’s RCIA class. I started going because my status and relationship with the Catholic church needs to be clarified.
If you are going to get into a mixed marriage, then you need to do it with your eyes wide open.
You need to realize that your spouse will not come to your church and worship with you or take communion with you because in Catholic eyes, Protestantism is just BS/‘faux’ religion.
They might show up out of love and respect for you or a special event, but if they are practicing Catholics, then they aren’t going to ditch their faith for yours. That’s just reality.
If you have kids and you raise them Catholic, you (as a Protestant) will not be able to share in the Eucharist with your kid because you are not in full communion with the Catholic Church.
Yes, there is respect because you are a Christian and are trying to live a Christian life, but Protestantism is different than Catholicism.
If your spouse-to-be is devoted to her faith, then she isn’t going to change her belief system for a man. She’s just being real with you.
Men come and go, but Jesus is forever
A mixed marriage is one thing, but a mixed marriage w/kids is an entirely other struggle! There are plenty of couples who navigate this successfully. Still, every couple has to find their own way and there isn’t a manual.
You are welcome to PM me and ask more questions if you want.
Jo
Good point.Non demons miss the point of church, that an ecclesiastical structure, set order and way to do things has been instituted by the apostles. My frustration with non denoms is that they think they can just open a church from merely reading the bible and be considered a full and true Church but if I were to ask any Non denom this;
“In the first century could one be in the church but outside communion with the apostles?” The answer is always no. And we know the desciples made people into authorities, they knew they would die this is why they established Episkopos, why has the order of things changed? Why is succession taboo? Why were the apostles privelged with things we cannot have?
And you became the king of the universe when?Non demons miss the point of church, that an ecclesiastical structure, set order and way to do things has been instituted by the apostles. My frustration with non denoms is that they think they can just open a church from merely reading the bible and be considered a full and true Church …
That’s something my husband is struggling with right now.I don’t know until this day whether she became a Catholic because of me or because it was really her decision to become one. In any case we were fortunate as that one obstacle was overcome. The marriage was not easy though - a recent Catholic can be more fervent than a cradle one and tend to interpret Church’s rules more strictly and literally. I remember how upset she was when she saw me did not go for the Holy Communion. What mortal sin did I commit or something. It was tough explaining to her how we honor the Communion by not receiving and it was not just because of mortal sin!
It is a mistake to convert because of marriage but it also can open the non-Catholics into understanding Catholicism better so that an informed decision could be made whether to convert or not.
God bless.