C
Caz
Guest
My husband and I got married in May and as part of our day, we had a beautiful Catholic marriage service at our local parish Church. The day was just perfect. I am Catholic and my husband is Jewish. In our sessions with the priest leading up to the wedding, we asked him whether the question “Will you bring up any children you have in the Catholic faith?” would be asked just of me or of both of us. My fiancé explained to the priest that he would not be able to answer this question as being “yes”, being that he’s Jewish. The priest said that this question would only be posed to myself as the Catholic. He reassured my husband that it would not be appropriate to ask someone who is not Catholic this question. We all discussed how it would be doing a disservice to the Catholic Church to have someone who is a practicing Jew agree to bring up a child in a faith he has no knowledge of! In addition, he agreed that even if the non-Catholic would like to bring any children up as a such, they would clearly not be able to a very good job of it when it’s not their own religion. They can only be supportive to the Catholic partner. This made a lot of sense to us and we were reassured that he’d said these things. However, a couple of days before the wedding during our rehearsal, the priest did in fact ask my husband that question. As I hope everyone reading this can understand given what we were told, it was a shock to us both. However, when my fiancé politely queried it, the priest said ”yes, you’ll be asked that, too”. He clearly did not want to discuss it any more than that. There was no “ sorry, I realised that I had got it wrong previously”. It was really strange. We were in total shock and not sure what to say. We carried on with the rehearsal but we went home feeling quite upset and as though we had been misled. The problem is that although my husband was very gracious about it and he did in fact answer that question as being a “yes” during our wedding ceremony, I feel quite hurt that the Priest has apparently been dishonest towards us. It goes against everything that Christianity stands for. It feels as though we were purposefully misled right up until two days before our wedding when of course it was much too late to make any other arrangements had we needed to based on this. I wonder whether I should make a complaint to someone higher up? If it was the case that the priest had been wrong when he said originally that only I would be required to answer this question, then I would have hoped he would explain his mistake in a nice way to us rather than apparently sneak it into our rehearsal like that. I thought it was possible that maybe he’d forgotten what he had told us, as I always try to see the good in people, but I don’t think that is likely since we had discussed it at quite some length. I know that some people might say to just leave things and try to move on, but it has left me feeling a little alienated from my own religion and as though it’s not what I thought it was.
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