Trying to reel this back to the original topic…
I think the above is where the challenge lies. There are certainly many people who know what marriage, baptism, conversion, et cetera involves before the hit the door.
I remember when I first walked into an RCIA class and was told “Conversion is a process, not a program… Now here’s the schedule for the process.” Okay, maybe that’s not a direct quote, but it certainly expressed the overall tone.
So the real question is how to accurately determine what a person or couple needs to prepare and then set out a plan for preparation. As you rightly point out some come in fully prepared and others can barely spell out their desire. Now I can work that out with a meeting or two… if the people or couple are willing to talk, the challenge has always been when people are openly defiant or refuse to talk.
We use the FOCCUS inventory not just to identify where people might have challenges, but also to identify where they disagree with the Church or need better catechesis. When people sit and roll their eyes or show up 30+ minutes late it is difficult to do that assessment or provide catechesis. The same thing when we’ve been teaching NFP and God’s plan for sexuality in marriage. We are kinda stuck if we let the people drive it and yet it hacks off people who feel like they are just being made to jump through hoops. There is a good reason that the vast majority of people the do marriage prep leave after a few years. It is not that they are unwilling or unable to be flexible, but rather that they are tasked with preparing people who simply do not want to hear what the Church teaches. People want their sacramental ticket punched according to their requirements and think the Church really should have no requirements of them.
For every one couple I think were truly aware of what marriage involved I would say we had 3 or 4 that we could have worked with for 3 years and still not had them where they should be. Thats discounting the other 70% that were iffy.
I am open to hearing suggestions on how to improve things. I would be perfectly happy to not give up nights and weekends with people glaring daggers at me. At the same time, just rubber stamping things might as well include a packet on how to requests an annulment. I’ll be honest, the last year has been great because we were required to step down from marriage prep while in formation. It should tell you something when it is a relief to sit with people dying in hospice rather than to work with couples preparing for marriage.