Priest response to spousal infidelity in marriage

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Being gaslighted has to be one of the most traumatic experiences that can happen to a person. It causes a person to lose all trust in everyone, including themselves. And for what? So a cheater can continue to lie and deceive?
I think gaslighting qualifies as emotional and psychological abuse and that is a sin against the spouse even apart from adultery.
I believe that cheating is always a deliberate choice and that the cheater should try to help the innocent spouse with complete honesty. Keeping a terrible secret like that (which will eventually come out) destroys the marriage possibly worse than the actual act of cheating.
I personally don’t subscribe to either “never tell” or “always tell” but I do suspect that for most cases involving ongoing affairs the question is not whether the spouse will find out, but when, and how. And that the “don’t tell” advice only works if one can guarantee that the ONLY way the spouse will find out is if the cheater confesses, and so doubt they are practical for most cases.

Note that even if the cheater keeps the affair completely on the down-low from any friends or family, there is always the risk the person he (or she) cheated with will reveal the affair, either hoping this will disrupt the marriage, or perhaps out of revenge if the cheater repents and ends the affair.

About the only slam-dunk “don’t tell” scenario I can think of, is someone who has a one-night stand with a stranger (or perhaps even a prostitute) while on a business trip. Even that isn’t a complete guarantee of anonymity. What if the person one cheated with, or a colleague of the cheater who was on the same trip, or maybe someone random person who happened to be at the same bar or hotel, posts an incriminating picture on Facebook that eventually gets circulated to the account of someone who knows the cheater?

Of course the cheater could fall back on obstinate denial since a photo (unless extremely explicit) doesn’t prove physical adultery, but I’d assume the marriage would already be in trouble at that point.
 
I feel for you, Clearwater, because I was once in the very place where you are at. the trickle truth left me so off balance that I ultimately was diagnosed with PTSD. And when I shared with my counselor the misfortune I endured as a child, the diagnosis was changed to Complex PTSD.

However, there were way more issues than the infidelity in the marriage. I was so disturbed by the trauma of discovering that my husband wasn’t faithful, when I was to working my butt off to follow church teaching by being open to life, potentially risking my life with pregnancy, sacrificing because we had a big family, and always trying to keep him happy. Our priest said something very similar to what yours said and it was probably due to the actualities of the situation. (Unfortunately, my priest also yelled at me to get “fixed” and that didn’t help with his credibility. My husband used that against me to avoid transparency and honesty.)

I focused too much on the infidelity, when at the end of the day, my philandering husband was more than happy to keep me on the outside of our marriage by withholding information from me.

That was the crux of my problem and I let cheating block me from the truth of my life. I wasn’t in a marriage, because I was on the outside. There was a legal certificate saying I was married; but from
So true… I would rather know the truth then to be fed a lie. I don’t want my husband to have the “control” to decide what is best for me and our marriage. We are supposed to be ONE PERSON. We should be making decisions together by both parties knowing all the facts. I firmly believe that the truth will set you free. I also believe that satan wants people to hide their mistakes, or lie to their spouse.

I have been traumatized, hurt and feel that my life has been turned upside down. I question everything now… What is real? What isn’t real? Did that happen? My husband even denies my memories (Gaslighting). I remember him telling me things and now he says, “I never said that!” This is emotional abuse.

When a person keeps adultery/one night stand/cheating from their spouse it creates a cracked foundation and a marriage built on lies. Telling the truth would help the couple seek professional help and find out why the person strayed to begin with. They would have the opportunity to fix their marriage. Hiding a serious secret such as infidelity sweeps the problem under the rug. Nothing gets resolved. The lie festers and eventually comes out. Most professional marriage counselors advocate telling the truth. The two priests at my parish encouraged my husband to tell me the truth when we were getting marriage counseling from them.

In my situation I feel like a joke. My husband must think I am real stupid to believe his lies. A woman knows. Intuition is strong. Always follow your gut instinct.

Yes, we do have a lot in common. For those who believe to keep silent and never tell their spouse about the adultery haven’t been in our shoes. The pain of uncertainty is awful. It is wrong to keep a secret like this from your spouse. People usually make “excuses” not to tell to avoid the consequences of their actions.

:signofcross:
 
Once the innocent spouse finds out about the lies and the cheating, there is a tendency to question everything. That’s why I said earlier that cheating involves a series of deceptions. The cheater lies about their whereabouts and what they were doing. Later on if it comes up, the lie has to be perpetuated. And in a long term affair, there are multiple instances of lying and deceiving.

Being gaslighted has to be one of the most traumatic experiences that can happen to a person. It causes a person to lose all trust in everyone, including themselves. And for what? So a cheater can continue to lie and deceive?

I believe that cheating is always a deliberate choice and that the cheater should try to help the innocent spouse with complete honesty. Keeping a terrible secret like that (which will eventually come out) destroys the marriage possibly worse than the actual act of cheating.
I cannot agree more with what you said. So true! Gaslighting is emotional abuse and the worst type of betrayal. Trickle truth does more harm than good. I have lost trust in my husband because of his lies and gaslighting. This cannot be healthy for a marriage. Everyone makes mistakes and should try to forgive other people. Hiding mistakes only festers and causes pain.

:signofcross:
 
From what you and Clearwater say (and what I’ve heard from posters on Chump Lady), the lying and deception messes with the innocent spouse’s sense of reality and is highly traumatic all by itself. What’s real, what’s not real? Who knows?

Here’s a piece on gaslighting and cheating:

chumplady.com/2012/06/gaslighting-the-fine-art-of-making-you-believe-youre-crazy/

The evangelistic lie was particularly vile. Yuck!
So true! Everything you said is true. This is exactly how I feel. I have been so traumatized that it has affected my soul and sucked out all joy in my life. It is very difficult to even get out of bed. Hence, the depression and anxiety that I now suffer, because of my husband’s lies and gaslighting. To me, my husband is being extremely selfish and only thinking about his life. What about me? Where do I fit in? We are supposed to be married and making decisions together. We are supposed to be one person. Well, I am now on the outside of our marriage and my husband drew a line in the sand. On one side of the line is the truth and the other side is me living a joke.

I don’t understand how people can justify keeping a secret such as adultery from their spouse. It is very wrong. I would be furious if I knew that my friend knew about my husband’s cheating and decided not to tell me.
 
This is difficult but ‘what God joined together let not man put asunder’ does apply also to people who are not happy in their marriages and are to some extent abused. In fact, the sole absolute right to separation which exists for people who have been cheated does not extent to seeking some sort of healing from civil divorce. That goes straight against what it says in Canon 1384 of the Catechism: ‘Divorce does injury to the covenant of salvation, of which sacramental marriage is the sign.’ Divorce, not just remarriage. And: ‘Contracting a new union, even if it is recognized by civil law, adds to the gravity of the rupture: the remarried spouse is then in a situation of public and permanent adultery.’ So contracting a new union only adds to the rupture,** but the rupture exists before.** Seeking comfort in being pronounced no longer married but single again by a civil judge, that already is wrong.
Yeah, adultery, lying, and abuse do have the tendency to produce a “rupture” in marital felicity.

I’ve seen you refer to divorce for “seeking comfort” before, and I don’t know that that is an adequate or fair description. Some issues:
  1. First of all, I was just doing a little googling, and it appears that a number of US states do not even have legal separation as an option.
I am not a lawyer, of course, let alone a family law lawyer, but that does seem to be a pretty big issue–there are a lot of cases where it is imperative that the legal relationship be immediately dissolved. In the US, spouses are to a great extent held responsible for each other’s actions (especially with regard to financial decisions), and there are potentially devastating consequences to being in a financial partnership (which is what civil marriage is) with a person who is out of control. (You may remember my story of my auntie who discovered that her estranged husband had run up $80k in debt while they were living separately but not legally separated.)
  1. An online contact says she was told by a lawyer that in her state it is more economical to immediately do a divorce, rather than doing a separation and then winding up later also having to pay for a divorce if her husband decides to divorce her. Bear in mind, a lot of people making these decisions are in financial distress (in fact, I’d say almost all of them).
I don’t know to what extent hat is true, but it does make sense, and that may enter into people’s calculations. As I mentioned previously, something like 80% of US separations ultimately end in divorce, so even if one would prefer to be separated rather than divorced, one may not be in a position to take the financial risk.
  1. In the US, it is not generally not possible to start the annulment process without first going through a civil divorce. That may or may not be canonically kosher–but that is the reality that Americans are dealing with. If they want to seek an annulment, they have to get an actual divorce–not a legal separation.
That is not something that lay Americans have ANY control over–so there’s no point in blaming them for following the guidelines set by the US bishops.
 
You are absolutely wrong. Free will does not mean you are free to do whatever you please without going to hell for it. It only means you have a limited freedom of doing it without external obstruction, and that’s a difference.

Within the limits of it but not beyond. For example just because a man you marry is difficult to put up with from the perspective of your absolute undisturbed personal comfort doesn’t mean you suddenly how some magic liberal/individualist responsibility to divorce him. On the contrary, you most likely still have a Catholic responsibility to continue to put up with him and pray.

Honesty is an obligation for your spouse, but thatt doesn’t go as far as giving you the right to require polygraph.

I’m sorry that happened to you, but again, the right to separate can be exercised if one’s sure of the infidelity. Doesn’t extent to having the other spouse prove his or her innocence.

This is difficult but ‘what God joined together let not man put asunder’ does apply also to people who are not happy in their marriages and are to some extent abused. In fact, the sole absolute right to separation which exists for people who have been cheated does not extent to seeking some sort of healing from civil divorce. That goes straight against what it says in Canon 1384 of the Catechism: ‘Divorce does injury to the covenant of salvation, of which sacramental marriage is the sign.’ Divorce, not just remarriage. And: ‘Contracting a new union, even if it is recognized by civil law, adds to the gravity of the rupture: the remarried spouse is then in a situation of public and permanent adultery.’ So contracting a new union only adds to the rupture, but the rupture exists before. Seeking comfort in being pronounced no longer married but single again by a civil judge, that already is wrong.
You and I are comparing apples and oranges.

Doing what’s best for oneself is far from doing whatever one pleases. In fact, one could argue from a philosophical position that these two behaviors rarely align with each other. From a religious perspective, choosing to do or failing to do an act that would lead to damnation would not be in an individual’s best interest at all.

And when I spoke of protecting oneself, I literally meant from harmful actions/behaviors of others that will damage or destroy that individual. We have the God-given right and responsibility discern and take action to keep ourselves safe from spiritual, physical, emotional, mental, and sexual harm (from self and from others). That’s the context of protection of which I speak, so your example doesn’t apply under those circumstances.

As far as the polygraph is concerned, once a spouse breaks the marriage vows with infidelity, lies, and trickle truths, the betrayed spouse has a right to require a polygraph, or whatever else the betrayed spouse needs to move forward, as a condition of re-entrance into the marital bed. There is just too much at stake otherwise. The betrayed spouse has the right to know what he or she is truly dealing with.

Let me say this, like another poster, I also suffered from certain infections at times when my spouse’s fidelity was questionable. I was also pregnant, nursing, or both during some of those times. I know first-hand what it’s like to have to go to my primary care provider and get blood drawn to test for HIV/AIDs and to have to undergo a physical exam with particular tests to check for the presence of STIs because my spouse had been unfaithful. It’s beyond humiliating and terrifying.

There is absolutely no room for multiple sexual partners in a marriage (especially a sacramental relationship that is non-contraceptive and open to life, as the church requires). Monogamy is necessary because without it, the marital embrace is no longer anything sacred; it becomes dangerous, unsafe sex at that point with high risks for multiple STIs, including HIV/AIDS. And if there’s a pregnancy or nursing child in the picture, that child maybe placed at risk also.

As far as separation is concerned, I agree with you to a certain extent. If a spouse is suspicious of infidelity, that in and of itself isn’t grounds for separation. But if there’s any kind of abuse occurring at that time, then separation is an allowable consideration by the church. An person who has suspicions has the right to ask and receive an honest answer. But honesty isn’t a virtue that cheaters are known for, so other actions sometimes have to be taken to protect self and family from further harm.

God requires our honesty and willingness to make amends for our sins if we want to be forgiven as sinners. We are not allowed to lie in confession and willfully withhold our sins by omission or commission. We can’t go to confession and refuse to do our penance. Such behaviors impede absolution and reconciliation.

It’s very similar when recovering from infidelity. The betrayed spouse has the right to know what happened if there’s going to be any chance of true recovery. Amends have to be made and the unfaithful spouse has to take action to make sure infidelity doesn’t happen again. However, I’m not implying that every betrayed spouse will want to know. If the betrayed spouse finds out and chooses not to question any further, that is within his/her right also.

What I’m talking about is a betrayed spouse who suspects or knows and asks questions.
I’m not saying that every detail has to be told, but if the betrayed spouse asks, it’s fair to expect an honest response from the wayward spouse.

What I share is from personal experience and also direct information from 3 certified counselors, including one very well-known and highly respected Catholic counselor.
 
I think they are wrong.

If the spouse is cheating there are probably a ton serious relationship problems that need to be addressed. It needs to be tackled sooner or later.

I am a strong believer of honesty regardless of consequence, in most cases.
At one time, I believed infidelity to be caused by some type of marital issues. But professionals know this isn’t always the case. Many times cheating is attributed to the character of the betrayer or the personal issues of the betrayer. Sometimes it’s just plain old curiosity/temptation and others it’s a serious or series of defects within the cheating partner.

The betrayed spouse can be doing everything right and from a certain level of perspective, the marriage is strong.

I guess sometimes a marriage is only as strong as the weakest weaknesses of the individual partners.
 
From what you and Clearwater say (and what I’ve heard from posters on Chump Lady), the lying and deception messes with the innocent spouse’s sense of reality and is highly traumatic all by itself. What’s real, what’s not real? Who knows?

Here’s a piece on gaslighting and cheating:

chumplady.com/2012/06/gaslighting-the-fine-art-of-making-you-believe-youre-crazy/

The evangelistic lie was particularly vile. Yuck!
Unfortunately, I’ve known gaslighting, minimizing, non-validation, passive aggression, direct aggression, covert and overt aggression from a very young age. Heck, I was conceived under some of these circumstances.

However, as far as the evangelistic lie is concerned, I’m not so sure that it didn’t start with pure intentions. Maybe it did. Maybe it didn’t. Not that I’m trying to defend my ex. But…if his intentions were not pure from the outset, then I would have been dealing with a monster. I’m not God, so I don’t know what his intentions were in his heart. For me, I’ll leave that to God above and just move forward in the most neutral way possible, especially since I have many children with the man.
 
That’s right. To remain silent is not to lie. If one communicates to the spouse, one must be truthful. If to communicate truthfully is anticipated to do more harm than good, then remain silent. It is always inappropriate (immoral) to pursue an act that one reasonably anticipates will do more harm than good.

Other aspects of the situation could change the judgement made - making the right choice to tell the spouse.
Wow, just wow.

I don’t think I am understanding the gist of your response.

Are you saying the spouse who did the cheating and who committed a grave act against the marriage, now has the moral obligation to remain silent about his/her actions in anticipation that being honest will do more harm to the victim spouse?

If yes, what about the betrayed spouse’s right not to have another person decide what is best for him/her? Um, if the betrayed spouse is an adult, it is up to him/her to decide what is best for self. It surely isn’t best to let an individual who committed the grave offense of cheating decide what is best for the innocent spouse. The time for that decision was before the cheating occurred. If the betrayed spouse asks, a truthful response should be given. The betrayed spouse has the right to direct his/her life and is responsible for his/her reaction to the truth.

Why would anybody think that the person who performed the offense should decide what’s best thereafter. Not telling doesn’t change the truth of the reality. Gosh, that sounds like the fox guarding the hen house.
 
I think gaslighting qualifies as emotional and psychological abuse and that is a sin against the spouse even apart from adultery.

I personally don’t subscribe to either “never tell” or “always tell” but I do suspect that for most cases involving ongoing affairs the question is not whether the spouse will find out, but when, and how. And that the “don’t tell” advice only works if one can guarantee that the ONLY way the spouse will find out is if the cheater confesses, and so doubt they are practical for most cases.

Note that even if the cheater keeps the affair completely on the down-low from any friends or family, there is always the risk the person he (or she) cheated with will reveal the affair, either hoping this will disrupt the marriage, or perhaps out of revenge if the cheater repents and ends the affair.

About the only slam-dunk “don’t tell” scenario I can think of, is someone who has a one-night stand with a stranger (or perhaps even a prostitute) while on a business trip. Even that isn’t a complete guarantee of anonymity. What if the person one cheated with, or a colleague of the cheater who was on the same trip, or maybe someone random person who happened to be at the same bar or hotel, posts an incriminating picture on Facebook that eventually gets circulated to the account of someone who knows the cheater?

Of course the cheater could fall back on obstinate denial since a photo (unless extremely explicit) doesn’t prove physical adultery, but I’d assume the marriage would already be in trouble at that point.
At one time, I could have written these very words. Maybe I did years ago on another forum.

You have my prayers, Clearwater. Please stay safe and if you can, consider counseling with a solid professional. You know what you know. Peace, my sister.
 
So true! Everything you said is true. This is exactly how I feel. I have been so traumatized that it has affected my soul and sucked out all joy in my life. It is very difficult to even get out of bed. Hence, the depression and anxiety that I now suffer, because of my husband’s lies and gaslighting. To me, my husband is being extremely selfish and only thinking about his life. What about me? Where do I fit in? We are supposed to be married and making decisions together. We are supposed to be one person. Well, I am now on the outside of our marriage and my husband drew a line in the sand. On one side of the line is the truth and the other side is me living a joke.

I don’t understand how people can justify keeping a secret such as adultery from their spouse. It is very wrong. I would be furious if I knew that my friend knew about my husband’s cheating and decided not to tell me.
People in my circles knew, including many family members. Some priests knew (through confession). The individual who eventually told me was a very bad person who was angry at me. That individual ultimately ended up being involved in the untimely death of a relative of mine years later.
 
…In the US, spouses are to a great extent held responsible for each other’s actions (especially with regard to financial decisions), and there are potentially devastating consequences to being in a financial partnership (which is what civil marriage is) with a person who is out of control. (You may remember my story of my auntie who discovered that her estranged husband had run up $80k in debt while they were living separately but not legally separated.)
That seems quite extraordinary - that a person not a signatory to a contract (a personal loan, say), having no knowledge of the contract, could be financially liable for it. It’s like saying that one’s spouse is automatically a guarantor. I don’t believe this is commonly the case in countries other than the US.
 
…Are you saying the spouse who did the cheating and who committed a grave act against the marriage, now has the moral obligation to remain silent about his/her actions in anticipation that being honest will do more harm to the victim spouse?
Not quite - what is to be anticipated is a matter of judgement and some may conclude that revealing the indiscretion is the better course. However, **if **the act (of revealing) the indiscretion **is anticipated **to cause more “harm” than good - it is wrong to reveal it. And the harm referred to is not limited to harm to the victim - but harm to all affected parties. This is a general principal of morality - acts cannot be moral if the actor anticipates more harm than good coming from the act they contemplate.
Why would anybody think that the person who performed the offense should decide what’s best thereafter.
In this case, the question of morality is of a personal nature - it cannot be objective because it involves judgements about consequences. Only the person deciding whether they should act can make the moral judgement involved.

I suspect your instinctive reaction is that more good than harm will arise from revealing the indiscretion. I imagine there are situations when this is right, and others when the other conclusion is right. Only the person involved can make the judgement.
 
Let me say this, like another poster, I also suffered from certain infections at times when my spouse’s fidelity was questionable. I was also pregnant, nursing, or both during some of those times. I know first-hand what it’s like to have to go to my primary care provider and get blood drawn to test for HIV/AIDs and to have to undergo a physical exam with particular tests to check for the presence of STIs because my spouse had been unfaithful. It’s beyond humiliating and terrifying.

There is absolutely no room for multiple sexual partners in a marriage (especially a sacramental relationship that is non-contraceptive and open to life, as the church requires). Monogamy is necessary because without it, the marital embrace is no longer anything sacred; it becomes dangerous, unsafe sex at that point with high risks for multiple STIs, including HIV/AIDS. And if there’s a pregnancy or nursing child in the picture, that child maybe placed at risk also.
Yep.
 
Wow, just wow.

I don’t think I am understanding the gist of your response.

Are you saying the spouse who did the cheating and who committed a grave act against the marriage, now has the moral obligation to remain silent about his/her actions in anticipation that being honest will do more harm to the victim spouse?

If yes, what about the betrayed spouse’s right not to have another person decide what is best for him/her? Um, if the betrayed spouse is an adult, it is up to him/her to decide what is best for self. It surely isn’t best to let an individual who committed the grave offense of cheating decide what is best for the innocent spouse. The time for that decision was before the cheating occurred. If the betrayed spouse asks, a truthful response should be given. The betrayed spouse has the right to direct his/her life and is responsible for his/her reaction to the truth.

Why would anybody think that the person who performed the offense should decide what’s best thereafter. Not telling doesn’t change the truth of the reality. Gosh, that sounds like the fox guarding the hen house.
That is a reasonable point, that the cheater is a disordered person, and hence their judgment is questionable, either way.
 
That seems quite extraordinary - that a person not a signatory to a contract (a personal loan, say), having no knowledge of the contract, could be financially liable for it. It’s like saying that one’s spouse is automatically a guarantor. I don’t believe this is commonly the case in countries other than the US.
I should have mentioned that that was $80k in credit card debt.

I don’t know what the legalities are (and outcomes no doubt vary a lot from state to state and judge to judge), but I do know that there are many, many problems that can arise from being civilly married to a person who makes bad choices.
 
Any suggestions what I should do in my marriage? I have already went to marriage counseling with my husband. We saw two different priests and we also saw professional marriage counselors. I have proof that my husband is lying about cheating on me, but he refuses to admit it. What am I supposed to do now?
 
Any suggestions what I should do in my marriage? I have already went to marriage counseling with my husband. We saw two different priests and we also saw professional marriage counselors. I have proof that my husband is lying about cheating on me, but he refuses to admit it. What am I supposed to do now?
How about you start a new thread with a specific title (“troubled marriage with possible infidelity”)?

This is deep into this thread.
 
You and I are comparing apples and oranges.

Doing what’s best for oneself is far from doing whatever one pleases. In fact, one could argue from a philosophical position that these two behaviors rarely align with each other. From a religious perspective, choosing to do or failing to do an act that would lead to damnation would not be in an individual’s best interest at all.
If you choose salvation as the individual’s best interest, then you simply have to follow whatever’s best from God’s perspective — including His law, his love, his mercy.

But you cannot possibly justify looking out for no. 1 — for one’s own best interest, whether you add adjectives such as ‘subjective’ or ‘egoistical’ — as a proposal compatible with Christianity. This is because God has to be at the top of the hierarchy, and whereas one has more of a duty of preservation toward oneself than one’s neighbour, one can’t claim to matter more and rank higher than one’s spouse does.

Extreme individualism is not compatible with Christianity or indeed with any form of monotheism. It goes against the first commandment. God > you, me etc. — and there are no buts. At the end of the day this really is just so simple.
And when I spoke of protecting oneself, I literally meant from harmful actions/behaviors of others that will damage or destroy that individual. We have the God-given right and responsibility discern and take action to keep ourselves safe from spiritual, physical, emotional, mental, and sexual harm (from self and from others). That’s the context of protection of which I speak, so your example doesn’t apply under those circumstances.
Our first obligation is to do good and avoid evil, not to make ourselves safe, comfortable or whatever, especially not in a perfect degree (and never rest until that perfect degree is achieved). This is because we believe in one God that isn’t in the mirror.

It would be convenient to recast egoistic or at the very least individualistic desires as moral obligations owed to oneself, but that only works to a very limited extent. It covers not taking unjustified risks, not making stupid decisions about one’s health or livelihood, not slacking off at work and getting fired for it (though the obligation not to fail the employer and/or clients and colleagues would rank higher), basically to not do something harmful to oneself, just like — in the extreme example — suicide is wrong. But it doesn’t go as far as to give religious sanction to looking out for no. 1.
As far as the polygraph is concerned, once a spouse breaks the marriage vows with infidelity, lies, and trickle truths, the betrayed spouse has a right to require a polygraph,
Nope. Not even if you could prove a right to honest and full answers could you take it as far as to require a specific method of corroboration (especially not one that isn’t fail-safe).

This relates not only to polygraphs per se but also to the idea that the wronged spouse (or simply suspecting spouse) gets to call the shots and gets to make very specific demands about everything that have to be obeyed to the letter.

There is no such putting of that spouse in control. Control is not a moral right, nor a necessity.

On the other hand, something like STD/HIV testing seems to me to be something a concerned spouse could legitimately require. Notably STD/HIV testing would squarely pertain to the assurance of the concerned spouse’s safety rather than investigation of the allegedly unfaithful spouse’s conduct. I also support the right of the male parent to paternity/DNA tests (which means not forcing the wife to do something but simply taking a hair from the child and from oneself without inventing reasons to allow the wife to prohibit that). However, just simply ordering one’s spouse to take poly would be taking it too far.
or whatever else the betrayed spouse needs to move forward,
Nope. That’s psychologism combined with individualism, not Christianity. You are simply trying to vest individualism with religious sanction here, and in Christianity that won’t work.

There is simply nowhere the kind of shortcut that would lead to just putting the innocent/suspecting spouse totally in control and with total discretion and licence to do anything and especialy act only with his/her interest in mind, let alone outside of moral law.
as a condition of re-entrance into the marital bed.
The innocent spouse does a grave wrong in not accepting a repentant unfaithful spouse. Notably, the ban against remarriage after being abandoned reflects this possibility of repentance — shutting it off by doing something like relocating to a different place without leaving one’s address or taking the spouses, basically forever removing the possibility of being contacted, would be a grave moral wrong. This is an aside addressed to those of our fellow posters here who would (wrongly!) justify civil divorce and complete cutting off of ties in the circumstances.

I don’t want to sound cruel, but the world dosn’t revolve around the innocent spouse. The innocent spouse is not God or centre of the universe. The unfaithful spouse actually still has rights, and the innocent spouse actually still has obligations that stem from their marriage. At no point does a licence appear to just take control or subject the other spouse’s interests and rights to one’s own.
There is just too much at stake otherwise.
Life isn’t easy. There are a lot of stakes, but one’s own stake isn’t the most important and all-trumping. Again, first commandment and commandment of love, with neither of which extreme individualism is compatible. Commandments are always possible to fulfil — God doesn’t allow us to be tempted more than we can resist. He gives us strength to resist temptation and do the right thing. We can’t really use our own high stakes to justify playing an egoistical game against everybody else.
 
I know first-hand what it’s like to have to go to my primary care provider and get blood drawn to test for HIV/AIDs and to have to undergo a physical exam with particular tests to check for the presence of STIs because my spouse had been unfaithful. It’s beyond humiliating and terrifying.
An excruciatingly horrible experience no doubt, which most people will fail to even begin to understand. Nonetheless, at the end of the day, it doesn’t create an exemption from God’s law, at no point it doesn’t mean that one’s obligations have all been fulfilled and now it’s time for exclusive focus on rights and/or take full control.
There is absolutely no room for multiple sexual partners in a marriage
Nobody says there is.
Monogamy is necessary
Nobody says it isn’t.
because without it, the marital embrace is no longer anything sacred; it becomes dangerous, unsafe sex at that point with high risks for multiple STIs, including HIV/AIDS.
Nobody says those are risks that need to be accepted lightly. And yes, the innocent spouse should not condone adultery (which is different from forgiving it). On the other hand, it seems to me that your position might dangerously lead to the conclusion that sanctity of marriage is conditioned by a perfect sense of safety and that would simply not be true. I’m sure we’ll agree that at the end of the day any practical failure of marriage can’t unmake the sacrament.
As far as separation is concerned, I agree with you to a certain extent. If a spouse is suspicious of infidelity, that in and of itself isn’t grounds for separation.
Yup.
But if there’s any kind of abuse occurring at that time, then separation is an allowable consideration by the church.
Nope. ‘Any kind of abuse’ would literally mean any kind or degree of abuse, and that’s simply not enough to justify separation. See the posts above, posters have already quoted the relevant norms for what kind of abuse permits separation. Taking it further than that would be individualism, not Catholicism. Catholicism simply doesn’t take individual rights as far as liberal democracy does. For example one can’t just quite when one’s rights are not fully respected, it takes much more than that.
An person who has suspicions has the right to ask and receive an honest answer.
I am not saying I disagree, but I honestly can’t say I’m convinced that there is a right to full information, either.
But honesty isn’t a virtue that cheaters are known for, so other actions sometimes have to be taken to protect self and family from further harm.
The bolded part is a blanket justification, sorry.

A strong possibility of an ongoing affair that’s being implausibly denied by the suspected cheater, creating risk of STDs etc. if the suspicion were to be ignored, that might justify withholding sex. Total separation would be a different sort of thing, let alone civil divorce. And just to be extra sure — simple denial of an affair in the face of inconclusive evidence of an affair is not the kind of harm that would justify separation. The right to separation really is decided by the danger of (serious) harm, not by one of the spouses feeling a strong desire to separate because of the circumstances.
God requires our honesty and willingness to make amends for our sins if we want to be forgiven as sinners. We are not allowed to lie in confession and willfully withhold our sins by omission or commission. We can’t go to confession and refuse to do our penance. Such behaviors impede absolution and reconciliation.
I realize you’re drawing an analogy here and not putting the two situations in the same basket, but just to be extra clear: one’s spouse has a different role from one’s priest-confessor. The two roles don’t conflate. Any analogies would be extremely limited.
The betrayed spouse has the right to know what happened if there’s going to be any chance of true recovery.
I don’t think I’ve seen sufficient evidence for that or good enough reasons to agree.
Amends have to be made and the unfaithful spouse has to take action to make sure infidelity doesn’t happen again.
That’s not the same as the cheated spouse (let alone suspecting spouse if the adultery is not certain) entering into some sort of role comparable to a spiritual director, let alone spiritual direction exercised with the good of oneself in mind rather than the unfaithful spouse’s.
What I’m talking about is a betrayed spouse who suspects or knows and asks questions.
I’m inclined to see there a right to get some answers and truthful ones, but I can’t p(name removed by moderator)oint any surefire right to information.
I’m not saying that every detail has to be told
Yes, of course. A lot of specific questions would be improper, especially in the context of some sort of probing driven by curiosity or attempt to humiliate.
What I share is from personal experience and also direct information from 3 certified counselors, including one very well-known and highly respected Catholic counselor.
So can the others say.
 
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