Is it okay to pray with my Mormon wife?

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I have no doubt my wife is praying to the same God as I am even if her understanding is flawed. I would guess we all have an understanding of God that is flawed because we all see through a glass darkly.
This. 👍

What a good and humble man you are, James.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
The Bible says lots of things and when you start cherry-picking your favorite verses and stifle all the other passages, then you end up with +30,000 denominations. The main message of Jesus is one of love, and that’s what we Catholics emphasize.

The original poster asked for help and he got some excellent recommendations. Don’t contradict this sound advice with your fundamentalist thinking.
It’s not sound advice to dissaude someone who claims to be a Christian from praying to his wife’s idol or encouraging her to pray to her idol. There is only one God. Christians must pray with other Christians, worshipping in Spirit and in truth. There can be no indifferentism from the true God and false gods. There are innumerable times in the OT when the people are admonished for not giving proper respect to Yahweh’s exclusivity.
 
My friend, if it was easy, then everyone would be doing it. Keep at it, and strive for clarity, not for agreement.

If you strive for clarity, that is, to truly understand one another’s beliefs and feelings without pressure to agree, it means that you trust that the Holy Spirit can do what He does best - convert the mind and heart.

I recommend that when you speak with one another about important things, you sit close together and hold hands. Trust me on this. 🙂

You just plant the seeds of clarity and understanding and let the Holy Spirit do His thing. It takes the burden off of you. Remember, Jesus’ yoke is easy and His burden is light (Matthew 11:30). Part of that easy yoke and light burden is not trying to do what only God the Holy Spirit can do. Let it go and just love her like she deserves to be loved and trust God.

Your wife may never convert to Catholicism. But that is between her and God. Do not try to make yourself responsible for something you cannot control.

Concentrate on the day-to-day happiness of your marriage. THAT you CAN control. Be that believing husband that sanctifies his wife (1 Cor. 7:14) with your kindness, your respect and your trust in God. That is your sole duty and responsibility. Everything else is in God’s hands.

God bless you, my friend in Christ.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
Paul, I just love your advice of striving for clarity before agreement. Any kind of discussion should have that as a motto.

I have been familiar with the saying “seek first to understand before being understood”. It is similar, but not quite the same as your advice. How do you see the difference?

I trust that the initial poster benefited from your advice, in their marriage and their spiritual lives. I also like the idea somebody brought up of holding hands with your wife while praying. The physical contact greatly reinforces the togetherness.

That would also be good advice, in my opinion, for the lady with a non-believing husband. Hold hands with him while you are praying. You don’t need to make it obvious that you are praying.
 
It’s not sound advice to dissaude someone who claims to be a Christian from praying to his wife’s idol or encouraging her to pray to her idol. There is only one God. Christians must pray with other Christians, worshipping in Spirit and in truth. There can be no indifferentism from the true God and false gods. There are innumerable times in the OT when the people are admonished for not giving proper respect to Yahweh’s exclusivity.
I don’t know that I would be completely comfortable praying with people who belong to the Church of England according to the above since it is hard to know if a person who belongs to the Church of England is simply a Unitarian in sheep’s clothing. Most Mormons don’t have enough understanding of theology to see a big difference. They are praying to the Father of Jesus in Jesus’ name. It is hard to know their heart.
 
I’m in a similar situation, where my wife is Mormon. We have younger children and they are generally the ones that say the prayers though they sometimes ask me to say them at bedtime. Paul’s advice is absolutely wonderful. I wondered the same thing before but now I go ahead and cross myself and say “Amen”. Since we live with her parents, they have Family Home Evenings and I participate, and when discussing the lessons, I offer my Catholic perspective.
 
…snip to here…

I really feel uncomfortable praying with her as we really don’t worship the same God or the same Christ.

I admit that I haven’t shown her respect, such as observing silence when she prays,

I just don’t know what approach to take.

Oh yes - our children are pretty much grown, but - get this - my son is on a Mormon mission even as I write.

Crikes.
I do love Paul’s response to this. It is truly one of the best posts I’ve read. Most of the posts on this thread have been along the same lines: show your wife respect, pray with her, and so forth. Good advice all the way around.

Of course, there is the one…I think it’s just one but I could be wrong…who figures that you absolutely should not pray with your wife because she’s ‘worshiping the wrong god’ or something. There’s always one.

What I have NOT seen…and perhaps you might want to think about this…is any surprise at all that your wife is willing to pray with you. After all, you are the one who changed; you are the one who left, and in her perspective, you have…in a very real way…divorced and abandoned her. I know that you don’t believe that, but SHE does. In her belief system, you may well have taken her family away from her; she won’t get to keep you, and her eternal future with you is gone. That’s pretty big, y’know?

Again, it doesn’t much matter that you don’t think this is true; *she *does.

Yet she is willing to pray with you, and stay with you, and love you…even though you may have, in a VERY real way, broken her heart.

…and nobody here seems a bit surprised that she is willing to pray with you and stay with you and love you.

So the next time you have a chance to pray with her, remember what Paul said, and remember what your wife thinks you have taken from her…and love her enough to respect her decisions even if you don’t respect her beliefs.
 
I’m in a similar situation, where my wife is Mormon. We have younger children and they are generally the ones that say the prayers though they sometimes ask me to say them at bedtime. Paul’s advice is absolutely wonderful. I wondered the same thing before but now I go ahead and cross myself and say “Amen”. Since we live with her parents, they have Family Home Evenings and I participate, and when discussing the lessons, I offer my Catholic perspective.
Hurrah for Z_Ninja! God bless you, my brother in Christ!

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
So I’ve been back in the Church from Mormonism (left the Church for Mormonism 28 years ago) for a little over a month. I did significant studying/catechesis/etc before I came back.

Prior to leaving the Church (28 years ago) I actually had a pretty significant level of theological understanding of Catholic theology, but a woefully insignificant personal maturity, coupled with a Bipolar Illness of over 30 years in duration (I am, of course, Bipolar to this day and take significant doses of mood stabilizers).

All this being said, since coming Home I have really struggled with the fact that my wife is a Mormon. I have definitely concluded that Mormons are NOT Christians, and in fact lie more along the lines of Polytheists/Henothists.

Long and short of this.

I really feel uncomfortable praying with her as we really don’t worship the same God or the same Christ.

I admit that I haven’t shown her respect, such as observing silence when she prays,

I just don’t know what approach to take.

Oh yes - our children are pretty much grown, but - get this - my son is on a Mormon mission even as I write.

Crikes.
yes, do pray.
 
“No one who denies the Son has the Father. Whoever confesses the Son has the Father also.” (1 John 2:23)

The Bible says that if you deny the Son (that is, if you reject Jesus as Lord and Christ) then you do not have the Father. In other words, the Holy Trinity is not a buffet. You either come to God the Father through Jesus Christ by the Holy Spirit, in which case you pray to and worship the one true God, or you deny Jesus and therefore have no part with the Father.
Indiferently,

Context is understanding. Remember that at that time there was only one Christian faith and those who denied the Son were pagans.

Since the reformation and the continued splintering of the Church, even the Catholic Church says that we cannot condemn as heretics those who were born into those faith traditions and follow them. They are our brothers and sisters in Christ by virtue of their Christian baptism.

Mormons are a different case. Their baptism is not valid, and their tradition is not an off-shoot of Christianity but an altogether different religion. They do have a belief in Jesus, although one that is so flawed as to be nearly unrecognizable were it not for the Name.

Even so, we must treat all of our non-Catholic brothers and sisters with respect as is their due as children of God created in His image. Saint Paul taught:
18 What is my reward then? Verily that, when I preach the gospel, I may make the gospel of Christ without charge, that I abuse not my power in the gospel.
19 For though I be free from all men, yet have I made myself servant unto all, that I might gain the more.
20 And unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law;
21 To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law.
22 To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some.
23 And this I do for the gospel’s sake, that I might be partaker thereof with you.
-1Cor 9:18-23
What St. Paul means here is that you meet each person where he/she stands right now and respect them and be an example to them and teach them when you can, so that maybe you might save some. You won’t save them all, but if you approach them on their own turf, understanding their own perspective, and bring the gospel to them on their own terms and in their own language as best you can, then you may eventually win some of them to Our Lord.

If Paul had stood there and told all these people who didn’t know Jesus that if they didn’t accept Jesus as God they would burn in hell, how many converts do you think he would have won?

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
First of all, respect is the single most important thing in any relationship, be it friend or co-worker or spouse.

You MUST show respect to your wife at all times. It is okay to let her know (in a gentle way) that you disagree with her choice of religion, but stress that you respect HER, and HER BELIEFS and HER REASONS for those beliefs.

If your wife thinks you don’t respect her:
  1. Your relationship will erode to the point where it is irrepairable.
  2. She will never take your beliefs seriously because she will see your beliefs as the source of your disrespect.
  3. She will not respect your views, so she will not listen to anything you say.
Remember that your wife is a child of God, and therefore beloved by Him, so she deserves your respect.

Respect is the one thing everyone craves. Give a person some respect and (s)he will be yours forever. If she is ever going to listen to you about what you believe (NOT what you demand that she believe) you will need to have a loving and trusting relationship wherein you can discuss things in a friendly and non-threatening way.

And even if your wife never embraces Catholicism, if you show her the proper kindness and respect you will have a happy and fulfilling marriage despite your religious differences.

Resolve to do some little kindness for her every day. Expect no compensation from her. Just do it because you love her. This is not a prescription for converting someone - this is the basic necessity for a loving marriage.

Here is the easiest and best way to have respectful relationships with your wife and others around you:

DO NOT strive for agreement with your wife; strive for CLARITY. That is, don’t try to get her to agree with you, just try to really understand what she thinks and believes (listen to her attentively and don’t interrupt). This is the thing that women want most from men and the thing that most men are clueless about. If you really listen to her (no matter how long it takes) and don’t interrupt, this alone will improve your marriage 1000%.

And try to communicate to her, softly and gently (after she is finished talking - you haven’t interrupted, right?), what you believe and why. In the beginning keep it short and simple - she will probably be in shock because you actually listened to her like she wished you would all these years. 🙂

You will be shocked at the turn-around in your relationship once your wife realizes that you are not trying to get her to agree with you; you are really trying to understand her and trying to get her to understand you. That is all. Nothing more.

Like my sig says, I prefer clarity to agreement. This has been the one thing that has turned around my relationships, my career and my life in general. I invite you to give it the 30-day trial. Trust me, you will never go back.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
This is why I keep coming back here after 10 years, the wonderful & intelligent response from people here, God bless you Paul x
 
Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
Hey Paul, do you have a mormon wife? If I had a mormon wife I would be very concerned about her immortal soul, and I would have no way of being sure that she could go to heaven. The normative way to go to heaven is being a Catholic. I don’t think it’s loving to allow one’s spouse to remain in a false religion out of indifferentism. I don’t think it’s a husbandly thing to do as such: “And even if your wife never embraces Catholicism, if you show her the proper kindness and respect you will have a happy and fulfilling marriage despite your religious differences.” Why not say that God has put the Catholic husband in the mormon wife’s life to bring her out of her false religion and idolatry and to a saving relationship with the one true God?

If one’s wife cannot see that a Catholic is acting out of love in trying to get her to leave a false religion, then whatever “relationship” one has would be rather shallow IMO.
 
One of my customers brought his Mormon wife into my Catholic bookstore to buy a Catholic Bible.

They have been married for 37 years and she finally decided to go to RCIA and convert.

As far as I could see he was not judgmental, arrogant or unkind to her in any way throughout the years.

Some of the posters here would have sent me running from the CC just by their sanctimonious attitudes.

Glad I didn’t meet them on my journey into the CC.
 
One of my customers brought his Mormon wife into my Catholic bookstore to buy a Catholic Bible.

They have been married for 37 years and she finally decided to go to RCIA and convert.

As far as I could see he was not judgmental, arrogant or unkind to her in any way throughout the years.

Some of the posters here would have sent me running from the CC just by their sanctimonious attitudes.

Glad I didn’t meet them on my journey into the CC.
Miriam…

OK, I’m a “Mormon wife.” I had a “Mormon husband.” He died twenty years ago last Saturday…and of last Saturday, I became officially a widow longer than I was married. However, my beliefs (and my conviction) tell me that I am still very much married to him. When I die, I will still have him, as husband, as I will still have ties to my children, AS my children. They, in turn, will be able to eternally with their spouses and children.

I know that you, as a Catholic, do not believe this, and I’m not asking you to. I AM asking those who are urging this man to be disrespectful of his wife’s beliefs, and to actively harass her (and that is what they are doing) into changing her beliefs, to THINK a moment.

As I wrote before, she…as do I…believes that marriages can be eternal. What this man has done, in her view, is to divorce her. He left her…that he stays with her at all now, though still a marriage in the eyes of the law and of God in the mortal sense, is no longer the marriage she expected, and the marriage he promised her.

Again, it doesn’t matter what he thinks. SHE believes this…and still she stays with him. She stays with him even though he treats her with contempt; making noise and being disrespectful during her prayers, mocking and denigrating the beliefs they both once shared.

I wouldn’t have been that understanding.

Oh, I would have stayed with him, and loved him through his personal search for religious truth. I would support him, and hope that eventually he would ‘see the light’ and come back. I would not, however, be disrespectful of his new beliefs. I would go to Mass with him. I would join with him in his religious life. I would pray with him, and study with him.

But if he acted toward me as the guy in the OP acted towards his wife, and the way others here have urged him to act?

He’d be gone, and it would be a big project for him to come back, assuming that I’d allow it. I might not.

…and no, I wouldn’t divorce him. As a Catholic, I understand that he MIGHT be able to get an annulment because he married ‘wrong’ in the first place. I’m not sure about that. He might not…but he’d have to do all the work and trust me, it would be work.

Again, I honor and respect his wife for being who she is, and putting up with that level of sheer contempt and disrespect.

I wouldn’t have. My flaw, I know…but I would not have.

…and if he did that to me, you can be absolutely assured that if I ever left Mormonism, Catholicism would be the LAST place I would look for solace.

And that would be on his head, wouldn’t it?

Diana, just interjecting a POV that, perhaps, might be worth a look.
 
Diana, only one poster has encouraged Shuttlepiper to not pray with his Mormon wife. One. Everyone else has encouraged him to pray with her and to be loving, kind and respectful.

I read Shuttlepiper’s other posts and his wife is not guiltless in their marital problems. It takes two to tango. They both need to improve their treatment of each other. They both need counseling. At least Shuttlepiper is asking for advice and seeking help during this difficult time. I hope his wife also seeks help and wants to keep their marriage together.

Also, please remember, before condemning the OP and assuming that he is always the ‘bad guy’ and the one who is changing everything and destroying ‘her’ marriage, that he is an equal partner in the marriage and his opinion matters too. The OP also struggles with mental illness. Even good days can be a struggle. Mental illness doesn’t give him a pass to behave badly, but we and his wife should be sensitive to that fact and be more charitable.

Since when are spouses in a marriage not expected to change? People change even in a marriage. I have only been married six years but both of us have changed over those six years. When I was suffering from depression and not a very nice person, my husband didn’t whine or complain about me changing. I even walked away from him because I couldn’t handle it anymore. He didn’t get upset with me. He loved me and took care of me. We got through it and have a stronger marriage for it.

Marriage is about commitment and no longer having an ‘eternal marriage’ doesn’t change that fact. Yes, she can mourn and grieve, but she needs to be committed and accept the OP’s commitment to their marriage regardless of whether or not it is ‘eternal’. Shuttlepiper’s rejection of Mormonism does not mean he has rejected her. If she thinks this, she needs to work on that herself. Yes, it hurts her, but she needs to learn and adjust too. Shuttlepiper is not the only one who needs to work on the marriage. They BOTH do.

My husband left Mormonism with me. I was lucky. He was waiting for me, in fact. However, my parents reacted horribly. They took it very personal and considered my rejection of the LDS church as a rejection of them and our whole family. I tried really hard to show them how much I love them and that my leaving the LDS church didn’t change the fact that they are my parents. The problem is that they refused to respect me and my husband as a couple and as parents to our children. They refused to respect boundaries and forced an estrangement. But of course, in their minds it was all our fault and we are the horrible apostates who are rejecting them.

My point is when it comes to marriage problems, it is quite rare that one of the spouses is guiltless. They both need to follow Paul’s wonderful advice and get some counseling if necessary.
 
Diana, only one poster has encouraged Shuttlepiper to not pray with his Mormon wife. One. Everyone else has encouraged him to pray with her and to be loving, kind and respectful.
This is true and I apologize…everybody else was remarkable, and a previous post of mine said so.

As to your point regarding the idea that both people are at fault when a marriage goes south…well, in many cases that’s true.

However, I wasn’t referring to the marriage going south; just going by what the OP said regarding what he actually did while his wife was praying.

I wouldn’t put up with that.

More importantly, no matter how badly my husband behaved, if he had switched religions on me, I wouldn’t have treated his ‘prayer time’ in that manner.
 
Pray with her. Pray for her. Pray for your children. But as to whether you kneel at the couch with her, or assume priesthood postures (because she does, or demands it of you as priesthood leader), or confine your prayers as directed to Heavenly Father only (instead of Jesus, the Holy Spirit, the Holy Trinity, the saints, etc), that is up to you. It is difficult to remain standing while she kneels in prayer. Or make the Sign of the Cross. Or clasp your rosary in your hands. Or conclude your prayer in the name of the Blessed Trinity. May God grant you strength in doing so.
 
Pray with her. Pray for her. Pray for your children. But as to whether you kneel at the couch with her, or assume priesthood postures (because she does, or demands it of you as priesthood leader), or confine your prayers as directed to Heavenly Father only (instead of Jesus, the Holy Spirit, the Holy Trinity, the saints, etc), that is up to you. It is difficult to remain standing while she kneels in prayer. Or make the Sign of the Cross. Or clasp your rosary in your hands. Or conclude your prayer in the name of the Blessed Trinity. May God grant you strength in doing so.
Why wouldn’t a Catholic kneel in prayer? And the only time I clasp my rosary in my hands is when I am praying the rosary. A lot of prayers at my parish are just to the Father in the name of Jesus. I’m not sure what a priesthood posture would be and I was a Mormon for over 40 years. The only priesthood posture I can imagine is standing in a prayer circle like they do in the Mormon temple so standing during prayer would be more Mormon than Catholic. Why would we want to throw Catholicism in the face of our spouse at a time when we are praying together … can’t see where that would convert her.

As for the charge that I have abandoned my spouse by becoming Catholic, I kind of had this idea I might be leading my family to the truth since Mormonism is so obviously false.
 
This is true and I apologize…everybody else was remarkable, and a previous post of mine said so.

As to your point regarding the idea that both people are at fault when a marriage goes south…well, in many cases that’s true.

However, I wasn’t referring to the marriage going south; just going by what the OP said regarding what he actually did while his wife was praying.

I wouldn’t put up with that.

More importantly, no matter how badly my husband behaved, if he had switched religions on me, I wouldn’t have treated his ‘prayer time’ in that manner.
I wouldn’t put up with disrespect either nor should the OP’s wife. The OP does acknowledge his fault, which is important and necessary. (This is unlike my Mormon mother who refuses to acknowledge when she is at fault. We cannot work on improving our relationship until she does so).

You did refer to marital problems in your first post. See below.
What I have NOT seen…and perhaps you might want to think about this…is any surprise at all that your wife is willing to pray with you. After all, you are the one who changed; you are the one who left, and in her perspective, you have…in a very real way…divorced and abandoned her. I know that you don’t believe that, but SHE does. In her belief system, you may well have taken her family away from her; she won’t get to keep you, and her eternal future with you is gone. That’s pretty big, y’know?

Again, it doesn’t much matter that you don’t think this is true; *she *does.
The perception of divorce and abandonment is a problem in a marriage. Remember, HE is also still there despite the fact that she may very well feel abandoned. The OP does need to respect his wife, but she also needs to adjust and learn to live in this new reality. She may think he has abandoned her, but be has not. He is still there, even with his imperfections.

Again, it doesn’t matter that she thinks he has abandoned her; he hasn’t. 😉

Actually, what they both think matters and I don’t think you should be as dismissive of the OP’s feelings and experiences as you seem to be. I get that you have more understanding of his Mormon wife since you are a Mormon woman.

Try walking in his shoes for a bit. Imagine learning a truth that shakes you to the core. By learning that truth, you realize you have been lied to and deceived by people you have always trusted completely. You realize your family is being deceived too. You love them and want to help them to also learn the truth. Now imagine they do not listen to a word you say. The people who you love and are the most important in your life are dismissive of what you think is supremely important. They used to trust you but because of this one thing, they don’t trust you anymore. Now imagine trying to pray with your family. They no longer trust you and dismiss your feelings and opinion. Don’t you think this might be hard?

The thing is, leaving the LDS church is difficult for both those who leave and for family who stay. The feelings of neither should be dismissed. Every member of the family is important regardless of their religion or lack thereof.
 
As for the charge that I have abandoned my spouse by becoming Catholic, I kind of had this idea I might be leading my family to the truth since Mormonism is so obviously false.
My own experience and my observation of many people who leave the LDS church is that it is often the ‘apostate’ who is abandoned by LDS family. It is not easy for either spouse when one leaves the LDS church. The feelings of both spouses are important.

I agree with you that you are leading your family to the truth. I’m glad your family is intact. Too many families are destroyed when one spouse stops believing in Mormonism.
 
My own experience and my observation of many people who leave the LDS church is that it is often the ‘apostate’ who is abandoned by LDS family. It is not easy for either spouse when one leaves the LDS church. The feelings of both spouses are important.

I agree with you that you are leading your family to the truth. I’m glad your family is intact. Too many families are destroyed when one spouse stops believing in Mormonism.
That’s because too many Mormons can’t handle the truth about Joseph Smith. They are threatened whenever they are presented with it.
 
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