Yada,
What a considerate and thoughtful reply. Thank you.
In answer to your questions, I am the only Catholic in all of this. My ex was raised Mormon. but left that religion and believes in the Universe (which he is the center of ha ha.). My current husband was also raised Mormon and left the church. Same for his ex wife. Her family (his in-laws) are mostly faithful Mormons (guess where I live.) I have very little family. I am the only Catholic.
My husband proclaims to be athiest, although I tell him he is the worst athiest I ever met. Although he is repectful of me and my beliefs, getting married in the Church wouldn’t change the quality of the relationship we have now.
Funny you should mention that the Church didn’t force me to marry my ex. It is too long of a story to present here, but I married him in the Church 6 years after a civil wedding solely as an act of obedience to the Church. Marrying him initially, was basically a life or death situation for the twins I was carrying. I didn’t want to marry him at all and I was honest about that. He had his own reasons for wanting to marry me and believe me, they were not noble. Six years later, my babies were preparing for First Communion and I wanted to be right with the Church as an example to them as a mother. I had tried to separate from my ex two times prior, and failed. I thought of my marriage as a sacrifice I had to make for my girls.
So, I went through the annuiment process for a first marriage I had at only 18, which lasted only a year and a half. The process was not healing at all. The priest just handed me the packet of papers. Twently five typed responses later, I gave it back to him with my check. I received one letter about 9 months later. stating that I had passed the local tribunal and that it was being sent to another archdiocese. About 3 months later, I got a letter of annulment. I married my ex during a small evening Mass, but only after I received assurances from my ex, that he understood what marriage in the Church meant AND that he really was done with drugs and crime. He said he did and was. Eighteen months later, I found out that he wasn’t. He left before my girls had the First Communion I wanted to make things "right " for. As an aside, his family was disgusted that he would marry in the Catholic Church. Of course, he didn’t care about that either.
I was devastated not at the end of the marriage, but over the fact that I could never marry again without another annulment, which I found cold and hollow and never wanted to repeat. I actually refused at first. to petition for divorce, and went with a legal separation instead. (to settle the matter of child custody.) I had counseling for 2 years to deal with the fact that I had married that man in the Church, thus ruining my life as a Catholic. If only I hadn’t tried to “do the right thing.” Ultimately I did divorce, but the Church ceased to be personally relevant to me. I continued to raise my daughters Catholic though, and they even sang in their choir for Pope John Paul II with their choir! They left the Church ultimately though.
So, to be religated to the official title of “adultress” now, rubs me just a little bit the wrong way. Getting married in the Church would not change the marriage I have, one little bit. And that’s a good thing! My marriage is a source of strength and comfort to me now, and it is as real as it gets.
Sometimes I think I should just leave, but that is a hard decision to make. As it stands, I don’t feel like the Church has a place for people like me.** I do want to see what Pope Francis might do to rectify these kinds of situations though. I strongly believe that God understands and fully accepts me and my situation. He gave me this person to share whats left of my life after all.**