Context matters. His attitude and behaviors are harmful. Everything anyone said regarding being a jerk has been in response to his statement of: “I don’t want to sound like a jerk, but…” The response of, “Actually, you are being a jerk” is not the same as just calling him a jerk out of nowhere for no reason. It’s not ideal, but it does get the point across.And while he did ask if he was being a jerk, it isn’t Christian to affirm it.
I understand that he’s devastated and not thinking clearly. But that doesn’t give him a liscence to be cruel to his wife. Really, this poor woman. She finds out her dream of having children will never come true, and the first thing her husband says is he wants a divorce? And he thinks divorcing her will be easy?
This has been on his mind before they even found out the definitive bad news. I mean, did he really just get married for kids?This is not what we were expecting to hear, and before we went I told her that if I was the problem and it couldn’t be fixed, I would let her divorce me no questions asked. I know she wants to have her own kids, be pregnant, and all that, and I’m not going to be the one to keep her from that dream. But, the problem is not me, my stuff is fine.
Usually the problem is that people want to get married but aren’t open to children, which, as we know, the Church is not okay with. But this is the other extreme. Spouses are not supposed to view each other solely as vehicles to parenthood. Husbands and wives must be prepared to accept children that God gives them, not divorce each other if God chooses not to send children their way. First and foremost they must love each other and keep the vows they made before God and the Church.
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