M
Misty1980
Guest
Hi, I’m a questioning Protestant thinking of converting to Catholicism. I have a theological problem related to my marriage.
I was raised Baptist, made a profession of faith, and was baptized. I left the church, but tried to live as much the way I thought Jesus taught.
I have two young children and know we should be in church. I don’t want to go back to the Baptists so I’ve been reading about other denominations.
My husband is twice divorced. While I was taught divorce was wrong, I was never taught it was wrong to marry a divorced person. I went into marriage innocently, not realizing it was problematic until recently. I realize this hinders me from entering the Catholic church.
I understand that annulment is a possibility for the previous marriages, know my husband wouldn’t go along. His past marriages are a barrier that I can’t fix. I’ve read that the next option is living as “brother and sister,” but this is another problem. Inevitably, he would divorce me. We know divorce is wrong, another sinful state.
I am stuck between two rocks here. I am interested in exploring the Catholic faith and possibly joining. My husband’s past marriages prevent me from being acceptance, and the alternative would just lead me into another state of sin, swapping out one for another.
I have read that there is no salvation outside the church. I have been taught that salvation comes through Jesus’s grace. I do believe Jesus is the ultimate answer and authority, but it bothers me. I feel cheated by a Christian tradition that failed to teach me that marrying a divorced person was wrong in God’s eyes. I honestly went into this marriage innocently, thinking I had done everything right, putting myself into a position where I cannot be accepted into a faith that seems to teach that I cannot be saved unless I am accepted. Is this what the Catholic church teaches?
I guess what I’m looking to ask is: If my marriage prevents me from acceptance into the church, does that mean that I’m shut off from salvation? Do all Protestants just go straight to hell because we aren’t members of the Catholic church?
I was raised Baptist, made a profession of faith, and was baptized. I left the church, but tried to live as much the way I thought Jesus taught.
I have two young children and know we should be in church. I don’t want to go back to the Baptists so I’ve been reading about other denominations.
My husband is twice divorced. While I was taught divorce was wrong, I was never taught it was wrong to marry a divorced person. I went into marriage innocently, not realizing it was problematic until recently. I realize this hinders me from entering the Catholic church.
I understand that annulment is a possibility for the previous marriages, know my husband wouldn’t go along. His past marriages are a barrier that I can’t fix. I’ve read that the next option is living as “brother and sister,” but this is another problem. Inevitably, he would divorce me. We know divorce is wrong, another sinful state.
I am stuck between two rocks here. I am interested in exploring the Catholic faith and possibly joining. My husband’s past marriages prevent me from being acceptance, and the alternative would just lead me into another state of sin, swapping out one for another.
I have read that there is no salvation outside the church. I have been taught that salvation comes through Jesus’s grace. I do believe Jesus is the ultimate answer and authority, but it bothers me. I feel cheated by a Christian tradition that failed to teach me that marrying a divorced person was wrong in God’s eyes. I honestly went into this marriage innocently, thinking I had done everything right, putting myself into a position where I cannot be accepted into a faith that seems to teach that I cannot be saved unless I am accepted. Is this what the Catholic church teaches?
I guess what I’m looking to ask is: If my marriage prevents me from acceptance into the church, does that mean that I’m shut off from salvation? Do all Protestants just go straight to hell because we aren’t members of the Catholic church?
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