Thread: Marriage vs God Board: Oblivion / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Scots lass (# 2699) on :
 
A friend of mine has recently become a Christian, which has left her husband very unhappy. He maintains that the same part of her brain that loves him is effectively having an affair with Jesus and that she has to choose between the two. Her options as far as I can see seem to be (a) Choose God (b) Insist that she can have both or (c) pick the husband and completely give up faith. Options (a) and (b) will have the consequence of ending the marriage, and to her appear like a choice to do so. The times I've spoken to her about it we seem to go round in circles.

She's asked me to ask the Ship what the thoughtful and considered options of the Shipmates are, and I've put it in Purgatory because she wants the discussion, rather than support. I'm aware that it might get moved depending on how the discussion goes.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
d) wait

The excited flush of 'first faith' which he is jealous of will soon go and equilibrium will be restored, hopefully.

<typo>

[ 30. October 2011, 09:59: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Full Circle (# 15398) on :
 
e) Talk about how love is cumulative - no one is issued with a set amount of love, either to distribute thinly between alot of relationships or deeply in one or two; rather different loves grow and strenghten one another, having a child doesn't stop you loving a spouse, having a parent doesn't stop you wanting a partner.

This also makes me wonder if the partner has heard too much of 'Jesus is my boyfriend - Jesus lover of my soul' type songs. Perhaps she could focus on other, less threatening analogies, 'Jesus as elder brother' - the first born of all creation, 'Jesus as friend' friend of sinners, shepherd or other relationship that would be meaningful to her and explain how the two loves can co-incide meaningfully together
 
Posted by The Revolutionist (# 4578) on :
 
It's a tough situation to be in. But there are a couple of Bible passages that speak to these kind of circumstances.

St Paul addresses this issue in 1 Corinthians 7:12-17. The basic principle is that the Christian should try to stay in the marriage if their partner is willing. But they should not feel bound if their unbelieving husband or wife chooses to leave them.

1 Peter 3:1-2 encourages wives with unbelieving husbands to win them over by the purity and reverence of their lives. It's important for a spouse who has become a Christian to do everything possible to show in action, not just say in words, that they can love both their partner and God. As Boogie says, hopefully time will allow them to adjust and understand each other.

If the husband refuses to accept that his wife can love both God and him, then that's a difficult and heartbreaking situation. But the Christian wife shouldn't be made to feel guilty in those circumstances - if she's loving both her husband and God, but the husband is making her choose between him and God, then he's the one at fault. Denying one's faith shouldn't be an option.

It's still a gut-wrenching situation to be in though [Frown] [Votive]
 
Posted by Ender's Shadow (# 2272) on :
 
Find some other non-Christian husbands with Christian wives to help him realise that the situation can work out? She'd be in an unusual church if there weren't others in her situation around.

But the Revolutionist's quote of Peter is the core - she needs to demonstrate by her life that it can hold together and that he'll get a better wife as a result of the deal!
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
Is she sure that's the real reason and not a rationalisation to express his discomfort with some aspects of what she's doing? I had to explain speaking in tongues to someone I knew whose spouse converted via an alpha course. They were very upset and assumed spouse had gone bonkers and joined some cult. It probably wouldn't be getting characterised as 'an affair with Jesus' if it was Christianity of a form the husband was familiar with or which seemed to him 'normal'.

I explained it via church history to my friend and convinced him that even if not all churches did it, it was a respectable part of the Christian mainstream. The thing is, if someone is not religious and doesn't have evangelical family members (I'm guessing this is some version of modern evangelicalism) they may be very freaked out and upset by a conversion and what follows after it. It doesn't look normal or wonderful to them but scary and abnormal compared to what they know.


Does husband have any Christian friends/ relatives of any sort whose opinion he respects and who he trusts and who could be called upon to put in a good word? It probably helps if they are a very different sort of Christian. Sometimes it's just needing a bit of basic Religious Education and context from someone you don't think is trying to convert you. I was happy to do so despite huge theological differences, because I could explain a lot to him and back up his wife as doing something which wasn't my brand of Christianity but which was something unexceptionable and not to be worried about.

Once my pal re-calibrated and figured out that spouse hadn't gone loony/got into some cult, the marriage just settled down and he became quite supportive.

So worth asking: how weird might this seem to him and is there someone who could demystify it for him?

cheers,
L
 
Posted by Evensong (# 14696) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scots lass:
A friend of mine has recently become a Christian, which has left her husband very unhappy. He maintains that the same part of her brain that loves him is effectively having an affair with Jesus and that she has to choose between the two.

Herein lies the problem with an incarnate God.

Some people do have love affairs with the human Jesus.

It's called projection.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
How awful. [Frown] sorry for them both.

I'm wondering if the real problem is not quite as he states, but rather a case of general jealousy of God's space in the spouse's life. Grahame Greene's book The End of the Affair gives a really vivid picture of just this sort of thing happening when a man realizes his lover now has a new focus to her life he simply can't compete with--and hasn't yet figured out that he doesn't have to. Because there is a real difference between worship and erotic love, and the most obvious is that you can do both at the same time, indeed worship of the Lord normally enhances the erotic love of a spouse. (Thus all those studies we were hearing about some years ago where they were shocked to find that the religious women (which from the sample seemed to = evangelical and mainline Christians) were the ones who had the best sex life.

But jealousy of a new interest in a loved one's life is very common, not just among spouses but among other family members as well. Sort of like having a new baby come into the family and start demanding time, becoming an obvious source of happiness for the parent, etc. etc. The remaining family members, even the dog, sulk (if they're not mature enough). Usually it sorts itself out over time, as they realize that the parent/spouse's heart is big enough to love them all. But the first little while is rocky, and sometimes people DO make demands like "you have to choose between me and X." It's a way of saying "Do you really love me anymore or not?" A rather nasty way, since it causes so much pain; but a very human thing to do.

For her own sake, I hope she IS experiencing the spiritual ecstasies and joys that often (but not always) come at the very beginning of Christian conversion. They'll pass away soon enough as the new life settles down. But for now they may be a comfort in the face of sharp pain.

Strategy? Well, obviously she wants to show by real concrete actions that her husband is not only still loved but now loved more than ever before. In other words, that the love of God is backing up/strengthening the love of husband. It would probably be a good idea to do some brainstorming on practical ways of demonstrating that stronger marriage love. For instance, is there some minor argument that has been annoying the hell out of him for years? (There usually is, even if it's as stupid as leaving one's shoes in the middle of the floor.) Could she do an about-face on that subject and shock the pants off him? Or for a greater challenge, is there some MAJOR issue (e.g. "I can't stand your mother") that her newfound Christianity might be able to carry her through (again, much to his surprise)? Though of course it's better to actually DO the thing (e.g. visit the mother) than to make grandiose promises about the future, since she is certainly still a sinner and to make a promise is to break one.

(In fact, I hope she stays away from making promises or resolutions of any kind during the first two-three years of her Christian life, because baby Christians are naturally prone to them and have no idea just how strong the sinful nature continues to be, even after conversion--what is easy the first week or month becomes hellishly hard to keep doing the sixth and seventh. The spiritual raptures do fade, it's perfectly normal and healthy--though they may return upon occasions--but they won't be enough to carry her through the difficult task of faithful love for difficult people lifelong. For that she's going to have to learn by doing, by depending on Christ.)

Now, about the husband--I'd suggest a "water" strategy here. As much as possible, don't resist him. Flow around him. He is trying to force a choice, most likely out of panic and jealousy. Stay out of those arguments to the extent you can (sorry, can't find a way not to write in the "you" language, pardon my grammar). Which is to say, don't fight back. Get sleepy/distracted/busy/interested in sex instead. Put the discussion off until later (by which time he'll have had more chance to see how much you really DO love him, by your actions. If you know a fight is brewing, pre-empt it by arriving with another agenda (whether that be sex or "honey, the car won't start"). The arguing will do no good, the basic problem is emotional and not logical, and the only cure for it is patience, love and time. When you must discuss it, try answering the real issue ("Do you still love me? How can I be sure?") and not the official issue ("there's not room enough for me and God both in your life"). That means your conversations will likely sound a bit odd, as he tries to frame it one way (a seemingly logical debate) and you answer in another way ("Yes, I love you and I always will. What would you like for dinner tonight?")

If you can avoid verbal "choose NOW!" engagement long enough, he should start to calm down enough to realize what your daily life actions indicate--that you love him just as much as ever, and more so. The time to have the debate ideally is when he's no longer interested, because he's found the answer for himself.
 
Posted by Belle Ringer (# 13379) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scots lass:
A friend of mine has recently become a Christian, ... Her options as far as I can see seem to be (a) Choose God (b) Insist that she can have both or (c) pick the husband and completely give up faith. Options (a) and (b) will have the consequence of ending the marriage, and to her appear like a choice to do so.

It's a question of balance and in a way not different than when the homemaker gets a job or when a baby is born into the family, the spouse who is used to getting all the attention now has to share some of the attention with the baby or the job, and that can feel like loss of love. One friend went back to school and her husband divorced her because he felt abandoned, she was no longer centering her life on him.

Realize there really is a danger of reduced attention being given to the spouse, one friend said her husband spent all his time at church and spent all his money at church - don't do that! The problem, of course, is the church encourages focusing time and money on church, we don't have a good theology of how to do church in a way that intrigues the spouse into wanting to know more instead of alienating the spouse who sees resources taken away from the marriage to be spent on this alien love. No one wants to be a "church widower" just like wives complain about being a golf widow.

Really important to find ways to enjoy God and church without taking away from the spouse. That suggests do NOT be in church every time the doors open, do NOT impose "saying grace" or hanging religious art all over the house, it's his house too! Find a prayer group or church group that meets at times he is busy anyway. Or negotiate how much time a new hobby can legitimately consume, nothing unusual about spouses having some separate interests but the commitment of time and money has to stay within bounds of a healthy balance for the marriage.

The problem is we get all the stuff about God first and love God more than family and fully committed to God and yes if taken too literally it threatens to marriage. It threatens jobs, too, I knew a man who couldn't hold a job because his understanding of being fully committed to God meant spending work time witnessing instead of doing the job. He didn't understand that one can be fully committed to God ND committed to doing god work on the job AND committed to the wellbeing of a spouse AND committed to care of the children/elderly parents AND committed to whatever community cause one adopts. God is within and encouraging these commitments, not a conflict to them (unless the job or spouse is insisting on immoral activities).

Balance is the word. What are the husband's real needs? Find ways of using words and time and money that aren't threats to his needs. That may include giving no money to the church if all the money is theirs, his money should not be spent in ways that seem to him anti-marriage! It definitely includes not spending all her time with church people instead of with him.

But if he objects to her taking 20 minutes to pray once a day at a time when he is watching TV, or her being at church when he's not at home, they need to have a gentle chat about supporting each other's exploration of life. I'll bet he has some interests she doesn't share, most spouses do spend a little time on separate interests.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Years ago there was a woman at my church whose husband said exacatly this - well almost, as actaully he was a heavy drinker and he said it was because she spent so much time in church and he felt abandoned, and the only solution was if she gave up church.

She tood the option C and gave up church. While it did keep her marriage, together it did not make her particualarly happy and it did not stop the husband drinking either. In fact he at times came up with more 'if you loved you would do x y or z ultimatums.

The bottom line really, was that her husband was jealous, controling and manipulative and looking to make it her problem and not his.

I don't know the state of your friends marriage, only she and her husband know that, but I think she needs to be asking herself how typical/untypical is this sort of behaviour from him? Because if it is part of a pattern it will not end if she gives up God and may only make it worse.

Maybe she has to consider as well that even if it is completely untypical behaviour and she gives up God, it may end their marriage anyway, as she may be resentful, unfufilled, disatisfied,and still searching for something else to put in the hole in her life that is left by missing God.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
e) be very careful not to try and convert him or imply in any way that you want him to become a Christian. This would certainly make him wonder if you no longer accept him as a person.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
I also think it's important to not demonize the husband as being some sort of malicious Jesus-hater.

How many of us in relationships haven't had the experience of learning to share our partner with a new interest, or of getting very involved in some project or cause that really isn't as interesting or compelling to our partner?

I know many women who, at midlife, start feeling new energy and assertiveness and embark on a new course of life -- whether it be continuing their education or starting a new career or some other aspect of personal reinvention. Sometimes this can be pretty disconcerting to a blindsided spouse. Likewise, when one partner retires, s/he sometimes uses that as an opportunity to take on new interests or activities that may make the other partner feel left out...or threatened. (After my father retired he developed a sudden interest in cooking, which really rattled my traditional/submissive mother, whose kitchen was really her only domain in that relationship. She told me at one point, "Now he wants to take that away from me too.")

I think others' advice here has been good.

If you read anything about family theory -- anytime you introduce a new individual to a group, you're going to create tension and dislocation. And that's what this woman has effectively done, at least in her husband's perception. (If you're Trinitarian, she's introduced THREE new Persons.;-)) You can't blame him for his feelings.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
If you read anything about family theory -- anytime you introduce a new individual to a group, you're going to create tension and dislocation. And that's what this woman has effectively done, at least in her husband's perception. (If you're Trinitarian, she's introduced THREE new Persons.;-)) You can't blame him for his feelings.

[Killing me] Yes, that marriage is going to be a little crowded. [Killing me]
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
There is a saying that all new Christians should be locked in a closet for six months.

They are sure they have found something wonderful (they're right) and they want everyone else to know the Lord in the same way that they do. It ain't gonna happen.

I think this wife should stop talking about religion and not let it infringe on her husband's life any more than necessary. At the same time she should be very loving and patient, going out of her way to do things that her husband likes.

I think that after a few months things will calm down.

Moo
 
Posted by HCH (# 14313) on :
 
Soberly, I agree that time may smooth this over. My immediate reaction, though, is that she may well be better off without a husband who issues an ultimatum, a dandy way to sabotage a marriage. If she gives in on this point, who knows what he may veto next?
 
Posted by Tortuf (# 3784) on :
 
Lots of good things have been said before now on this thread. Allow me to be the cynical old fart.

He is trying to manipulate her back to whatever they both were before her conversion. He doesn't like what she thinks now and he doesn't like her new buds. They take her away from what they had together before.

Whether or not his feelings are justified, they are real. So . . . ask him what aspect of her new faith troubles him most and start from there. Work on how they can accommodate and reaffirm each other and their relationship. Work on making him comfortable with her new buds and work on making her new buds comfortable with their old buds (letting new buds know that proselytizing will not happen for six months at least.)

Or

Tell him to put on his big boy underwear and celebrate her new faith with her.

The choice depends on whether or not hubby is worth accommodating.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
Well, if she was a Catholic Christian, then it would be relatively easy: marriage is a Christian vocation. If she's doing anything as a Christian which is damaging her marriage, she's getting it wrong; her marriage is her way to God - or at the very least, a major part of her way to God.

So as a Christian she should be more committed to her marriage than she was before; and as she has the example of Jesus's self-giving and total commitment to the Church, she will know what her self-giving and total commitment to her husband should be.

Perhaps if that's the way she lives her Christianity in her marriage, he'll start to see the advantages.

I don't know that all denominations would ask her to see it that way, though.
 
Posted by Enoch (# 14322) on :
 
This isn't fair on Scots Lass as it isn't answering her question. But, Conjunx, despite two other distinctly odd contributions, I had thought what you said was the general Christian consensus. I wasn't under the impression that there was any specifically Catholic claim to that understanding.
 
Posted by Scots lass (# 2699) on :
 
Thanks for all the replies. I don't think that she's been trying to shove it all down his throat, and I certainly don't think she's projecting, quite apart from anything else she thinks that the whole Jesus is my boyfriend thing is a little bit creepy. Part of the problem is that the husband doesn't seem to want to give it time.
quote:
If she's doing anything as a Christian which is damaging her marriage, she's getting it wrong; her marriage is her way to God - or at the very least, a major part of her way to God.
Coniunx, I'm not entirely sure what you mean by marriage being her way to God - that doesn't really make sense to me. But as it appears to me, the problem is not what she's doing as a Christian, it's being one at all.

I happen to think the husband is all kinds of wrong in not being prepared to believe she can love both and in not wanting to wait to see, but that is obviously my perception. I would imagine that his view of the situation is a bit different. Zacchaeus's concerns about the end result are mine as well.
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
Some churches demand so much out of their followers that they forget their earthly families. That attitude, though, is so unhealthy and I've sadly seen it lead to marriage break-ups amongst friends.

Instead, she needs to go to a boring, old, bogstandard church, where all she need do is turn up for one hour a week (while hubby reads the paper or watches the sport) and then gets home in time to cook him a special meal.

There are plenty of boring, old, bogstandard churches all over the country, which do not make unrealistic demands on the time of married women. There's no need to join a cult.
 
Posted by Pre-cambrian (# 2055) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scots lass:
I happen to think the husband is all kinds of wrong in not being prepared to believe she can love both and in not wanting to wait to see, but that is obviously my perception. I would imagine that his view of the situation is a bit different. Zacchaeus's concerns about the end result are mine as well.

Do you know what level of Bible knowledge, if any, the husband has? The Revolutionist cited a couple of passages from the Epistles as being pertinent to the case, but nobody has yet mentioned Luke 14:26:
quote:
If anyone comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even their own life—such a person cannot be my disciple.
If the husband is aware of that then he has every right to feel unhappy or concerned that her conversion will have a negative impact on how she views him. More generally how would people explain that passage to the spouse of a new convert?

[ 31. October 2011, 16:07: Message edited by: Pre-cambrian ]
 
Posted by anteater (# 11435) on :
 
quote:
A friend of mine has recently become a Christian, which has left her husband very unhappy.
You give us so little to go on. OK maybe that means I shouldn't post! But here we go.

Did she know in advance that her husband would be upset? If so that adds a different aspect. For example: I know my wife would be upset if I joined the RCC. Many christians would be upset if their spouse de-converted or became a JW or Mormon.

It's idle to suppose the marriage will not be affected and difficult to belief that this was unexpected. I can believe it was unintended, but would not even take that for granted.

We also have no idea of what the wife wants. Does she want to stay, or would she rather look elsewhere? If I was married to someone who had joined a religion which put me in the category of Unsaved and Going to Hell Unless My Wife Wins Me Over, I would probably just piss off . . or buy a dog. OK she may not push that but is it not the reality? And may it not also be the reality that she will only "stick" with him as part of her Christian Duty.

Of course, this may all be bollocks. We don't know. But often this type of life changing commitment is a sign of underlying unhappiness, so if the hubby thinks her conversion is a sign that the marriage is not all that great, he may not be that wide of the mark.

Equally, the husband may be a total jerk.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enoch:
This isn't fair on Scots Lass as it isn't answering her question. But, Conjunx, despite two other distinctly odd contributions, I had thought what you said was the general Christian consensus. I wasn't under the impression that there was any specifically Catholic claim to that understanding.

It may be all denominations would see it that way, but I certainly can't guarantee it. Perhaps if those whose churches agree say so, we can find out!
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scots lass:

quote:
(Coniunx)If she's doing anything as a Christian which is damaging her marriage, she's getting it wrong; her marriage is her way to God - or at the very least, a major part of her way to God.
Coniunx, I'm not entirely sure what you mean by marriage being her way to God - that doesn't really make sense to me.

Being a Christian is living out a vocation of self-giving love; that's the way in which we actualise in ourselves, and thus enter more fully into the selfgiving nature of God. That's mainstream Catholic theology, most clearly expressed by Bl John Paul II in his Theology of the Body and other writings.

For the married woman (or man), the focus of that vocation is their spouse; the commitment made at the time of marriage is one of self-gift, and the Christian (and the new Christian, on conversion and on realisation of the Christian meaning of marriage), therefore finds the path to God primarily in that context.

quote:
But as it appears to me, the problem is not what she's doing as a Christian, it's being one at all.
Possibly; and if it is simply the statement that she is Christian which is so unacceptable, then the problem is his rather than hers; and he perhaps wasn't listening to what he said when he married her (the 'for better, for worse' bit, if he judges becoming Christian to be for worse).

But if it's his experience of her as a Christian which leads him to believe that she's somehow leaving him behind, or rejecting him, or trying to change him, then one might ask whether she has given cause for that.

I don't know, and I'm not judging him or her; but people can get the impression that one can be a married Christian without being as committed to marriage as to Christ, and that's not often the case.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
If anyone comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even their own life—such a person cannot be my disciple.
More generally how would people explain that passage to the spouse of a new convert?
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.
 
Posted by Taliesin (# 14017) on :
 
quote:
Did she know in advance that her husband would be upset? If so that adds a different aspect. For example: I know my wife would be upset if I joined the RCC. Many christians would be upset if their spouse de-converted or became a JW or Mormon.

This interests me, because when I met my husband I was a practising Pagan. He never joined in, as such, but was happy enough to go along to moots and festivals and camps, and joined me in planning a handfasting. He didn't mind at all how often I referred to or invoked any number of Goddesses or Gods and cheerfully accepted whatever I felt the need to do in thanking the earth for things, celebrating, giving presents and so on. We celebrated Yule on December 21st rather than Christmas on the 25th, and Eostre in early April. We had a naming ceremony for our son at a Beltaine camp to which he was happy to invite his family, but all the while he himself kept apart, because he didn't believe in any of it. Does that make sense? He'd stand beside me, but not wish to speak, or have me say 'we ask...' on his behalf.

So when I converted to Christianity I naively imagined he'd be equally happy to go along with that - being social on the fringes without actively signing up for anything. Turns out he had a hidden antipathy for the church. It's taken 8 years to get any kind of non-hostile reaction to the church community and I've had to be patient and subtle and willing to put the church second in any number of ways. But it's church you (one [Biased] ) puts second - not God. One can continue to think about, praise, love, worship, thank, delight in, be with and generally be known by God without saying a word or raising an eyebrow.

If he wants to control her thoughts, he's not entirely rational.
 
Posted by Graven Image (# 8755) on :
 
When I got married I made vows in a church before God. I believe that God expects me to take them seriously. Marriage first Church second. I would never had been ordained, If my husband who was not then a Christian, would have found my ordination in anyway a threat to our marriage I would have found other ways to continue to live out my Christian life as a member of our family and community. I would have struck some kind of agreement with my husband about the time I spent at church. This of course would have no change in my own private prayer, Bible study, and works of mercy. Yes, my husband attends church now, just not mine. This by the way is not a bad thing we discovered.
 
Posted by bib (# 13074) on :
 
I wonder if the wife is being just too good and pious - there is nothing worse than being managed by a do-gooder!
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
If anyone comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even their own life—such a person cannot be my disciple.
More generally how would people explain that passage to the spouse of a new convert?
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.

My poor father is still flummoxed by this passage. He became a committed Christian rather late in life, mostly in response to my missionary brother I believe. But he has always been fiercely loyal and protective of his family. The whole love/hate dichotomy in the passage rocked him on his heels. At least three of us (family and priest) have tried to explain that ancient usage was different to modern English usage, but the word "hate" screams in his ears. And there is no way in hell he'd ever "hate" his family. [Mad]

I hope Jesus will explain it to him some day.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

That may be the theory, but how it works out in practice can often be more difficult.

I am a Christian, and I still struggle with the idea that my wife should choose God over me in the event of such a choice having to be made. How much more will someone who isn't part of the church struggle with that knowledge - especially as them not being part of the church makes such a choice more likely to have to be made?

Incidentally, I wonder if people on this thread have considered what their reaction would be if the couple in question had started out Christian but one of them decided to renounce their faith. Would the spouse who remains in the church be expected to just suck it up and deal, or would any unhappiness or discomfort on their part be seen as justified?
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
For what it's worth (not much then [Biased] ), I'd say that both are entitled to their discomfort and even grief and anger for the way it used to be. It's hard when a person you love changes in a really fundamental way, even if it's a change that you firmly believe yourself is for the better. And if you don't believe that, [Eek!]

It doesn't matter whether it's a case of one spouse suddenly becoming Christian or a case of one suddenly going apostate. It's going to hurt, and the hurt one is entitled to have that recognized and taken into account.

But in either case, you hope the couple will adjust to the new reality and continue loving each other. (and no, Marvin, I don't think the Christian spouse in a case like you mention is entitled to special privileges more than the nonChristian spouse of the OP. If anything, the burden of continuing to love falls more heavily on the Christian whose spouse has left the faith, because the Christian has the strength and help of Christ to lean on to get through the grief. A non-Christian spouse hasn't got the same resources and should probably be cut more slack.)
 
Posted by Pre-cambrian (# 2055) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.

Which, however way you put it, means that the conversion has instituted a fundamental shift in the balance of the marriage, that the marriage and the husband are no longer first.

Taken altogether what you are saying comes across as: "When we said nasty X we actually meant mild Y, and when we say you should put A above B, that's actually an indication of how important B is." To which the spouse could respond: "You really expect me to swallow all of that? That's how politicians speak when they want to dress up their real intentions to win over the voters."
 
Posted by anteater (# 11435) on :
 
quote:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand
Is there any evidence for this? Other than that's what people need to believe to make the teaching palatable?
 
Posted by no_prophet (# 15560) on :
 
Echoing others. Better to be a relatively quiet Christian than a noisy one. Delay and reserve. Although it may be exciting and wanting the world to know etc, best to be calm and hesitant re spouses discomfort.

I would be careful of any form of marriage therapy until you know you can face the possible outcomes. Therapy often clarifies things such that decisions are inescapable, while they can remain suspended while things are less clear. And with marriage the decision can be to stay or to go.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.

Which, however way you put it, means that the conversion has instituted a fundamental shift in the balance of the marriage, that the marriage and the husband are no longer first.
I think you miss the point. Let's try putting it this way.

Yes, she puts Christ first; at the point of conversion, that's what she does. However, He immediately tells her that, in putting Him first, she has recommitted herself to putting her marriage first, as that is her way to know Him more fully.

By the time she tells he husband about it, he's back first - and there's a whole new level of authority telling her to keep it that way.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
I think I'd be wary of anyone bringing a new rule into the relationship saying 'It is me or X,' and you'll have to choose between me and that thing X, because you can't have both. Unless that was already understood as a non-negotiable, they are being controlling. I think I would lean toward choosing X, because controlling is something I can tolerate below all else in a marriage.
 
Posted by Scots lass (# 2699) on :
 
Sadly, it's the belief that's the problem, not church attendance. Which makes the "wait and see" advice difficult. I don't think she ever realised that this would be his reaction, she's been interested for a long time and that wasn't a problem, it was the leap into faith.

I'm wary of saying too much, because it's not my problem and it may well just be my take on things. As a friend, it's hard to know what the right thing to do is in this situation.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by anteater:
quote:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand
Is there any evidence for this? Other than that's what people need to believe to make the teaching palatable?
There's a ton of evidence, though we probably ought to be in Keryg to attack it. For the moment, though, just consider the fact that you have a born-and-bred Jew telling Jews in a Jewish setting to "hate" their parents--and they all have that Fourth Commandment thing going on in the back of their skulls... And nobody, but nobody, calls him on it. Which makes sense if they understood it as (deeply serious) hyperbole meant to point up a comparative, but not if they took it as straightforward "Detest thy parents".

You might also consider that this is the same Man who took care to provide for his mother even when he was busy dying on that cross--and who never by any report treated her badly. But he did on one or two occasions use her as one part of a shocking comparative.

[ 01. November 2011, 23:06: Message edited by: Lamb Chopped ]
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
Which, however way you put it, means that the conversion has instituted a fundamental shift in the balance of the marriage, that the marriage and the husband are no longer first.

Taken altogether what you are saying comes across as: "When we said nasty X we actually meant mild Y, and when we say you should put A above B, that's actually an indication of how important B is." To which the spouse could respond: "You really expect me to swallow all of that? That's how politicians speak when they want to dress up their real intentions to win over the voters."

It's very true, this change has shifted the balance of the marriage (in the man's favor, actually, but he can't be expected to understand that). And no doubt he feels betrayed, because everything ought to have gone on exactly the way it was on their wedding day.

But this is the real world, not some fantasy "Never, ever change" place. People have babies, and they demand attention--way too much of it, it often seems. People have ailing relatives who suddenly start demanding care and attention, and even house space, the spouse never expected to have to share. People get sick or unemployed or disabled, and suddenly they're no longer the package deal their spouses married. Compared with these common changes, Christian conversion sounds like a bargain to me. At least Jesus isn't threatening to come live in the study! Or needing his bum wiped and his face fed every two hours.

I have a close relative who divorced his wife after her sister died. The reason was, the sister left a young child with Down's Syndrome and nobody to care for him. The living sister, his wife, decided to take him in and raise him rather than let him go into god-knows-what state system.

My relative couldn't stomach the thought of sharing her love and attention. He ditched her.

Never, ever change. Humph.
 
Posted by Pre-cambrian (# 2055) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.

Which, however way you put it, means that the conversion has instituted a fundamental shift in the balance of the marriage, that the marriage and the husband are no longer first.
I think you miss the point. Let's try putting it this way.

Yes, she puts Christ first; at the point of conversion, that's what she does. However, He immediately tells her that, in putting Him first, she has recommitted herself to putting her marriage first, as that is her way to know Him more fully.

By the time she tells he husband about it, he's back first - and there's a whole new level of authority telling her to keep it that way.

No, I get the point completely. Having been a Christian I understand Christianspeak.

But you are not getting my point. You are taking a text that that says you have to hate your [husband] to become a disciple and claiming it to be a sign of Christian glorification of marriage. Why should someone outside the Christian circle, like the husband in the OP, place any trust in a religion - or its followers - that twists words and meanings to such an Orwellian degree?
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
quote:
Originally posted by anteater:
quote:
Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand
Is there any evidence for this? Other than that's what people need to believe to make the teaching palatable?
There's a ton of evidence, though we probably ought to be in Keryg to attack it.
I think that's worth a new thread in Kerygmania so I'm going to set one up for more detailed discussion of the meaning of Luke 14:26. I recommend to Shipmates that folks who are interested in that continue their discussions there.

Barnabas62
Purgatory Host

 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
It's very true, this change has shifted the balance of the marriage (in the man's favor, actually, but he can't be expected to understand that).

Except that's not true, is it. OK, there might be the theoretical "Christians should love their spouses more" handwaving going on, but when it comes down to it the fact remains that henceforth, if the husband wants to do something that the wife judges to be against her new religious morality she is obliged to choose that morality over him.

And let's face it - Christians are known for having some 'fun' moral rules. Any one of a number of previously-insignificant things - using contraception, eating meat on Fridays, having disposable income without giving it away, lie-ins (or sports) on Sundays, not having a problem with homosexuality, taking the kids out trick-or-treating at Halloween, and many more depending on denomination and personal interpretation - might now be off-limits to her, which if he wants to keep doing them is going to cause problems.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Oh dear. Maybe I understand better what the problem is here now.

No, there's a difference between "Christ first" and "Christian morality first," particularly when those moral rules are ... dubious, and not accepted by even half the Church at large.

Choosing Christ first is a given for any Christian, yes, and not just over spouses but over one's own self too. (which is highly unpleasant I can tell you)

But Christian customs, "rules," and crap like that--no. The kind of thing you cited are indifferent matters--they're in a different class from (say) "Thou shalt not murder." I can have a lie-in Sunday morning if I so choose; it is no sin. Now Christ would have something to say to me if I continually, voluntarily, perpetually, made it a habit to avoid any Christian worship or gathering altogether any time, anywhere. But I can't see this husband being so unreasonable as to forbid her to visit worship ever, at any time, in any place. Is that your reading of him?

Same with wearing makeup, going to movies, having hot sex, trick or treat, choices about donations--all this crap is in the "work it out for yourself" category, not in the Big Ten of commandments. And really, I can't see this guy wanting his wife to break those--murder? adultery? um yeah. [Razz] No. 3 (about the Sabbath) is covered above.

I really, really hope she hasn't got roped into a denomination that mixes up the essentials with these manmade traditions. Because it's damn hard for any Christian, let alone a newbie, so stand up to a so-called church authority and say, "You're talking nonsense. Christ does not require that of me."

Is it possible for Christ to require something a husband will contradict? Sure, but it happens more rarely than you'd think. He could (for instance) demand that she take part in prostituting their child (yechhhh). Or in some kind of murder plot (yeah, right). Or that she burn incense and worship (insert deity of your choice here), or the marriage is over. In those extreme cases, you have to make a choice. And the choice will be for Christ. Which in 99.99% of cases is identical to what we would call a choice for decency.

But from the little we know in the OP, it doesn't sound like this husband is the kind of freak who would demand such evils. If his only problem is with the human interpretations of manmade traditions that have only the most tenuous support from God's Word (if that at all!), well, then, he should be just fine. And if he is the kind of indecent jackass who WOULD force such obvious clear evils as murder and child abuse on a wife, she'd be better off without him. Christian or no.

Really, the whole "choose between Christ or me" thing is a pretty rare conflict to actually come up in modern Western-world lives. I've only had to make such a choice a couple times, and in at least one case the asker was clearly and doctor-certifiably out of his mind.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
I really, really hope she hasn't got roped into a denomination that mixes up the essentials with these manmade traditions.

Sadly, that would be most of them. And even if the denomination doesn't, the individual church often will.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Well, then we got our work cut out for us. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
[qb] Same way as to anyone else - it's hyperbole, translated from a language in which the expression referred to matter of preference rather than a complete love/hate opposition that we'd understand, and addressed first to people in a society in which clan / tribe / family tended to outweigh all other considerations. We (mis)understand it from a very different society and language.

Yes, it means you put Christ and God first, but as I've said elsewhere the fact of doing so makes one committed in a new way to marriage and to self-giving love for others.

In Christ we die and are resurrected; the resurrected us is more capable of loving and giving, and the spouse should be the first beneficiary of the change.

Which, however way you put it, means that the conversion has instituted a fundamental shift in the balance of the marriage, that the marriage and the husband are no longer first.
I think you miss the point. Let's try putting it this way.

Yes, she puts Christ first; at the point of conversion, that's what she does. However, He immediately tells her that, in putting Him first, she has recommitted herself to putting her marriage first, as that is her way to know Him more fully.

By the time she tells he husband about it, he's back first - and there's a whole new level of authority telling her to keep it that way.

No, I get the point completely. Having been a Christian I understand Christianspeak.

But you are not getting my point. You are taking a text that that says you have to hate your [husband] to become a disciple and claiming it to be a sign of Christian glorification of marriage. Why should someone outside the Christian circle, like the husband in the OP, place any trust in a religion - or its followers - that twists words and meanings to such an Orwellian degree?

Same way he understands any other sort of consequence of change?

This isn't specifically Chritian, after all.

If I move from one country to another, I then have to follow the laws of the other country. When I cross the border, I start working within that country's laws above the laws I left behind.

Does that mean I can cheerfully murder someone because I move to France, and so French law makes claim of sovereignty over me? No, because as soon as I fall under the law of France, murder becomes illegal again.

If you're being particularly argumentative about it, there may be a stage at which I'm between jurisdictions or a fraction of a second - at which I've turned my back on England and embraced France; and if I'm pretty ignorant I may not know that French law forbids murder (or perhasp can't read French and so haven't yet worked out what the language means); but the end result is that I'm equally required not to murder before and after the change of country.

That's not twisted, that's simply normal life.

(And I don't quite know where you get the impression that the 'hate' langauge is a sign of glorification of marriage; it's more a sign that Jesus used a different language from us. The glorification of marriage is elsewhere.

Or do you really think this guy is ignorant enough to think the whole of Christian life is stated in one obscure verse of the Bible? To stretch the analogy, perhaps if he travels to France he believs that driving on the right is the whole of French law, on the same sort of basis).

[ 03. November 2011, 14:57: Message edited by: coniunx ]
 
Posted by Pre-cambrian (# 2055) on :
 
Would you mind explaining what the purpose of your analogy is because, as far as I can see, it has no bearing on the issue in question.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Pre-cambrian:
Would you mind explaining what the purpose of your analogy is because, as far as I can see, it has no bearing on the issue in question.

You suggest that the man in questions considers it "twisting" to say that because his wife has a new allegiance to Christ, she is in fact still as much - or even more - committed to him, even though at the instant of that conversion she placed Christ first.

But unless you have a very strange scope of normality, it's not twisted to say that in moving from one jurisdiction to another, you don't change your status in respect to what is and is not illegal.

Deciding to obey Christ's law doesn't affect her marriage negatively; just as deciding to move to France and obey French law wouldn't affect her legal position on murder.

Just because the word 'Christian' is involved instead of 'French' doesn't make it twisted.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
But unless you have a very strange scope of normality, it's not twisted to say that in moving from one jurisdiction to another, you don't change your status in respect to what is and is not illegal.

Tell it to the jurisdiction you've just left.

Your analogy is, in fact, not analogous to the conversion in the OP - the wife has gone from a situation where she places her husband first in her affections to one where she places him second. From his point of view she's left his jurisdiction and moved to another.
 
Posted by coniunx (# 15313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
But unless you have a very strange scope of normality, it's not twisted to say that in moving from one jurisdiction to another, you don't change your status in respect to what is and is not illegal.

Tell it to the jurisdiction you've just left.

Your analogy is, in fact, not analogous to the conversion in the OP - the wife has gone from a situation where she places her husband first in her affections to one where she places him second. From his point of view she's left his jurisdiction and moved to another.

So you're accusing her of being disobedient to Christ? That's a bit judgemental of you, isn't it?

Or have you still not got the point that it's only by placing her husband first that she can obey Christ?
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by coniunx:
Or have you still not got the point that it's only by placing her husband first that she can obey Christ?

Even discounting the fact that it's not that simple - as my previous post detailing just a few of the moral demands that may muddy the waters makes clear - even discounting all of that there's a difference between someone putting you first because they genuinely want to put you first and someone putting you first because the one they really want to put first tells them to.

I don't want my wife to put me first because God wants her to do so, I want her to do it because she wants to.
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I don't want my wife to put me first because God wants her to do so, I want her to do it because she wants to.

Just to clarify where we've got up to - Marvin, you want your wife to put you first? Is she aware of that? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I don't want my wife to put me first because God wants her to do so, I want her to do it because she wants to.

Just to clarify where we've got up to - Marvin, you want your wife to put you first? Is she aware of that? [Big Grin]
We have an understanding. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by bib:
I wonder if the wife is being just too good and pious - there is nothing worse than being managed by a do-gooder!

"A martyr is someone married to a saint."
I can understand the husband's worries.
quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
(Thus all those studies we were hearing about some years ago where they were shocked to find that the religious women (which from the sample seemed to = evangelical and mainline Christians) were the ones who had the best sex life.

Maybe he should read these?
I always suspected this but did not know of studies on it. What are they?


Is the situation different from that of a woman (for it is mostly the woman) joining another religious or spiritual group rather than a church? I mostly know of cases of women who suddenly start to take a very strong interest in esoteric things, usually when they are aged between 35 and 50.

This is usually as much an expression as a cause of relationship-threatening major changes in their own lives and self-perception, some sort of identity crisis and personal self-reinvention. Some of them mellow down after a while, but not all do. In these cases it often leads to severing the relationship, especially as religious groups often come with a charismatic member of the other sex who has more understanding of and tolerance for "my new self", i.e. the new self including the new religion. One should not outright deny the man's p.o.v.

The first question imo would be: what are you missing in your life that made you take such a massive step in new directions? It often turns out that some kind of relationship/family counselling would have been in order anyway.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Sylvander, all I can remember is that they hit the news about three (?) years ago, and I believe were done in America. You could probably pull them up by googling "religious women more orgasms" or something similar. Forgive me for not doing so, I'm hearing the call of my neglected duties and must jump Ship momentarily!

Before I do, though...

Marvin, I totally see the point of not wanting to be someone's first (second) love just because the real first (first) love ordered it to be that way. But it doesn't work that way in reality, does it? I mean, surely she loved her husband to bits before the conversion, that's the sense I'm picking up anyway here. In that case, all Christ is doing is saying "continue status quo"--which doesn't invalidate or change in quality or quantity the love that has been there all along. If anything, it establishes it even more firmly.

Now you'd have a real point there if she did NOT in fact love her husband to start with, but after the conversion showed up all long-faced and said grimly, "Jesus says I have to love you so I WILL" (with teeth clenched). Nobody wants that kind of love.

But that's not what she's giving, is it? If it were, the situation described in the OP would have been different. Something along the lines of "my wife doesn't love me and now I'm sure she never will no matter how I try 'cause I've got competition." But the OP seems to be "my wife loved me lots before but I don't think she will anymore," which is a lot closer to the new-baby-in-the-family scenario.

Must go attempt to love my family by cleaning up this disaster of a house.
 
Posted by Theophania (# 16647) on :
 
I'm the wife in the OP. It's taken me until now to have the courage and the internet connection to engage with this thread, though I've been reading it for a while.

Thank you all for your thoughts: they were helpful and thought-provoking.

My husband's view is that the belief itself is the problem: that I am having a relationship with another man, in effect, and that's not something he should put up with, for it is someone else in his place.

As I understand it husband is still around because he hopes that a) my faith will disappear of its own accord or b) he will be able to bully me out of it if he tries hard enough.

Likewise, he thinks Christianity itself is evil and says, if I must have a religion, that he'd much prefer it if I was eg a Unitarian or a Jew.

I'm not sure how to get round any of that.
 
Posted by tomsk (# 15370) on :
 
Hello Theophania, thanks for posting

Not sure if anyone's suggested this passage yet.

"1 Peter 3

1 Wives, in the same way submit yourselves to your own husbands so that, if any of them do not believe the word, they may be won over without words by the behavior of their wives, 2 when they see the purity and reverence of your lives. 3 Your beauty should not come from outward adornment, such as elaborate hairstyles and the wearing of gold jewelry or fine clothes. 4 Rather, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight. 5 For this is the way the holy women of the past who put their hope in God used to adorn themselves. They submitted themselves to their own husbands, 6 like Sarah, who obeyed Abraham and called him her lord. You are her daughters if you do what is right and do not give way to fear."

This might sound glib but, hopefully, your positive example will bring him round, if not to faith, then at least to thinking you haven't gone bonkers and got wrapped up in an evil cult. Others have given lots of practical advice. All I suggest is that you don't allow a situation to develop where your faith squeezes him out of your time.

[ 26. December 2011, 12:09: Message edited by: tomsk ]
 
Posted by Evensong (# 14696) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:

My husband's view is that the belief itself is the problem: that I am having a relationship with another man, in effect, and that's not something he should put up with, for it is someone else in his place.

What if Jesus was female?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
theophania--

Do you have children? Would your love for a son be a threat to your husband? The love we have for Christ would seem to be more analagous to that sort of love-- the love of a mother for her son or a daughter for her father-- than the love of a woman for her lover (St. Teresa not withstanding). I don't know if that would help your husband understand.

I suppose none of us can really understand what it would be like to be in your husband's shoes-- to have your spouse change in such a fundamental way, in a way you can't really understand or appreciate. For that, I assume, grace and forebearance are in order.

Thank you for coming here and posting. It was a good reminder to me to pray for you. Because I don't really have any answers, just that reminder as the community of Christ to lift it up to our Lord and ask him to hold you both.
 
Posted by Theophania (# 16647) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Evensong:
What if Jesus was female?

He'd find that a lot easier to deal with, he says.

quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

Do you have children? Would your love for a son be a threat to your husband? The love we have for Christ would seem to be more analagous to that sort of love-- the love of a mother for her son or a daughter for her father-- than the love of a woman for her lover (St. Teresa not withstanding). I don't know if that would help your husband understand.

I agree with your analogy, but husband doesn't. He says that's not the case, it's a romantic relationship, and nothing will persuade him otherwise. And yes, trying to look at it objectively, I do think husband would feel threatened by children if we had any. I'm so glad we don't.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Dear God, sweetheart. If he feels threatened by your own children (and I agree, I think he would), he's in serious serious need of counseling. Because that's not a romantic relationship by any stretch of the imagination, and it sounds to me like the truth is he doesn't want you having ANY close relationship but with him. Which is isolating and abusive.

Please do some very private thinking about your own self-protection--I don't mean physically, don't know that that's a problem, I mean emotionally. Because being married to someone who needs/demands to engross ALL your attention and love is rather like being married to a black hole. Impossible to satisfy, and a good recipe for eventually disappearing yourself.
 
Posted by Josephine (# 3899) on :
 
Theophania, I'm inclined to agree with Lamb Chopped. You should at least think about how your husband feels about your other relationships. How does he feel about your spending time with your parents or friends? Is he pleased that you have family and friends that love you and like to spend time with you? Does he support your being involved in activities that you enjoy, even if he doesn't share them?

If he tends to keep you away from other people, or if he tries to control who you see, and when, you should know that those are "red flags," and they suggest that the relationship is likely to be abusive -- and if it is not abusive now, it could become so in the future.

I don't know what kinds of services or supports are available where you live, but if you feel like your husband is manipulative or controlling, or that he is attempting to isolate you from other people, you may want to find a counselor who can help you work through your situation, and the best way to respond to your husband.
 
Posted by Genevičve (# 9098) on :
 
Might as well add my 2 cents:
From what Scots Lass has said, it doesn't sound as if the husband objects to specific scriptural admonitions, or particulars of denominational theology.
It sounds as if (as others have noted) his wife has gone from having an "interest" in Christianity to faith--to relationship, and he feels threatened. The situation could be analogous to her having gone from an interest in X to suddenly making X priority. The kicker is that we don't know what the husband's context is for Christianity. So we don't know if he just feels threatened because anything has assumed more (or at least equal) importance to him (as he perceives it), or whether there are also some specific negative associations with Christianity.
Thus, the only suggestion I have to add is: if possible have a conversation, and try to find out the roots of his feelings about (not his thoughts, his feelings) Christianity. Whether or not such a conversation is possible depends on their relationship. Sometimes getting the deeper feelings on the table makes it possible to deal with something that has seemed intractable.
I wouldn't suggest marriage counseling as a first step, but if they continue at an impasse, a good marriage counselor may be able to help.
 
Posted by Genevičve (# 9098) on :
 
oops, disregard my whole post. I stupidly hadn't seen page 2. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Evensong (# 14696) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:
quote:
originally posted by Evensong:
What if Jesus was female?

He'd find that a lot easier to deal with, he says.

How bout you? Would you be happy if Jesus was female?
 
Posted by Theophania (# 16647) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Evensong:
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:
quote:
originally posted by Evensong:
What if Jesus was female?

He'd find that a lot easier to deal with, he says.

How bout you? Would you be happy if Jesus was female?
I honestly find that very difficult to answer because it's completely outside my experience. I suspect I would feel different about it - in the way that people tend to have different relationships with brothers than with sisters - but I can't say for sure.

I do genuinely think I'm not projecting, though.

What do others think about "if Jesus were female"?

The other thing I meant to acknowledge from earlier is the "marriage is a vocation" ideas. I agree the marriage should be a priority and should be sincerely worked at: but when the only way to save the marriage or submit to the husband is to denounce faith, I think that's going too far. What do you all think?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:

The other thing I meant to acknowledge from earlier is the "marriage is a vocation" ideas. I agree the marriage should be a priority and should be sincerely worked at: but when the only way to save the marriage or submit to the husband is to denounce faith, I think that's going too far. What do you all think?

I think there is support for your pov both biblically and from church history. I would make it clear that in such a circumstance, it is not you that is ending the marriage, but rather your husband, by making that demand. It sounds like it's not at that point yet, and I pray it never does.

However, like Lamb Chopped and Josephine, I too, am now far more concerned about the potential abuse here than I am the theological issues. As they noted, abuse does not need to be physical to still cause great harm. The notion of "non-physical abuse" can of course, be easily manipulated to rationalize bad choices, but that doesn't seem to be anywhere close to your problem. Rather, I'm concerned far more about the reverse. Precisely because the abuse isn't physical (if that indeed is the case) it can be easy to overlook the damaging effect of controlling and isolating behavior.

When you said you "only were just able to get to internet"-- is that a simple logistical matter, or could there be something more insidious behind that-- is he deliberately limiting your access?

There are some real red flags here that have me very concerned, and all the more called to pray for you. I hope you will take advantage of whatever resources you can find to get some good counsel for yourself-- from a therapist or wise pastor-- re: how to proceed. I, too, am not talking marriage counseling at this point-- although that may or may not come later. I'm talking re: counseling for yourself to work thru what is in your best interests at this point to put you in a place where you can safely move forward.
 
Posted by Eliab (# 9153) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:
As I understand it husband is still around because he hopes that [...] he will be able to bully me out of it if he tries hard enough.

If he said anything even remotely like that, I cannot imagine a clearer danger signal. That, combined with the irrational insistence that your faith really is a romantic (and adulterous) relationship with another man, suggests to me a distrustful and jealous personality who is prepared to hurt you to get his own way.

If your husband is not willing to do something about this, then you should - and that may ultimate involve you leaving him. . The duty of wifely submission, however you understand it, certainly does not include allowing your husband to bully you. He has no right to do that. Nothing in your marriage vows included consent to being abused.


I agree with you that denying your faith to satisfy your husband's demands is going too far. You should, of course, try to understand his objections and worries, and be patient and considerate in helping both of you find a solution. But if he does not want a solution, and will be satisfied only with coercing you into denying your faith, then it will be him, and not you, who has killed the marriage, regardless of who physically moves out. Do everything reasonable to avoid that, but "reasonable" does not mean putting up with bullying. That will destroy your life, if you let it happen, and won't do your husband any good either. Next to giving up your faith, that is an outcome to be avoided at all costs.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
And forgive me, but if you do give in and give up Christ, he'll only move on to making you give up something/someone else. Such people are never satisfied. Even when you have nothing left they will still punish you.

Because the problem lies not with you but within them.
 
Posted by Evensong (# 14696) on :
 
Uh. Lots of good advice given here already so will only add a slightly different point.

My husband was very possessive of my attentions when we were first married.

As many of you have said, it was isolating and difficult.

But he did calm down eventually. It took quite a few years but he did grow out of his insecurity.

Seventeen years later, we are going strong.

[Votive] [Votive] Theophania
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
Perhaps, Theophania, it would help not to talk to your husband too much about your faith, about God and about church, as he's already feeling quite threatened. There must be other people you can talk to about those things, and many other subjects you can talk about to your husband. If you do God-lite with him, and keep thoughts about your faith to private conversations between you and God (when in the bathroom if necessary!), plus discussion with a few well-chosen friends (when you can see them on your own), he will feel less anxious and then, over time, you might find you can gradually open up that part of your life to him again.

All the best.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
The bathroom is a good place. It's where I hid my faith for the first four years or so.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
Hello everyone, I am the husband in question.

This is my first post, and I haven't studied the relevant etiquette for this forum properly, so I hope people will excuse me if I do things wrongly.

To address some of the points people have made:

a) Yes, we are receiving professional marriage counselling, but have been having extreme difficulty convincing the counsellor that differences in belief are (at least in my opinion) the driving force for our current problems.

b) Yes, I admit that objecting to my wife's unilateral introduction of a new man into the relationship is controlling. I don't see how this is significantly different to my wife objecting to me introducing a new woman. Would anyone like to fail to explain?

c) Further to this, given that my wife dropping the new man doesn't seem to be an option and that it is always going to hurt me coming second to an imaginary man, does anyone have any bright ideas how we could still run a worthwhile relationship out of this? Note that I'm going to find suggestions that I convert would be patronizing, pointless and supporting my opinion of Christianity.
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
Surely, in true medieval style, aren't you supposed to challenge the Lord Jesus to a duel? If your honour is at stake, it's the only way.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
Curiously enough, in one of the few lighter moments between my wife and me, I have suggested taking the matter outside for a gentlemanly bout of fisticuffs between me and Him. This ended with me demonstrating how this would work and punching my own fist. It hurt.
 
Posted by hatless (# 3365) on :
 
Did she shout "Leave it, e to the i Pi. (Does she call you -1 for short?) He's not worth it."
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
No she didn't. If that were her opinion, I think we'd be in fewer difficulties...
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
This ended with me demonstrating how this would work and punching my own fist. It hurt.

Heh, heh - Jesus 1, e to the pi O.

Next, stay up all night and challenge him to a wresting match. (You may see an angel or two ascending or descending a ladder while u wait - this is quite normal.)
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
Um, you could put it to the test you know. Take up a devotion to Diana, or to Aphrodite. I rather doubt your wife would react as you have.

Sorry, but being jealous of a deity is just plain weird. Particularly one who is as marriage-affirming as this one.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
She was distinctly unnerved when I started talking about Thor, so I'm not totally convinced she wouldn't object if she believed me to be choosing a relationship with a perfect Woman, although I'd probably aim for Athena, considering Diana/Artemis' strong connection with chastity & virginity, and that Venus/Aphrodite was both married and rather prone to a love them and leave them policy. Although given that she knows I don't believe in Gods, I'd be hard pressed to convince her I was serious.

Since I'm not the one to bring them up, I'd imagine a lot of people have been jealous of the classical Gods, especially considering what Zeus is suggested to have got up to. This is a lot easier with a god who's shtick is that he's human.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
And who hasn't been back (in the flesh, anyway) in 2000 years? Come on.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
So are you saying that the most important part of a relationship is the flesh? I don't subscribe to that point of view.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Just as the Inuit, and other Arctic people, people have lots of words for 'snow', and we basically only have one, so we, in our culture, are lumbered with only really having one word for 'love'---'love'!

You may be relieved to know that 'love' is a lot broader and deeper than our society generally allows, with its fixation on romantic/sexual 'love'.

CS Lewis in 'The Four Loves' explores in some detail [extract from Wikipedia follows]:


Storge – affection

Affection (storge, στοργή) is fondness through familiarity, especially between family members or people who have otherwise found themselves together by chance. It is described as the most natural, emotive, and widely diffused of loves: natural in that it is present without coercion; emotive because it is the result of fondness due to familiarity; and most widely diffused because it pays the least attention to those characteristics deemed "valuable" or worthy of love and, as a result, is able to transcend most discriminating factors. Ironically, its strength is also what makes it vulnerable. Affection has the appearance of being "built-in" or "ready made", says Lewis, and as a result people come to expect, even to demand, its presence—irrespective of their behavior and its natural consequences.


Phileo – friendship

Phileo is the love between friends. Friendship is the strong bond existing between people who share common interest or activity. Lewis explains that true friendships, like the friendship between David and Jonathan in the Bible is almost a lost art. Friendship is a love just like the love between two lovers.


Eros – romance

Eros (ἔρως) is love in the sense of 'being in love' or loving me. This is distinct from sexuality, which Lewis calls Venus, although he does spend time discussing sexual activity and its spiritual significance in both a pagan and a Christian sense. He identifies eros as indifferent. It is Venus that desires the sexual aspect of a relationship, while Eros longs for the emotional connection with the other person.

Agape – unconditional love

And a final thought: if Theophania's faith is quite new found it is not untypical for people in her situation to be a bit 'over enthusiastic', which can be quite threatening to those who are used to the status quo. Given a bit of time, and some good guidance from Christian friends/mentors (plus others), things usually calm down and start to mature.

[ 30. December 2011, 16:06: Message edited by: Alisdair ]
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
Blast! Editing probs. 'Agape' is the key one in this case as it describes the love that is between a human being and God (including Christ), and also between Christians, or anyone else who is gving themselves unconditionally for the sake of another and the values embodied by Christ; that person may well be seen as an enemy, it doesn't matter.


Agape – unconditional love

Charity (agapē, ἀγάπη) is the love that brings forth caring regardless of circumstance. Lewis recognizes this as the greatest of loves, and sees it as a specifically Christian virtue. The chapter on the subject focuses on the need of subordinating the natural loves to the love of God, who is full of charitable love.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!


quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Just as the Inuit, and other Arctic people, people have lots of words for 'snow', and we basically only have one...

If you start your post with such an old hoary falsehood why should we believe the rest of it? Or even read it?

In fact I've forgotten what it was about already. The pimple has outshone the nose.

[ 30. December 2011, 16:12: Message edited by: ken ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
Blast! Editing probs. 'Agape' is the key one in this case as it describes the love that is between a human being and God (including Christ), and also between Christians, or anyone else who is gving themselves unconditionally for the sake of another and the values embodied by Christ; that person may well be seen as an enemy, it doesn't matter.


Agape – unconditional love

Charity (agapē, ἀγάπη) is the love that brings forth caring regardless of circumstance. Lewis recognizes this as the greatest of loves, and sees it as a specifically Christian virtue. The chapter on the subject focuses on the need of subordinating the natural loves to the love of God, who is full of charitable love.

My classics are I admit limited, but I understand this to be a highly Christiancentric representation of the situation. If my sources are correct agape has been used between spouses nd is by no means unconditional. As such, why shouldn't I interpret this as an affair?
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
I have yet to see a spousal relationship that seemed perfect or had truly unconditional love, so I can't see why I'd personally call it agape. (Though I've also heard that perhaps we make much bigger distinctions between those three Greek words than the original users did.)
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Purgatory is a board for serious discussion of issues, not the joint airing in public of personal relationship issues.

I note the couple in question are receiving counselling, which process should be governed by certain confidentiality protections and legal protections re advice. Clearly, neither Purgatory nor any other of our discussion boards has either of these safeguards. Nor should we be seeking to cut across anything said in that process.

So please bring the specifics of that part of the discussion to an end. This ruling is not intended to curtail more general discussions about the principles and issues which apply.

Barnabas62
Purgatory Host

 
Posted by Eliab (# 9153) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Hello everyone, I am the husband in question.

Hello (and can I say I greatly admire your courage in posting here).

quote:
a) Yes, we are receiving professional marriage counselling, but have been having extreme difficulty convincing the counsellor that differences in belief are (at least in my opinion) the driving force for our current problems.
Good that you are doing something positive.

I'm not sure that you need to convince your counsellor about anything. There may be underlying issues, or there may not, but if the faith thing is the one that causes problems you are going to have to fix this in any case.

quote:
b) Yes, I admit that objecting to my wife's unilateral introduction of a new man into the relationship is controlling. I don't see how this is significantly different to my wife objecting to me introducing a new woman. Would anyone like to fail to explain?
I'm certainly going to fail to explain, because you are, I'm afraid, making a category mistake in equating a religious faith with a romantic relationship. No one is ever going to explain things to your satisfaction, because any remotely true explanation will have to be in terms which you have already ruled out.

First, you have to change your preconceptions, because until you do, you aren't going to understand or accept anything. If you insist that Jesus is your rival in love, despite the fact that He, your wife, and the entire fucking Christian Church swears that he isn't, then you aren't going to accept that he has a legitimate place in your wife's life. But it is your stubborn and idiosyncratic labelling that makes the problem, not anything that your wife is doing or feeling.

Does it help if I point out that there are hundreds of millions of decidedly straight men (and a smaller but still significant number of gay women), who love Jesus in exactly the same way that your wife (and hundreds of millions of other women and gay men) do, and few of them see this as getting in the way of their ordinary sexual relationships? For a Christian to characterise their relationship with Jesus in personal erotic terms is not altogether unknown, but it strikes the rest of us as odd, to say the least. Basically, it is generally true of Christians that we don't fancy Jesus.

quote:
c) Further to this, given that my wife dropping the new man doesn't seem to be an option and that it is always going to hurt me coming second to an imaginary man, does anyone have any bright ideas how we could still run a worthwhile relationship out of this?
The first thing to recognise is that although you have many excellent possible reasons for being unsettled by your wife's new faith, her having an affair with an imaginary man is a product of your imagination and not hers. Whatever else about Christianity may be made up, that certainly is, and by you. It is utterly unreal, and any demand you make to have it treated as real is doomed to frustration. Your wife is not having any sort of affair, and so cannot possibly satisfy you that Jesus isn't in that part of her life when it is you (and not her) who is insisting on putting him there.

So drop that. Then work out sensibly what practical, ethical and social differences her new religion is going to make to you, and be honest with her about what you are worried about and what compromises and assurances you would ask her to give. You have a right to be concerned about that, and a right to have your concerns treated with respect. You don't have the right to have your, frankly, delusional, equation of Christian faith and spiritual adultery granted the status of fact.

Everything you previously loved and valued about your wife is still there. Christianity ought not to change that.

quote:
Note that I'm going to find suggestions that I convert would be patronizing, pointless and supporting my opinion of Christianity.
Am I right in thinking that you start with a very negative view of Christianity? Whatever view you have, there'll be no shortage of Christians to support it. There is, though, no reason at all to suppose that your wife will turn into the sort of Christian that you are taking as typical.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
E to the i pi, surely one question is: Why are you choosing to interpret your wife's faith as 'an affair'?

For a start the man in question has been out of 'the market' for 2,000 odd years. For another, what does your position imply for any other male friends your wife may have? And for a third, anyone who seriously sets out to follow Christ's way, very quickly learns that the call to put Christ (God) first is a call to truly understand the meaning of love for others, and that is expressed powerfully in the relationship between a husband and a wife.


and, Ken, relax, life is too short. ;-)
 
Posted by Eliab (# 9153) on :
 
[my last crosspossed with Barnabas62. Sorry if that continued the tangent]
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
No sweat, guys. Easy done

B62, Purg Host
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
There's a strong Christian tradition (mainly from the non-conformists, for sure) of seeing Jesus as ruler of an alternative (both Heavenly and Earthly) realm, the Kingdom of God.

This has, in times past, made the secular authorities very twitchy, because it leads to Christians following the tenets of their faith, rather than the social and legal norms of the State. We don't see so much of that in the UK or the USA, because the way the state does things is more or less congruent with the way Christians do things.

Theophania has taken duel-citizenship in the Kingdom of God. She has pledged allegiance to a different flag, sworn fealty to a different lord - call it what you like. But her marriage vows remain completely unaffected. For all I know, she might even mean them more, now...
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
And for a third, anyone who seriously sets out to follow Christ's way, very quickly learns that the call to put Christ (God) first is a call to truly understand the meaning of love for others, and that is expressed powerfully in the relationship between a husband and a wife.

But in that situation the husband or wife is still coming second. A close second perhaps, but second nonetheless.

The problem is having something that is considered to be ultimately more important than the relationship. It doesn't matter if it's another person, a sport or a god - if when push came to shove the person would chose it over the relationship then it's a threat.

I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand.
 
Posted by Alisdair (# 15837) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
[/QB]But in that situation the husband or wife is still coming second. A close second perhaps, but second nonetheless.

The problem is having something that is considered to be ultimately more important than the relationship. It doesn't matter if it's another person, a sport or a god - if when push came to shove the person would chose it over the relationship then it's a threat.

I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand. [/QB]

Possibly without intending to, I think you have captured the problem quite well.

If I see this situation as making me 'second best', when I should be 'first', there is clearly a problem. But if what is happening is that the relationship is being seen in it's true context---lived out before and sustained by the Living God---then 'second best' is simply the wrong way to view it; in fact it is about seeing and understanding the relationship in its fulness. It is about learning to truly love one's husband/wife/partner/family/friend/colleague/...

In the case in question there may be a level of immaturity on both sides that is undermining the relationship, but one thing is certain, whatever the reality of the relationship between these two people (and with God), it must change, it cannot be static, and it will either change for the better or the worse depending on the willingness and insight of both parties. As far as I know, God's hope will be that they change for the better, but it is their relationship and they must take responsibility for it.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
Much of what we believe about marriage is a romantic fiction. It's lovely talking about nothing coming before your spouse, but it's not true for any of us. The minute you have a child, you are relegated to 2nd place. Do something to hurt that child and you will find that out right quick.

Now, if all you want is pretty words, the romantic fiction, that should be easy enough to arrange. Both inside and outside the Christian tradition we can find all sorts of poetic nonsense that will fill the bill quite nicely.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand.

Because, as someone said up-thread, it's as big a category error to see Jesus as a romantic love rival as it is to see a son or daughter as a romantic love rival. I know a lot of the songs we sing in church are of the "Jesus is my boyfriend" variety, but genuinely, no, Jesus is not my boyfriend neither do I think my wife is romantically attached to Jesus.

It's more akin to having your partner change nationality and their allegiance is to another country. Odd, but not insurmountable, and the only real effect is if there's a war on between your country and theirs.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
That is an interesting take on the situation. But would any Christian be willing to pledge allegiance to the Kingdom of Heaven rather than the individual?

(I hope that's general enough).
 
Posted by Jenn. (# 5239) on :
 
My allegiance is to God as revealed to us by Jesus. Jesus preached about the Kingdom of Heaven, with God as the King. The kingdom wouldn't mean much without a King, so I'm not sure what pledging allegiance to the Kingdom without God would mean.

When I am talking to people about God, some find it easier if I talk about God, some Jesus. I don't think you can understand either properly without the other, but if it helps to frame it differently I do that. Does it make things easier if you substitute God for Jesus?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
I'm a non-Trinitarian atheist, so I don't see that as just a substitution.
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
I think its worth thinking through what practical difference it makes.

Depending on denomination - apart from a Christian trying act in a Christian way, which would generally mean honesty, not hurting people and following the golden rule etc - you might be talking about a person being off out an hour a week.

In another denomination; it might be that said person will be able bible study one night, accountability group the next, then choir practice, plus two services and making lifestyle decisions such as becoming teetotal and stopping smoking and smoking weed that they want their partner to fall in with.

Or is it more that a view of a relationship is that each partner has to be the most important thing in the other partner's life. If so, as others have said, I think that is unrealistic. If your partner defrauded someone Ł100,000 - would you hand them over to the police if they wouldn't do it themselves ? I hope so.
 
Posted by justlooking (# 12079) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
The minute you have a child, you are relegated to 2nd place.

This is true. Babies are totally dependent and they have to come first or they wouldn't survive.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
That is an interesting take on the situation. But would any Christian be willing to pledge allegiance to the Kingdom of Heaven rather than the individual?

(I hope that's general enough).

If you're British, you swear allegiance to the Crown, as personified by Her Maj QEII. And in olden times, if you believed in the Divine Right of kings, to quote Louis the (XX-ish, I can never remember which), "L'Etat, c'est moi". I am the State.

The New Testament was written at a time when the king/emperor was the very embodiment of the people, and a lot of theology in it (and afterwards, up to post-medieval times) is couched in those terms. A whole theory of atonement (Anselm's Satisfaction theory, and no shipmates, we're so not going there [Biased] ) is based around medieval concepts of fealty and honour.

Jesus is our King, not our husband (and for the record, I'm a straight bloke).
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
I don't think I've ever been called apon to give the loyal toast (I'm neither a member of the of armed forces, nor an MP.) If I were called I'm not sure whether I would do so or not. There are plenty of religious groups that would agree with me on that bit.

In other words, make heaven into a constitutional monarchy with a directly elected head of government and I'll start being more interested.
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
It's more akin to having your partner change nationality and their allegiance is to another country. Odd, but not insurmountable, and the only real effect is if there's a war on between your country and theirs.

My atheist husband says he thinks it's a bit more complicated than that. And it's not just about the time element either, though he has a reciprocal "other woman" in sailing which takes up a roughly equivalent amount of time and interest as the practical bits of God stuff do to me.

He does feel, or rather did, that there's a 3rd "thing" in the marriage, which is God. But this was the state of affairs before we married, so we've had it much easier than Theophania and Pi fella.

It is, perhaps, a question of personalities and which bits of faith you actually talk about. Apparantly (this isn't something we discuss often!) I talk a lot about faith, and trying to understand what God meant or did by xyz, but I don't discuss Jesus in starry-eyed, breathlessly excited terms - not to suggest you do either, Theophania, ofc. He thinks he'd find that rather more difficult.

And I get irrationally grumpy at the start of every sailing season where said husband is bouncing up and down like an over-excited schoolboy at the prospect of a day's sailing, especially if I'm already tired and grumpy and the kids are fighting. So, yes, in a tiny way, I think I get it. It's not the time, or any sort of infidelity, it's that something else makes him this happy and it's not me. That's not mature, and it's not rational, but sometimes it rankles.

The whole God thing bothers my husband much less now. He comes to church occasionally (when it doesn't clash with sailing) even on church weekends away [Eek!] and thinks it's been rather a journey over 12 years or so. From my point of view, having an atheist husband over the process of nearly losing my own faith, has been A Good Thing.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
... The problem is having something that is considered to be ultimately more important than the relationship. It doesn't matter if it's another person, a sport or a god - if when push came to shove the person would chose it over the relationship then it's a threat. ...

But why should push come to shove? There isn't necessarily a conflict unless the two people decide to make it one e.g. by demanding a choice between football and church on Sundays. Any reason why they can't go separately, or alternate, or do something else entirely, or whatever? I think something is seriously awry in a relationship if it does reach the ultimatum stage, but I also believe it was awry before the two choices presented themselves. They're just the pretext for indulging in a bit of an "if you loved me" control game, which in itself is a sign of insecurity. (Trust me, I've been on both sides of the game. [Frown] [Hot and Hormonal] )

Relationships by their nature and variety aren't necessarily either/or, zero-sum arrangements (obviously some are). We can have lots of friends, and our friends don't ask to be ranked against, say, our jobs or family members or whatnot. As Henry Higgins asked, "Would you be livid if I took out another fellow?" OliviaG
 
Posted by BarbaraG (# 399) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I'm a non-Trinitarian atheist, so I don't see that as just a substitution.

Err... so you don't believe in the Christian Trinitarian understanding of God.... but do believe in other conceptions of God - or at least, are more willing to relate to them? But I think you said elsewhere that you don't believe in any sort of God.

To get back to the theological discussion, as our host has directed: a new or different religious belief/practice is a substantial change in one partner in a marriage, and it should not be a big surprise that it causes a sense of threat in the other partner. The Christian partner is enjoined to do their absolute best to be a loving and supportive spouse, while also being faithful to their Lord. In cases of direct conflict - the Christian must choose Christ.

Now, if the non-Christian partner adheres to another faith, or is a career criminal, there are going to be lots of occasions of conflict, but excepting those two cases, it's really up to the non-Christian spouse whether they are going to create situations of conflict or not.

I was in a similar situation some 20 years ago ( not identical), so I have some experience of the dynamics. Very difficult, but not hopeless, as long as both partners want to make the situation work.

BarbaraG
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I don't think I've ever been called apon to give the loyal toast (I'm neither a member of the of armed forces, nor an MP.) If I were called I'm not sure whether I would do so or not. There are plenty of religious groups that would agree with me on that bit.

In other words, make heaven into a constitutional monarchy with a directly elected head of government and I'll start being more interested.

You are, whether you like it or not (and I have strong republican leanings), a subject of Her Maj, and very few people either today or throughout history ever get to choose who rules them. Or how.

Your wife has chosen God, as best described by the person of Jesus, to be her king. Difficult to be ruled by someone you don't believe exists, so it's not for you.

quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
My atheist husband says he thinks it's a bit more complicated than that. And it's not just about the time element either, though he has a reciprocal "other woman" in sailing which takes up a roughly equivalent amount of time and interest as the practical bits of God stuff do to me.

Any analogy breaks down if you push it far enough. [Razz] Currently, I'm more than a little involved with a pseudo-16th century Austrian town, and will be for the probably the next 12 months. Guaranteed I'll spend more time there than here, and with fictional Jews, princes and librarians than with my wife. And I wasn't an author when I got married: be glad it's only sailing...
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
Originally posted by Doc Tor:

quote:
If you're British, you swear allegiance to the Crown, as personified by Her Maj QEII.
When I took my Oath of Fealty it was directly to Brenda "mine sovereign liege lady, Elizabeth" but it wasn't a "British" Oath, in that the wording of the oath pre-dated the Union of the Crowns. This has come up on the Ship before when Matt Black and I, lawyers both, were mutually astonished that most Scottish solicitors have taken an oath of Fealty and most English solicitors haven't. When Brenda goes, my Oath ends - I haven't sworn allegiance to the Crown, but to Bren as an individual.

I wonder if there's an analogy here, in that technical understandings of loyalty and allegiance can be internalised and assumed by one person, but understood in a completely different way by another?
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand.

Because, as someone said up-thread, it's as big a category error to see Jesus as a romantic love rival as it is to see a son or daughter as a romantic love rival.
I wasn't talking about a romantic rival per se, as my inclusion of "sport" in the list of things that can cause such a problem should really have indicated.

It's about your partner having something else in their life that's more important to them than you. Something that, if it became necessary, they would leave you for. A romantic love rival is only one of many things that may be in that category, but they all potentially lead to the same place - separation. Hence why they're all threats.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by OliviaG:
But why should push come to shove? There isn't necessarily a conflict unless the two people decide to make it one e.g. by demanding a choice between football and church on Sundays.

I gave several examples of potential conflict in this post back on page 1.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
If a relationship, partnership, marriage or union is a stable place of trust and love then there are no such things as "threats".
Perfect love casts out fear and all that.
The problem is when we feel we're on the wrong side of that "if". Which I am guessing includes virtually everyone at one time or another.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I think each of the examples you gave, Marvin, would be issues to be worked out within the framework of the marriage. So far as I'm aware, the marriage promises do not exclude either of the partners from the possibility of a genuine change of mind on such matters. Such issues can be worked on, and worked out, if there is love and goodwill at work.

The issue gets really difficult if the perception of the spouse is that his or her partner has become involved with a controlling cult - and that perception has some foundation. Let's face it, such cults exist and some of them have Christian Church signs on the door.

If the partner has that fear, and has their own reasons for it, then the convert is well advised to listen carefully and consider well. Adult converts are not always fully aware of the nature of the local church they have become linked to. There may be a genuine desire to protect a loved one, but it is easily misread as an attempt to control.

And that issue can also be worked out within a marriage, provided there is the necessary trust that your partner is, in their own way, looking out for you. If, however, the relationship is already in difficulties because of control issues, then help is needed from experienced third parties to untangle the knots.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I think each of the examples you gave, Marvin, would be issues to be worked out within the framework of the marriage. So far as I'm aware, the marriage promises do not exclude either of the partners from the possibility of a genuine change of mind on such matters. Such issues can be worked on, and worked out, if there is love and goodwill at work.

...and as long as both partners are coming from the same perspective in terms of what's really important.

But religious moral imperatives don't work like that, do they? Catholics don't get a pass on using contraception just because their non-religious partner doesn't want (any more) kids. Someone who now believes strongly in spiritual warfare isn't going to blithely accept their kids going out at halloween dressed as demons, regardless of how much the kids have enjoyed it in previous years.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I'm armed by the experiences of a long marriage, Marvin. My wife and I have differed, sometimes sharply, on moral and behavioural issues, while both being Christian. Maybe it's a feature of our mutual nonconformism. After nearly 44 years, we've worked most things out and disagree very rarely about anything. But there have certainly been times when we have been divided by a common faith! We learned how to live with our differences, because in the end that was the agape way i.e not to insist on our own way. And before the differences were resolved, we found compromises. That's pretty hard to do over issues like contraception - but we didn't have that one.

Learning to live with differences of outlook is common to all marriages, isn't it? Maybe what made it easier in our case is that we were not Christian when we married and so we both experienced conversion within the framework of our marriage? Not sure. I think we argued more in the first five years after conversion than we did before!
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
(Speaking generally now) Alternatively, someone could be a better partner for having a Christian faith - for example, if they regularly pray that they might be a better partner and constantly try to live up to the high ideals of the Christian life. If an Atheist was not so frightened or threatened by the spiritual relationship, he/she might be able to view his/her marriage in that more positive light.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand.

Because, as someone said up-thread, it's as big a category error to see Jesus as a romantic love rival as it is to see a son or daughter as a romantic love rival.
I wasn't talking about a romantic rival per se, as my inclusion of "sport" in the list of things that can cause such a problem should really have indicated.

It's about your partner having something else in their life that's more important to them than you. Something that, if it became necessary, they would leave you for. A romantic love rival is only one of many things that may be in that category, but they all potentially lead to the same place - separation. Hence why they're all threats.

It sounds like what's being held up as the ideal here is a situation where the spouse is somehow tied so inextricably to you that you can be 100% certain that they cannot, will not, never ever ever ever leave you & break your heart.

That's called slavery.

Outside of slavery, every relationship requires some risk. All relationships are threatened by the possibility that someone may find a job offer in another city or a enthralling hobby that is more interesting than the spouse. All relationships are threatened by the possibility that (like one of our Supreme Court Justices) a spouse will develop debilitating dementia and forget they are married and fall in love w/ someone else.

As I've said before, most certainly, if you have children, they will come before the spouse, absolutely. If you have to choose between them, the kids will win, every time.

That's the nature of relationships. It is painful, but it is unavoidable. Again, we can tiptoe around it with some polite fictions about eternal love, but the evidence is all around us that it is precisely that-- a polite fiction.

I have lost a spouse to adultery. It is absolutely, gut-wrenchingly horrible. But you will survive. And knowing that, paradoxically, helps you to become the type of person who is less likely to be the victim of adultery. Today my 2nd husband and I are off to celebrate our 21st wedding anniversary. There is hope, there is joy, there is love, but it doesn't come by desperately clawing your way to it.

There are no guarantees in life, most especially in relationships. But if you don't want to lose your spouse, the best way to avoid that is not to control his/her interests, desires, and passions, but to focus on yourself. Become the sort of man or woman who is desirable and interesting and loving.

[ 31. December 2011, 17:26: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I think each of the examples you gave, Marvin, would be issues to be worked out within the framework of the marriage. So far as I'm aware, the marriage promises do not exclude either of the partners from the possibility of a genuine change of mind on such matters. Such issues can be worked on, and worked out, if there is love and goodwill at work.

...and as long as both partners are coming from the same perspective in terms of what's really important.

But religious moral imperatives don't work like that, do they? Catholics don't get a pass on using contraception just because their non-religious partner doesn't want (any more) kids. Someone who now believes strongly in spiritual warfare isn't going to blithely accept their kids going out at halloween dressed as demons, regardless of how much the kids have enjoyed it in previous years.

No, but other sorts of moral imperatives will happen as well. Does the new vegan made ham & cheese sandwiches for the kids? Do you homeschool or public school? Democrat or Republican?

I agree w/ Barnabus: you've got to find ways to see these conflicts as normal: uncomfortable, but inevitable. You have to find systems for negotiating these differences, whether they arise from religious convictions or other sorts of deeply held beliefs. You have to find ways to listen to each other, trust one another, even as you disagree. To respect one another. This is as true for couples with the same religious beliefs as it is for those in "mixed" marriages. It's part of the deal.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
It's about your partner having something else in their life that's more important to them than you. Something that, if it became necessary, they would leave you for. A romantic love rival is only one of many things that may be in that category, but they all potentially lead to the same place - separation. Hence why they're all threats.

Absolutely. My physical, emotional, and mental well-being. If it became necessary, and my spouse was abusing me, I would leave her for that. Is my unwillingness to be a doormat a threat to my wife? Only if she wants to make me a doormat.
 
Posted by Lynn MagdalenCollege (# 10651) on :
 
This has been a fascinating thread to read through; I'm sorry I missed it in real time. If anyone's still reading and interested, here are my reactions:
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:
quote:
originally posted by Evensong:
What if Jesus was female?

He'd find that a lot easier to deal with, he says.
Does he understand you're not having a relationship with Jesus' male parts? [Help]

quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
For a start the man in question has been out of 'the market' for 2,000 odd years. For another, what does your position imply for any other male friends your wife may have? And for a third, anyone who seriously sets out to follow Christ's way, very quickly learns that the call to put Christ (God) first is a call to truly understand the meaning of love for others, and that is expressed powerfully in the relationship between a husband and a wife.

I would submit that Jesus was never "on the market" - marriage was not an option for Him, since His purpose was to die, not to leave a widow and orphans behind.


quote:
Originally posted by Marvin the Martian:
quote:
Originally posted by Alisdair:
And for a third, anyone who seriously sets out to follow Christ's way, very quickly learns that the call to put Christ (God) first is a call to truly understand the meaning of love for others, and that is expressed powerfully in the relationship between a husband and a wife.

But in that situation the husband or wife is still coming second. A close second perhaps, but second nonetheless.

The problem is having something that is considered to be ultimately more important than the relationship. It doesn't matter if it's another person, a sport or a god - if when push came to shove the person would chose it over the relationship then it's a threat.

I don't get why so many people are finding that very simple problem so hard to understand.

I think the part of the wife which is 'involved' with Jesus is not a part which is available to the husband, not really. I realize that doesn't remove the dilemma you present - but I think it does cast it in a slightly different light.

Our human nature is inclined to be co-dependent with other people; I think this is because we were built to be co-dependent with God but it's easier to be co-dependent with a physically-present human than a spiritually-accessed God.

quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Much of what we believe about marriage is a romantic fiction. It's lovely talking about nothing coming before your spouse, but it's not true for any of us. The minute you have a child, you are relegated to 2nd place. Do something to hurt that child and you will find that out right quick.

Exactly! Think how we despise a woman who stays with a husband who abuses their children (or her children, for that matter).

quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
That is an interesting take on the situation. But would any Christian be willing to pledge allegiance to the Kingdom of Heaven rather than the individual?

Probably not, because Jesus says that no one enters the Kingdom of Heaven except through Him-- you need to possess the key to unlock the door.

quote:
posted by Barnabas62:
Learning to live with differences of outlook is common to all marriages, isn't it? Maybe what made it easier in our case is that we were not Christian when we married and so we both experienced conversion within the framework of our marriage? Not sure. I think we argued more in the first five years after conversion than we did before!

I believe it - I expect it's a fascinating tale. Did you convert at approximately the same time, responding to generally the same influences? Glad you made it!

Loved this post, cliffdweller.
 
Posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard (# 368) on :
 
Excellent advice from Boogie on down ... (I've ALWAYS wanted to say that, without knowing it!)
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lynn MagdalenCollege:
quote:
Originally posted by Theophania:
quote:
originally posted by Evensong:
What if Jesus was female?

He'd find that a lot easier to deal with, he says.
Does he understand you're not having a relationship with Jesus' male parts? [Help]

What is it with Christians assuming relationships are all about sex? There are gender roles in how humans relate to each other and I had expected primacy in that position with my wife. Evidently I was wrong.


quote:
Originally posted by Lynn MagdalenCollege:
Our human nature is inclined to be co-dependent with other people; I think this is because we were built to be co-dependent with God but it's easier to be co-dependent with a physically-present human than a spiritually-accessed God.

Alternatively social co-dependence evolved and was co-opted memetically when mysticism developed.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
In the old marriage vows, women had to "honour and obey" their husbands. But I don't think that was ever meant to apply to their religious views... "..for better for worse, as long as ye both shall live" seems more appropriate.

If a couple marry, and both are atheists, does that mean either one is barred from changing their minds unless they both convert at exactly the same time?

In simple terms, I think he needs to cut her some slack, and remember that she is still his wife. He could even listen to her now and again.. you never know, he might learn something.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
In the old marriage vows, women had to "honour and obey" their husbands. But I don't think that was ever meant to apply to their religious views... "..for better for worse, as long as ye both shall live" seems more appropriate.

If a couple marry, and both are atheists, does that mean either one is barred from changing their minds unless they both convert at exactly the same time?

In simple terms, I think he needs to cut her some slack, and remember that she is still his wife. He could even listen to her now and again.. you never know, he might learn something.

He is me. And she is no longer speaking to me, so it's all academic anyway. I would suggest to anyone that is considering a significant change in their philosophy of life (whether to or frrom belief, or from one to another) that they discuss it with the their significant other first, rather than presenting a fait accompli.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I would suggest to anyone that is considering a significant change in their philosophy of life (whether to or frrom belief, or from one to another) that they discuss it with the their significant other first, rather than presenting a fait accompli.

It sound like you could be in some pain right now, and perhaps that's shaping the way you respond. But honestly, that just sounds extraordinarily controlling. And it would sound that way to me if we were talking about gardening or going back to school or changing political parties or any of the myriad other ways that people will, in life, grow and change over time.

It can be disconcerting when someone we love changes, and you fear you'll not fit in well with their new life. But that is the way life is-- for all of us, yourself included. There's just no stopping it.

Despite the rhetoric, you don't "decide" to believe Jesus is Lord any more than you "decide" that strawberries are tasty. You have an experience that leads you to a conclusion. In fact, that's what life is made up of-- an endless string of experiences that you respond to, that shape you and your beliefs and values and interpretations of other experiences both past and future. That's true for believers and non-believers alike.

[ 12. May 2012, 21:15: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Despite the rhetoric, you don't "decide" to believe Jesus is Lord any more than you "decide" that strawberries are tasty. You have an experience that leads you to a conclusion. In fact, that's what life is made up of-- an endless string of experiences that you respond to, that shape you and your beliefs and values and interpretations of other experiences both past and future. That's true for believers and non-believers alike. [/QB]

How about if it were instead one's sexuality, another thing people don't just decide? Should you just go "Hello darling, I'm gay/straight/bisexual"?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Despite the rhetoric, you don't "decide" to believe Jesus is Lord any more than you "decide" that strawberries are tasty. You have an experience that leads you to a conclusion. In fact, that's what life is made up of-- an endless string of experiences that you respond to, that shape you and your beliefs and values and interpretations of other experiences both past and future. That's true for believers and non-believers alike.

How about if it were instead one's sexuality, another thing people don't just decide? Should you just go "Hello darling, I'm gay/straight/bisexual"? [/QB]
You are aware, aren't you, that those conversations happen all the time, and pretty much precisely like that?

I've known a couple of women who have been on the receiving end of that conversation. And yes, it is extraordinarily painful. And yes, it signals a future that will be quite unlike the one you had dreamed of and planned for.

But there is a difference, isn't there? The "I'm gay" conversation almost by necessity ends the marriage (although not often, in my experience, the friendship). The "I'm Christian" conversation does not need to do so, any more than a "I've decided to become an anthropologist" would.

Again, not meaning to suggest that life for you right now is easy, or that you should just "roll with it". But it also does seem you are making it harder than it need be precisely because of some of the unnecessary baggage and assumptions you are making.
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
sense of humour always helps - being the partner of a True Believer who can't rib their own beliefs is a recipe for sorrow
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jahlove:
sense of humour always helps - being the partner of a True Believer who can't rib their own beliefs is a recipe for sorrow

True. But that's apt to change, in my experience. New Believers (whether of Christianity or the new fitness fad, or whatever) tend to be a passionate but serious lot-- hard to get them to lighten up about something they've experienced as life-changing. But after awhile we all tend to lighten up and see the ridiculous side of even our most passionate pursuits.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
But there is a difference, isn't there? The "I'm gay" conversation almost by necessity ends the marriage (although not often, in my experience, the friendship). The "I'm Christian" conversation does not need to do so, any more than a "I've decided to become an anthropologist" would.

I suspect there are marriages continuing in which one or both parties aren't sexually interested in the gender of their spouse. And the "I'm a believer in X/I'm atheist" conversation may or may not force the end the relationship depending on the personal beilefs of the participants. Saying it isn't is just as controlling.

quote:

Again, not meaning to suggest that life for you right now is easy, or that you should just "roll with it". But it also does seem you are making it harder than it need be precisely because of some of the unnecessary baggage and assumptions you are making. [/QB]

It's my baggage. I get to decide what is necessary. Hence suggesting that people discuss things beforehand.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
It seems a bit odd that both you and your wife would both discuss your marriage crisis on the same community board - a christian board at that, when you are an avowed atheist...
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
It seems a bit odd that both you and your wife would both discuss your marriage crisis on the same community board - a christian board at that, when you are an avowed atheist...

*shrug*. A Christian friend of my wife's started the thread. My wife told me it existed and was interested in what my view of the discussion on the subject was and whether any of it was useful. I felt that much of it fundamentally failed to understand the point of my objection (I think Mr. Martian got closest) so gave my own opinion and bookmarked the thread. I admit I haven't read anything much else on here.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
It seems a bit odd that both you and your wife would both discuss your marriage crisis on the same community board - a christian board at that, when you are an avowed atheist...

*shrug*. A Christian friend of my wife's started the thread. My wife told me it existed and was interested in what my view of the discussion on the subject was and whether any of it was useful. I felt that much of it fundamentally failed to understand the point of my objection (I think Mr. Martian got closest) so gave my own opinion and bookmarked the thread. I admit I haven't read anything much else on here.
And you are very welcome here. There are other atheists on this board, for a variety of reasons. And perhaps this can be a good place to come, and find out what this life change means for your partner, and if that is something you'll ever be able to accept and life with.

I had understood your objection to be one of a sort of "alienation of affections"-- is that correct? If not, perhaps you'd like to try again to explain?

As has been said upthread, I think the notion that it is undermining the primacy of the marital relationship is probably as much as a romantic misunderstanding of marriage than it is about the nature of Christianity.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:

As has been said upthread, I think the notion that it is undermining the primacy of the marital relationship is probably as much as a romantic misunderstanding of marriage than it is about the nature of Christianity.

If you'd said a different conception, I'd have agreed with you. The way you phrase it makes it sound like you assume there can only one true, externally prescribed definition of marriage. At that point I think we reach the natural barrier in communication between believers and non-believers.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:

As has been said upthread, I think the notion that it is undermining the primacy of the marital relationship is probably as much as a romantic misunderstanding of marriage than it is about the nature of Christianity.

If you'd said a different conception, I'd have agreed with you. The way you phrase it makes it sound like you assume there can only one true, externally prescribed definition of marriage. At that point I think we reach the natural barrier in communication between believers and non-believers.
I'm not talking about a "Christian" or "nonChristian" definition of marriage. I'm not even talking about what is ideal or desirable. I'm simply talking about the reality of human relationships. Descriptive, not prescriptive. Marriage-- all marriages, not just "Christian" ones (which are really not much different than anyone else's)-- has come to be viewed thru a romantic haze of polite fictions that don't much reflect the actual reality of the thing. I'm not talking about "definitions" I'm talking about human nature.

As I said upthread, if nothing else, you will find your romantic notions of the primacy of the marital relationship knocked off it's pedestal the minute the peestick turns blue. We'll still talk a good game and pretend it isn't so, but the reality is, that bond is going to trump all others.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
One problem might be the way many of us talk about christianity as being "a personal relationship with Jesus". I'm not saying this is wrong, but it may lead to suggestions that "the bride of Christ" is just that one person.

"The Bride of Christ" is the whole Church of course, so it may be better to talk of "friendship" with Christ rather than "a personal relationship". I think that's how Pope Benedict has been talking.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Thought there are many ways that people find God, because of the way that belief and understanding works, it is not necessarily possible to discuss becoming a christian beforehand.

For many people belief strikes them without giving time to think about it. Also a lot of people don't go out to find God, he finds them along the way.

You see you be angry that your wife has made a decision without consulting you, but for those who have been hit by faith the decision is made for them.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Thought there are many ways that people find God, because of the way that belief and understanding works, it is not necessarily possible to discuss becoming a christian beforehand.

For many people belief strikes them without giving time to think about it. Also a lot of people don't go out to find God, he finds them along the way.

You see you be angry that your wife has made a decision without consulting you, but for those who have been hit by faith the decision is made for them.

So the argument goes that my wife's conversion was fated and she cannot influence her beliefs, but mine are down to free will and I should change them? That doesn't seem very consistent.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Thought there are many ways that people find God, because of the way that belief and understanding works, it is not necessarily possible to discuss becoming a christian beforehand.

For many people belief strikes them without giving time to think about it. Also a lot of people don't go out to find God, he finds them along the way.

You see you be angry that your wife has made a decision without consulting you, but for those who have been hit by faith the decision is made for them.

So the argument goes that my wife's conversion was fated and she cannot influence her beliefs, but mine are down to free will and I should change them? That doesn't seem very consistent.
I don't see anyone here expecting you to change your beliefs. Perhaps your wife hopes you will-- just as you hope she will change hers. But I don't see any expectation that you should come to faith on this thread.

But I do think you have some control over your interpretation of events. Clearly your wife's conversion has shaken up your domestic life, changed your relationship in ways you didn't choose. You're entitled to be pissed off at that, and to express that.

At the same time, though, some of the spin you're taking on this unexpected change of events is, I think, causing you unnecessary additional pain. Yes, it will be painful for you no matter what, but I think you are making it worse by the assumptions you are making about Christianity and "Christian marriage" (again, not really any different than "non-Christian marriage") and what it means for your wife to have a "relationship with Jesus".

I'm not saying that cuz I think you're a bad guy, but rather cuz I think you're a good guy and deserve to be happy.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
I don't see anyone here expecting you to change your beliefs. Perhaps your wife hopes you will-- just as you hope she will change hers. But I don't see any expectation that you should come to faith on this thread.

Whereas I see lots of people expecting me to change my beliefs in the incompatibility of my personal view of a rewarding relationship and belief in the Christian deities. If I did come to faith, it would probably be Thor worship and I don't think that would help.


quote:

But I do think you have some control over your interpretation of events. Clearly your wife's conversion has shaken up your domestic life, changed your relationship in ways you didn't choose. You're entitled to be pissed off at that, and to express that.

At the same time, though, some of the spin you're taking on this unexpected change of events is, I think, causing you unnecessary additional pain. Yes, it will be painful for you no matter what, but I think you are making it worse by the assumptions you are making about Christianity and "Christian marriage" (again, not really any different than "non-Christian marriage") and what it means for your wife to have a "relationship with Jesus".

I'm not saying that cuz I think you're a bad guy, but rather cuz I think you're a good guy and deserve to be happy.

Not different to you, perhaps. Different to me though. Different value systems, different choices. I hadn't realised quite how culturally separated my wife and I were until this thing started. Thank you for the sentiment.

[ 13. May 2012, 15:52: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Thought there are many ways that people find God, because of the way that belief and understanding works, it is not necessarily possible to discuss becoming a christian beforehand.

For many people belief strikes them without giving time to think about it. Also a lot of people don't go out to find God, he finds them along the way.

You see you be angry that your wife has made a decision without consulting you, but for those who have been hit by faith the decision is made for them.

So the argument goes that my wife's conversion was fated and she cannot influence her beliefs, but mine are down to free will and I should change them? That doesn't seem very consistent.
What I was trying to say to you that when your wife changed her beliefs, it may not have been possible to consult you about in the way that you seem to have wanted.
I wasn't trying to say anything about fate, just that you were not being excluded form her decision making, in the way that you seem to be thinking.
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
E to the i pi:
quote:
I hadn't realised quite how culturally separated my wife and I were until this thing started.
That is key. Sorry it broadsided you both.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
What I was trying to say to you that when your wife changed her beliefs, it may not have been possible to consult you about in the way that you seem to have wanted.
I wasn't trying to say anything about fate, just that you were not being excluded form her decision making, in the way that you seem to be thinking.

More like in the way that she told me she did. According to her after the event, the whole decision process happened over the course of a month or more and she didn't tell me about it becuse "she thought I wouldn't be interested". I wouldn't like others to make that assumption of their loved ones.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
...According to her after the event, the whole decision process happened over the course of a month or more and she didn't tell me about it because "she thought I wouldn't be interested". I wouldn't like others to make that assumption of their loved ones.

Well she was right - you're not interested (at least not in any positive way)
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Nobody here is expecting you to come to faith. What we are struggling with, is to understand why no compromise seems to be possible. You can only see a future in your relationship if you wife has no faith.

Most of us know lots of couples where one partner only has a faith and their relationship survives with a bit of give and take on both sides.

Indeed on this board there are also people whose partner has a different faith from them, but they cope together.

That's the part that is hard to get a handle on, why there only black and white/either or, in the situation between you and your wife
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Nobody here is expecting you to come to faith. What we are struggling with, is to understand why no compromise seems to be possible. You can only see a future in your relationship if you wife has no faith.

Most of us know lots of couples where one partner only has a faith and their relationship survives with a bit of give and take on both sides.

Indeed on this board there are also people whose partner has a different faith from them, but they cope together.

That's the part that is hard to get a handle on, why there only black and white/either or, in the situation between you and your wife

Firstly, as you admit yourself faith is not equal to Christianity. Indeed I have faith in the non existence of gods. Secondly, lack of faith in the divine and the spiritual is not equal to an absence of philosophy of life. Mine has a theory of the primacy of human relationships that is incompatible with Christianity. I think here is where the impossibility of compromise comes in; You can have gods first or you can have Man first. It's too many ideological hoops to jump through to have both first.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Then I can see why your wife, when she felt the first stirrings of faith, felt it was impossible to talk to you..
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
If you committed a serious crime, and your wife knew - eg you hit a pedestrian whilst driving, paniced and fled the scene of the accident and couldn't bring yourself to go to the police - would you expect her to keep the secret out of loyalty to you and the primacy of your relationship, or would you be able to accept it if she put conscience / law first and went to the police?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think˛:
If you committed a serious crime, and your wife knew - eg you hit a pedestrian whilst driving, paniced and fled the scene of the accident and couldn't bring yourself to go to the police - would you expect her to keep the secret out of loyalty to you and the primacy of your relationship, or would you be able to accept it if she put conscience / law first and went to the police?

I could accept that, but I fail to see the relevance. Anthropomorphic deities are not principles.

[ 13. May 2012, 18:42: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
Anthropormorphic deities can be seen as a social construct that exists to codify and justify pro social behaviour. Not sure what you think the idea of a Christian God is going to get your wife to do? Or why it would suddenly take up more time than if she took up bridge as a hobby.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think˛:
Anthropormorphic deities can be seen as a social construct that exists to codify and justify pro social behaviour. Not sure what you think the idea of a Christian God is going to get your wife to do? Or why it would suddenly take up more time than if she took up bridge as a hobby.

If my wife had seen it as that then we wouldn't have had a problem. I suspect the believer on the board would say that that isn't Christianity though.

Edit: One practical thing it would have done would have been to encourage her to bring up any children we were to have had as Christians.

[ 13. May 2012, 18:56: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
Well, obviously, someone who believes in God won't see it as a cultural construct - but you have the option of seeing her religion in this way. As regards kids, I would have thought that would be open to negotiation. If you want your children to grow up to think for themselves, it probably best to expose them to a range of world views and teach them critical evaluation. If you want them to become Christian adults your best bet is rigid religious instruction - because children generally rebel against their parents.

The way you post about how you have reacted to her conversion, suggests you have come across as extremely controlling and possibly quite weird. Don't know how that has impscted on your relationship - but I am guessing not well. Have you considered going to Relate?

Often ideollogical and other rows in relationships are just proxies for more underlying issues in a relationship - if you value the relationship and want to salvage it you need to,move beyond intellectual debate and address such things. Eg. In general to what extent you and your wife compromise over disagreements within your relationship. Is it always you, and thus this is the straw that broke the camel's back, or always her and now you are not coping with her being assertive, or whateve.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think˛:
Well, obviously, someone who believes in God won't see it as a cultural construct - but you have the option of seeing her religion in this way. As regards kids, I would have thought that would be open to negotiation. If you want your children to grow up to think for themselves, it probably best to expose them to a range of world views and teach them critical evaluation. If you want them to become Christian adults your best bet is rigid religious instruction - because children generally rebel against their parents.

In other words, I should lie to myself in order to continue in the relationship? That doesn't make sense to me. I think you've missed my point over children, Young children under 5 or so don't have enough capacity for rational thought to stop and think. If they see mummy doing it, they are going to think it's the right thing to do. As such I view bringing children up in a religious environment as a moderate form of child abuse.

quote:

The way you post about how you have reacted to her conversion, suggests you have come across as extremely controlling and possibly quite weird. Don't know how that has impscted on your relationship - but I am guessing not well. Have you considered going to Relate?

Be assured I see many of the views being expressed by others on this thread as quite weird. That's differing culture again. We tried going to Relate. The guy there didn't ever quite seem to get what the problem was and seemed to suggest it was possible to compromise without ever suggesting a way himself.


quote:

Often ideollogical and other rows in relationships are just proxies for more underlying issues in a relationship - if you value the relationship and want to salvage it you need to,move beyond intellectual debate and address such things. Eg. In general to what extent you and your wife compromise over disagreements within your relationship. Is it always you, and thus this is the straw that broke the camel's back, or always her and now you are not coping with her being assertive, or whateve.

I'm afraid for both me and my wife intellectual debate is central to who we are. And we're both sufficiently stubborn to stick to what we believe is right when it's important. Previously we'd just never been on opposite sides of it.

[ 13. May 2012, 19:21: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
No kidding, but I seriously wonder what Jeremy Kyle and his aftercare team would make of all this...

Be a Guest on the Jeremy Kyle Show
(from the webpage):
Do you have an issue you feel The Jeremy Kyle Show could help you work out?

Relationships
If you’re worried your relationship will breakdown unless things change, call Jess on 0161 952 0750 or email Jess.Parkinson@itv.com

Dont forget to leave a telephone number if you text.
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
You don't believe there is a God - so presumably you just believe it to be a social construct? Other wise you'd be saying its real [Ultra confused]

So what is it you find abusive? Incidently, how do you intend to derive a moral system for you progeny - humnism? What makes that less abusive?

I wonder from your post above if you and your wife take some pride in being stubborn, never yielding. could be you are both seeing this as test you have to win.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think˛:
You don't believe there is a God - so presumably you just believe it to be a social construct? Other wise you'd be saying its real [Ultra confused]

The reglion is a social construct. My wife's belief in the religions figureheads is real.

quote:


So what is it you find abusive? Incidently, how do you intend to derive a moral system for you progeny - humnism? What makes that less abusive?


I have a similar distaste for humanism as I do for organised religion. I don't intend to create a moral system (i.e. externally prescribed) for my children, I intend to instill an ethical one (internal, based on application of the veil of ignorance and rationality). You'll find that covers most of the big ones and is I suspect how most parents actually teach one, "you wouldn't like it if he did it to you".

quote:

I wonder from your post above if you and your wife take some pride in being stubborn, never yielding. could be you are both seeing this as test you have to win.

I think we both see this as a test we've lost [Frown]
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
I realise its a tangent, but;

I don't think do as you would be done by works as fundamental rule because it is too easy to define out others as not being similar enough to matter. And it is based on a fundementally egocentric view of the world. Measuring the world by our own likes and dislikes. (Also, trying to get a child to reason like that can lead to a very Hobbesian social Darwinist position.)

Non-tangentyness - compromise is not weakness it is the stuff the social world is made of, it is something you could potentially both learn. You don't *have* to lose.

[ 13. May 2012, 19:56: Message edited by: Think˛ ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Think˛:
I realise its a tangent, but;

I don't think do as you would be done by works as fundamental rule because it is too easy to define out others as not being similar enough to matter. And it is based on a fundementally egocentric view of the world. Measuring the world by our own likes and dislikes.

Non-tangentyness - compromise is not weakness it is the stuff the social world is made of, it is something you could potentially both learn. You don't *have* to lose.

A: I'll only say religious codes have exactly the same failing.

B: If there were a genuine compromise I would be eager to hear it. I couldn't see one, my wife couldn't see one and no-one here has suggested one. The situation may be sufficiently binary that there isn't one. It's not like she can only be a Christian when I'm not in the room.
 
Posted by Think˛ (# 1984) on :
 
I would suggest focusing, at least initially on external behaviour rather than internals.

You think her belief is erroneous, but it is perfectly possible to live with someone who holds different views on something important - couples who vote differently for example.

So lets think about what bothers you about her faith;

Thus far I get - not being the most important person in her life, and the possibility of kids you don't yet have catching faith from her. At the moment you are also holding her as less important than your intellectual position - does that mean you love her less than athiesm ? Or would you see that as a question lacking meaning?

If we accept religion as a social construct (your view), she is not in love with a person - she is convinced by an idea you happen to believe is wrong. But whatever she may believe she can not have a two way relationship with the proposed being because it does not exist. Therefore, he/she/it can not make any specific demand of your wife. Therefore he/she/it can never demand she makes some kind of choice between you and faith.

So, from an atheist perspective, you are never dealing with a third party in the marriage - you are either dealing with your wife's views/conscience that she is experiencing as an external impetus, or you are dealing with her church's interpretation of scripture.

Now as you may have noticed on this site - there are almost infinitely varied ways to interpret scripture. You can debate any scriptural assertion and attempt to come to a shared view, without having to agree whether there is a God underlying it. Essentially these are many of the debates that a married couple might have about how to live their life regardless of spirituallty. How do we bring the kids up, what is the right thing to do when our friends divorce who do we stay in touch with, what are the rights and wrongs of deciding how to support our elderly parents etc.

Quite possibly where your wife needs to get to is a similar place - where well here is bible verse x is not seen as the be all and end all of a debate. And to reengage critical faculties with regard to her engagement with her new church. Plus a bit of protected not talking faith time, and negotiating about the timing and priority of religous activities.

It is doable if you both want it. But if this conversion is the end point of burnng bridges in a mariage that was already fragile. Then it may not be doable. (Or if you have been in a situation where your wife has become frightemed of you.)
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
What you describe is not, to me a compromise. Cherry picking some points You start by saying lets begin by ignoring what's important for the matters we can fix. Atheism is a principle not a figurehead, I don't love it, I live it so yes, your question lacks meaning. I don't believe that a symmetric argument can be applied to God the Father, Jesus and the rest though. These are characters, however fictional, not principles. If I called them graven images, would that give some sense of my feeling?

I suspect the bridges have been burnt to cinder. However much we love each other, this is a divide that appears to be too important to both of us.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:


I suspect the bridges have been burnt to cinder. However much we love each other, this is a divide that appears to be too important to both of us.

Since you haven't commented on my suggestion, may I say it again?

My advice is to give it time. The first flush of faith will soon fade into questioning and uncertainty, I expect.

<eta 'I expect' - no point acting all certain when talking of uncertainty!>

[ 13. May 2012, 21:45: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
If my wife were to decide to come back to me on terms I could accept I would welcome her with open arms. However, her adherence to her principles are as unflinching as mine and she is used to getting her own way, I understand she's made her choice and am trying to find ways to continue on without her. Not the happiest time of my life I must admit.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
Purgatory is a board for serious discussion of issues, not the joint airing in public of personal relationship issues.

I note the couple in question are receiving counselling, which process should be governed by certain confidentiality protections and legal protections re advice. Clearly, neither Purgatory nor any other of our discussion boards has either of these safeguards. Nor should we be seeking to cut across anything said in that process.

So please bring the specifics of that part of the discussion to an end. This ruling is not intended to curtail more general discussions about the principles and issues which apply.

Barnabas62
Purgatory Host

Just a reminder, folks, following the re-opening of this thread.
 
Posted by savedbyhim01 (# 17035) on :
 
Believing in God is the most important decision a person can ever make. It is worth losing everything else. This decision will affect her entire eternity. She should count the costs first, but those costs are easily worth it.

But that doesn't mean that her marriage has to end. Another poster mentioned 1 Peter 3. A Christian wife should be loving and submissive to her husband (as long as her husband doesn't require her to sin). If she is truly following Christ, she will be treating her husband much better than before. It shouldn't take long for him to realize that this version of his wife is better.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
I don't see anyone here expecting you to change your beliefs. Perhaps your wife hopes you will-- just as you hope she will change hers. But I don't see any expectation that you should come to faith on this thread.

Whereas I see lots of people expecting me to change my beliefs in the incompatibility of my personal view of a rewarding relationship and belief in the Christian deities.
What we're saying is that the assumptions that you're making about Christian beliefs, and particularly Christian beliefs about marriage, may be erroneous. They certainly appear to be. And that, perhaps, listening to what Christians actually believe rather than what you think they believe, may give you some measure of relief, as you may find your personal views-- at least re: marriage-- aren't as different from ours, and hopefully your wife's, as you assume. Whether you personally chose to worship Jesus, Thor, or nothing, is another matter altogether. We're here simply talking about beliefs & reasonable expectations re: marriage, regardless of the religious framework.


quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:

At the same time, though, some of the spin you're taking on this unexpected change of events is, I think, causing you unnecessary additional pain. Yes, it will be painful for you no matter what, but I think you are making it worse by the assumptions you are making about Christianity and "Christian marriage" (again, not really any different than "non-Christian marriage") and what it means for your wife to have a "relationship with Jesus".

Not different to you, perhaps. Different to me though. Different value systems, different choices. I hadn't realised quite how culturally separated my wife and I were until this thing started. Thank you for the sentiment. [/QB][/QUOTE]

Obviously Jesus, Church, God, the Bible are more important values to your wife now than they are to you, and that involves a certain element of "Christian Culture" (for better or worse-- fwiw, we mock it too) that is alien to you. And I certainly get that that causes some degree of discomfort and friction.

But can you say more about how your wife's values and choices re: marriage in particular have changed in ways that are "culturally separate" from your own, and perhaps even incompatible to yours? That's the piece I'm having a hard time seeing.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
sorry-- had a hard time posting there, and by the time I finally got it to appear with messed up code, the edit window had closed. Hopefully you can figure it out. : (

[ 14. May 2012, 01:24: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
If my wife were to decide to come back to me on terms I could accept

iow, do what you yourself refuse to do-- change an integral, core belief to suit your fancy.


quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I understand she's made her choice

Obviously we're only seeing glimpses and tiny slices of a complex multi-faceted relationship here. But what I'm seeing looks far more like you are making the choice here, not her-- much as you are unhappy with the outcome.


quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I understand she's made her choice and am trying to find ways to continue on without her. Not the happiest time of my life I must admit.

I am-- honestly-- very sorry that is the case, and that there is so little we or anyone else can do to help you thru this pain.

I am worried for your future relationships, as it seems to me this is a pattern that is doomed to repeat itself, whether or not a hypothetical future spouse changes religions or not. Perhaps when the pain is a little less fresh, you'll be able to reflect on this somewhat, and see the choices you both made just a bit more clearer.

I found Think's posts on this page to be very relevant and thoughtful, fwiw.

[ 14. May 2012, 01:35: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
If my wife were to decide to come back to me on terms I could accept

iow, do what you yourself refuse to do-- change an integral, core belief to suit your fancy.

I never said it was likely to come to pass.

quote:

quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I understand she's made her choice

Obviously we're only seeing glimpses and tiny slices of a complex multi-faceted relationship here. But what I'm seeing looks far more like you are making the choice here, not her-- much as you are unhappy with the outcome.

In one sense neither of us have had any choice once the dominoes started (now there's something for believers in fate). In another sense we've both chosen and both believe the other has the easier choice to be able to recant and reconcile. However this is hardly an impartial audience so I don't expect anyone here to see it like that.

quote:

quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I understand she's made her choice and am trying to find ways to continue on without her. Not the happiest time of my life I must admit.

I am-- honestly-- very sorry that is the case, and that there is so little we or anyone else can do to help you thru this pain.

I am worried for your future relationships, as it seems to me this is a pattern that is doomed to repeat itself, whether or not a hypothetical future spouse changes religions or not. Perhaps when the pain is a little less fresh, you'll be able to reflect on this somewhat, and see the choices you both made just a bit more clearer.

I found Think's posts on this page to be very relevant and thoughtful, fwiw.

Your worry is noted. However when, after my wife finally gets round to divorcing me and assuming I eventually get the desire to seek a new life partner, I'll know that love won't conquer all and to stick to potential partners of a similar philosophy. Hopefully my wife will soon find a nice Christian chap to give her a shoulder to cry on and take her mind off me. Alternatively she could use Jesus for this, but it would rather prove my original thesis.

The rather unromantic point of this story seems to be not to get involved with people outside one's own creed for fear of following the Romeo and Juliet story too closely. And I *know* that there's scripture supporting that view.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
I am worried for your future relationships, as it seems to me this is a pattern that is doomed to repeat itself, whether or not a hypothetical future spouse changes religions or not. Perhaps when the pain is a little less fresh, you'll be able to reflect on this somewhat, and see the choices you both made just a bit more clearer.

I found Think's posts on this page to be very relevant and thoughtful, fwiw.

Your worry is noted. However when, after my wife finally gets round to divorcing me and assuming I eventually get the desire to seek a new life partner, I'll know that love won't conquer all and to stick to potential partners of a similar philosophy. Hopefully my wife will soon find a nice Christian chap to give her a shoulder to cry on and take her mind off me. Alternatively she could use Jesus for this, but it would rather prove my original thesis.

The rather unromantic point of this story seems to be not to get involved with people outside one's own creed for fear of following the Romeo and Juliet story too closely. And I *know* that there's scripture supporting that view. [/QB]

Actually, once again, you're missing my point.

I am not worried because I think you'll have difficulty finding someone with the same religious views as you. Obviously, that's not all that hard to do. I'm worried because of the assumptions you're bringing to marriage-- your assumptions that marriage requires: 1. Being in agreement about most everything. 2. Your partner never changing. 3. Avoiding compromise.

You could marry someone who agrees with you on each and every point re: religion and never wavers from that position. But you WILL encounter problems irregardless if you don't rethink some of those basic assumptions about marriage. As was noted upthread, we have shipmates here in all sorts of "mixed marriages", including ones precisely like yours (in terms of religious convictions), but they are able to make it work-- some quite happily-- w/o pretending they believe something they don't, w/o giving up their basic core values. They make it work w/ mutual respect and compassion.

Just curious: why are you continuing to post here-- given, as you said, it's not entirely an impartial place? Is there something in you that hopes to find a workable compromise? Are you hoping to convince us of your rightness in order to win this argument with your wife? Or are you looking for a place to vent your anger at the community you believe is stealing your wife away? (any of those are OK, just wondering).
 
Posted by Erroneous Monk (# 10858) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
....I'll know that love won't conquer all and to stick to potential partners of a similar philosophy....


You'll know that love won't conquer all for *you*. Lots and lots and lots of people have happy loving marriages or other long term relationships with people with completely different belief systems.

Do you think those people are better at love than you are?
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
Better still, why not just convert and be done with it! [Smile]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Better still, why not just convert and be done with it! [Smile]

Which, after all, is precisely what you're asking of your wife.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

I am not worried because I think you'll have difficulty finding someone with the same religious views as you. Obviously, that's not all that hard to do. I'm worried because of the assumptions you're bringing to marriage-- your assumptions that marriage requires: 1. Being in agreement about most everything. 2. Your partner never changing. 3. Avoiding compromise.

You could marry someone who agrees with you on each and every point re: religion and never wavers from that position. But you WILL encounter problems irregardless if you don't rethink some of those basic assumptions about marriage. As was noted upthread, we have shipmates here in all sorts of "mixed marriages", including ones precisely like yours (in terms of religious convictions), but they are able to make it work-- some quite happily-- w/o pretending they believe something they don't, w/o giving up their basic core values. They make it work w/ mutual respect and compassion.

Just curious: why are you continuing to post here-- given, as you said, it's not entirely an impartial place? Is there something in you that hopes to find a workable compromise? Are you hoping to convince us of your rightness in order to win this argument with your wife? Or are you looking for a place to vent your anger at the community you believe is stealing your wife away? (any of those are OK, just wondering).

Actually I'd say my thesis is dual to yours. A marriage (can I say relationship instead?) is as you say based on mutual respect and my wife and I have ended up in a situation where we cannot respect each others' positions. She finds my need for the primacy of human relationships just as objectionable as I find her need for the primacy of her Messiah. This isn't something which compassion can really overcome and is pretty much impossible to compromise on without compromising one of our positions. I suppose in some sense there is only room for one fundamentalist opinion in a relationship.

As to why I've posted: a) People have kept on asking me questions, or putting words into my mouth that I haven't agreed with. b) I'd hope that others in a situation with any similarity might be interested in how I, having been through this, think a less messy resolution could be achieved.

P.S. I'm afraid irregardless isn't a word [Smile]

quote:
Originally posted by Erroneous Monk

You'll know that love won't conquer all for *you*. Lots and lots and lots of people have happy loving marriages or other long term relationships with people with completely different belief systems.

Do you think those people are better at love than you are?


No, not at all. They just possibly have less strongly held beliefs, or at least a less incompatible set. My wife has told me there are as many forms of Christianity as there are Christians, and the same holds true for other religions and for non believers. If my wife were willing to put me first or I was able to accept our relationship being put second (both by my standards) then I could see it working.

quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Better still, why not just convert and be done with it! [Smile]

Which, after all, is precisely what you're asking of your wife.
I admit, both of us converting to Thor worship would probably have fixed the problem. Alternatively, my wife has shown that her belief system is mutable, mine has shown no sign of it [Smile]
 
Posted by Poptart22 (# 17096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Better still, why not just convert and be done with it! [Smile]

Which, after all, is precisely what you're asking of your wife.
That makes it sound like you can just *decide* to believe something. As someone who isn't really up for forcing belief on myself, I don't understand this at all. Either you believe or you don't. If there is a God, he'll know I'm just full of it even if I say and do the right things. Don't trivialize something that huge.


quote:
Originally posted by savedbyhim01:
Believing in God is the most important decision a person can ever make. It is worth losing everything else. This decision will affect her entire eternity. She should count the costs first, but those costs are easily worth it.

But that doesn't mean that her marriage has to end. Another poster mentioned 1 Peter 3. A Christian wife should be loving and submissive to her husband (as long as her husband doesn't require her to sin). If she is truly following Christ, she will be treating her husband much better than before. It shouldn't take long for him to realize that this version of his wife is better.

OK, not every Christian things every non-Christian is going to hell (what I'm assuming you're referring to when you say it affects eternity). Even my wife says she's not too sure about after death because really we're just humans and we don't get to study the afterlife (not like we can go there and come back), which I'm sure is why her conscience allowed her to marry me when I refuse to define myself as anything at the moment. And not everyone buys into the submissive thing. The only submissive in *this* house is the kind that requires a safeword.

I am not convinced at all that I was better when I was strong in my Christian belief. I can sleep better now at least knowing I claim my current beliefs or lack thereof. My wife insists she's a better wife because of her Christianity and I believe her. I just don't think that's the only way to be the best spouse possible.

I really understand the dilemma. It's possible to have a mixed-faith marriage, but it does create some problems.
 
Posted by Erroneous Monk (# 10858) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
If my wife were willing to put me first or I was able to accept our relationship being put second (both by my standards) then I could see it working.

Hmmm. What makes you think she put you first before she converted? Surely you only came second then? Unless you believe romantic love has a supernatural quality in that it trumps instinctive self-preservation?

Where's the evidence that you've actually slipped in the rankings, rather than remained where you were with first and third changing place?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Erroneous Monk:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
If my wife were willing to put me first or I was able to accept our relationship being put second (both by my standards) then I could see it working.

Hmmm. What makes you think she put you first before she converted? Surely you only came second then? Unless you believe romantic love has a supernatural quality in that it trumps instinctive self-preservation?

Where's the evidence that you've actually slipped in the rankings, rather than remained where you were with first and third changing place?

If people will ignore the potential innuendo, I don't think my wife "had a relationship with herself". Alternatively, are you claiming that following conversion my wife spookily put our relationship above self preservations in order not to change the league table?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Actually I'd say my thesis is dual to yours. A marriage (can I say relationship instead?) is as you say based on mutual respect and my wife and I have ended up in a situation where we cannot respect each others' positions. She finds my need for the primacy of human relationships just as objectionable as I find her need for the primacy of her Messiah. This isn't something which compassion can really overcome and is pretty much impossible to compromise on without compromising one of our positions.

Again, I think you are quite wrong about that. I think it is quite possible for you to (both-- I realize this impasse is very much two-sided) accept this regrettable difference, respect one another's strongly held beliefs w/ respect and compassion w/o compromising either position. It would take work and pain, and perhaps you (or she) have, for whatever reason, determined the relationship is not worth that effort. But it is certainly possible-- the evidence is all around you, as millions of other couples manage it every day.


quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Erroneous Monk

You'll know that love won't conquer all for *you*. Lots and lots and lots of people have happy loving marriages or other long term relationships with people with completely different belief systems.

Do you think those people are better at love than you are?


No, not at all. They just possibly have less strongly held beliefs, or at least a less incompatible set.
[/QB]

B***. Millions of couples with beliefs as strong or stronger than yours, have managed it. One of such couple (perhaps more) known to us here on the ship is a clergyman-- someone whose devotion to Christ has encompassed even his vocation/ calling. His wife is equally passionate re: her differing belief system. It can be managed. Again, not with out work & pain, but certainly possible, with sufficient love, respect and compassion. The operative word here, I suspect, is "respect" (on both sides).


quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
If my wife were willing to put me first or I was able to accept our relationship being put second (both by my standards) then I could see it working.

Again, my experience shows me that this romantic expectation is unrealistic even in a marriage of two avowed atheists. For example, again, as soon as children come into the picture you will notice an immediate demotion. The sort of unrivaled attention you are demanding is just not realistic even beyond religious convictions.

The flaw seems to be in picturing love as a zero-sum game. Much like an only child believes mommy's love is a zero-sum, so when a new baby comes along, s/he feels threatened that mommy will love her less. But we all (believers and non-believers alike) have found that is not the case, that the love for someone else--whether child or deity-- does not lessen the first love.

Now attention is, of course, limited. A 2nd child will divide mommy's attention. And your wife's commitment to Christianity will, by necessity, divide her attention, so there will be less time devoted to you. But the same would be true if she took up golf, or decided to go back to school, took on a demanding job... or had a child. Part of being an adult married person is accepting that and negotiating that. Not negotiating beliefs, simply negotiating how you live out those beliefs in a way that meets each others' needs.

quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:

P.S. I'm afraid irregardless isn't a word [Smile]

Webster's said you would say that: I'm afraid it is.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

quote:


P.S. I'm afraid irregardless isn't a word [Smile]

Webster's said you would say that: I'm afraid it is.
You are, perhaps unsurprisingly, given what I suspect are our respective theological positions, quoting from a source I don't believe in.

[ 14. May 2012, 16:58: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

quote:


P.S. I'm afraid irregardless isn't a word [Smile]

Webster's said you would say that: I'm afraid it is.
You are, perhaps unsurprisingly, given what I suspect are our respective theological positions, quoting from a source I don't believe in.
Houston, I see the problem. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
My pastor and spouse are of two differing belief systems and are comfortable navigating that territory (more comfortable, perhaps, than some of the people around them who have very black-and-white ideas about the nature of God and salvation).

I haven't read each and every post here, but I'm still trying to unpack what the "cultural differences" are, sir, that you feel are creating an irreparable tear in you and your wife's relationship. Can you give us some specific examples?

People's intimate relationships are impacted by outside forces all the time. Example: When I met my partner, her adult children (from a disastrous early 20's marriage) were both living their own lives at opposite ends of the continent and, despite the occasional visit back or forth, were something of an abstraction to me; we got along very well, and I was relieved that they liked me and had given my partner their approval of our relationship, but in a sense they were always "out there" somewhere in the wider world. In the last two years, though, their life changes -- a baby, two marriages and two acute healthcare crises -- have drawn our lives far closer together. Have I ever resented this intrusion of their lives and problems into our household? I'd be lying if I said no; I mean, there have been days when I've thought, "I really didn't think I was signing up for this." I think that's true of anyone in a life partnership. And then you have a cry or get mad or have a glass of wine, and then you pull up your grown-up pants and get over it. And I've every reason to believe that my partner has thought exactly the same of me, especially in this past year when I had a life-threatening episode and needed months to recover, effectively placing most of the burden of our household management on her. It's what the "for better, for worse" is about in marriage vows.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:

I haven't read each and every post here, but I'm still trying to unpack what the "cultural differences" are, sir, that you feel are creating an irreparable tear in you and your wife's relationship. Can you give us some specific examples?

The brief version is the town mouse and the country mouse. The longer version is she grew up in a small village in the Midlands, daughter of a church warden and a church-going atheist science teacher. I grew up in outer London son of confirmed unbelievers (a school inspector and a university librarian). She went to the local CoE primary school (the only school in the village) then a school with a 99% white, predominantly rural middle class intake. I had schoolfriends of all major extant religions except Buddhism (including one of the people who later ran away from their police curfew in the days following the London tube bombings. She read a humanities degree at university, I read maths.

[ 14. May 2012, 17:50: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Houston, I see the problem. [Big Grin]

Absolutely.

But I have a rather different problem. Which is that this thread is still tending to focus on the specific compatibility issues of one relationship, rather than the general issues of compatibility when folks have different world views, outlook and vision.

The thread's on notice. Unless there is some significant change of focus, I'll close it.

Barnabas62
Purgatory Host

 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
I read through this thread with interest, both because I went through a period of Ayn Rand-style atheism similar to e-i(pi) and because a sea change in my first wife's faith was the major visible factor in the marriage ending in divorce.

I think that, prior to marriage, we have an obligation to share who we think we really are with our future spouse. After marriage, I think there's an implied covenant to refrain from major lifestyle changes without some informed consent from the other spouse, or renegotiation of the ground rules of the marriage.

For example if someone were to marry a surgeon whose plans were to maintain a career in medicine and establish and follow a lifestyle consistent with a $300,000 income it would not be fair for said surgeon to decide to abandon that career in favor of a reclusive life of prayer, contemplation, and poverty.

In similar fashion, if the marriage began with the premise of an intellectual atheist and an inactive Christian respecting each others' differences, well, any significant move away from the center of that is going to be disruptive, and it isn't fair (IMO) for one spouse to make such a change unilaterally and insist that the other just accept it.

Most of us have limits as to what beliefs we would accept in a spouse. I think most Christians would be more accepting of an atheist spouse than a spouse following a nonmainstream Christian faith or a non-Christian one, e.g. Mormon, Islam, Hindu. Christianity is a repudiation of the belief system of intellectual atheism, and as such there is more conflict between these beliefs than would be the case between the beliefs of inactive and practicing Christians, or the beliefs of questioning vs. practicing Christians -- combinations we might encounter more frequently among spouses.

In these sorts of situations it is tempting to polarize the dispute with the false dichotomy between God and spouse, or between Christ and spouse, as the case may be. There are more tolerant, less overtly evangelical approaches to Christianity that emphasize "this is what I believe" rather than "this is what God says."

In like fashion there are more tolerant approaches to atheism. Those newly converted to Ayn Rand's world view are tempted to preach the foolishness of believing in a God that can't be perceived by the senses or measured in the lab with the same fervor that the born again preach Romans 5:8. There are more tolerant approaches to atheism that emphasize that moral systems can be built with intellectual foundations alone, without undermining the value of faith-based beliefs.

In my experience there are two factors for success in marriages where the beliefs of the spouses differ markedly:

1) The extent to which the beliefs set up day-to-day conflict on matters such as diet, home decor, weekends, holidays, and social networks.

2) Whether both parties are willing to compromise enough to respect each others' beliefs as valid expressions of their humanity.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Better still, why not just convert and be done with it! [Smile]

Because:

a) it would lack integrity unless there was a sincere change of heart

b) opposites attract to maybe there'd be a loss of 'spark' if both were of the same faith/belief system
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Bartolomeo:
quote:
In similar fashion, if the marriage began with the premise of an intellectual atheist and an inactive Christian respecting each others' differences, well, any significant move away from the center of that is going to be disruptive, and it isn't fair (IMO) for one spouse to make such a change unilaterally and insist that the other just accept it.
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions. That seems unfair and frankly unlikely to work; marriage shouldn't be the thought police. I would, however, expect discussion and compromise on time spent in activities related to the change. And IMO each spouse should respect the other's opinions, refraining from both sarcasm and self-righteousness. Time spent in discussing the change should mostly be on terms the unchanged one can handle. I don't deny working through the change would likely be difficult.

Example: If someone who had previously been lukewarm came to the conclusion that there is no God, but both spouses had been previously involved in many church activities that the now unbelieving spouse doesn't want to participate in, it would be good for the marriage for the believing spouse to pull back from the less compelling church activities and carve out time for new activities they may both enjoy. And it would be well for the unbelieving spouse not to expect the Christian spouse to do a Ruth/Naomi "your lack of God will be my lack of God". [Biased] Or for the believing spouse to condescendingly consider this atheism a "phase" to be indulged 'til the wandering sheep returns to the flock.

Kindness and respect are key, at least in most disparate yet successful marriages I've known.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
As my Buddhist friends remind me from time to time, attachment can create suffering -- in some cases, perhaps a partner's attachment to a sort of snapshot picture of that couple that was true at the beginning of the relationship but may not be true now.

Serious illness can transform relationships between partners in a way that makes one partner feel as if something has been lost in the relationship. Retirement is another thing that can be a real stressor between couples as they renegotiate their roles in the household. Education/life experience can turn the passive, deferential partner in a relationship into someone who is more confident and independent, and that in turn can feel threatening to a partner who started out as the intellectual/experiential superior in the relationship, who now realizes that s/he's dealing with someone who has become a peer.

I think partners whose relationship is based on friendship (which, frankly, not all relationships are) are able to navigate these sorts of changes.
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
Bartolomeo:
quote:
In similar fashion, if the marriage began with the premise of an intellectual atheist and an inactive Christian respecting each others' differences, well, any significant move away from the center of that is going to be disruptive, and it isn't fair (IMO) for one spouse to make such a change unilaterally and insist that the other just accept it.
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions.
Because truly incompatible and irreconcilable beliefs do exist.

What if your spouse/partner were to conclude one day that the church is a fundamentally pagan and evil institution that should be destroyed, by force if necessary? That you and your friends, relatives, children, were all fallen and would be destroyed during the upcoming apocalypse? That holy communion is a particularly evil and personal affront to your spouse that no one in the family should ever participate in?

I put up with that for years.

And I would imagine that most card-carrying atheists married to born-again believers feel largely the same way, though the specifics differ.

Bottom line, yes, I'm going to veto my spouse's right to believe that I'm a second class citizen, not in the club of salvation, going straight to hell. It simply isn't conducive to a loving relationship between equals.

[ 14. May 2012, 21:04: Message edited by: Bartolomeo ]
 
Posted by Ethne Alba (# 5804) on :
 
Thing is though, people change during a marriage. We just do.

The key question is how far do we put up with change in a marriage, before one person calls time?

No easy answers.

[ 14. May 2012, 21:41: Message edited by: Ethne Alba ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
L*R:
quote:
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions. That seems unfair and frankly unlikely to work...
I sympathize, Bartolomeo; you were in a pretty untenable position. But the question is: Did your veto work? Someone who went harebrained like your spouse did is not going to sit down nicely and say, "Honey, it's occurred to me "that the church is a fundamentally pagan and evil institution that should be destroyed, by force if necessary". Before I adopt that belief, I thought I'd run it by you for approval. What do you think?"

If the belief has not solidified, you might have a chance of persuasion. But unless part of the new belief were total submission to their spouse's will, there would be no power of veto. You could stand by your beliefs, come what may, but that still would not constitute a veto of your partner's thoughts. There could be only pained acceptance, compromise (maybe), constant quarreling, a combination of the above, or a parting of ways. Or...?

No, it wasn't fair. But if someone is of the temperament to adopt extreme opinions, any reasonable prior arrangement for discussion would be dust in the wind.
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
When I first separated from my ex, he started attending an Evangelipentehostile church, and came back a couple of weeks later insisting that divorce was against God's law and we had to get back together again. I didn't buy it, but I did notice that Christianity seemed to have "grabbed" him more than anything else he'd ever been interested in. Six months later, however, he had stopped going to church, and the subject never came up again.

Like many others, I think the thread title is an artificially-created dilemma. Religion doesn't break up marriages or hold them together, people choose to do so. If a relationship gets to the "my way or the highway" stage over any issue, things are not good. OliviaG
 
Posted by OliviaG (# 9881) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bartolomeo:
... I think that, prior to marriage, we have an obligation to share who we think we really are with our future spouse. After marriage, I think there's an implied covenant to refrain from major lifestyle changes without some informed consent from the other spouse, or renegotiation of the ground rules of the marriage. ...

That sounds both very reasonable and utterly fantastical. There are lots of unintended events that can precipitate a major lifestyle change - illness or a car crash, for example. "Honey, after 30 years GM wants to lay me off with no health benefits, but they need your informed consent." As for knowing each other as who we really are, well, if we waited for that, nobody would ever get married. And what about all those arranged marriages where the spouses are introduced and may have a lot in common but only limited acquaintance?

quote:
For example if someone were to marry a surgeon whose plans were to maintain a career in medicine and establish and follow a lifestyle consistent with a $300,000 income it would not be fair for said surgeon to decide to abandon that career in favor of a reclusive life of prayer, contemplation, and poverty. ...
Again, it sounds reasonable, but it also sounds like an argument in divorce court, complaining of not being kept in the style one is accustomed to. Obviously, entering the novitiate isn't the thing to do when you're married, but that has nothing to do with the loss of income! OliviaG
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
"Two becoming one" does not envisage a loss of individual identity. So far as commitments not to change are concerned, OliviaG has nailed it.

I remember a very funny bit of play-acting by Rob and Marion White (at a Spring harvest event in the 1990s), who were acting out a row.

Rob was demonstrating an indignant recall of things which Marion had said on the issue they were having a row about. After some defences along the lines of "Did I say that?", "Perhaps you misunderstood me?", "That wasn't really what I meant", Marion came out with the clincher.

"Well .. I've changed my mind!"

Hoots of laughter everywhere, followed by "Hmmmm.."

quote:
From Olivia's post:
Like many others, I think the thread title is an artificially-created dilemma. Religion doesn't break up marriages or hold them together, people choose to do so. If a relationship gets to the "my way or the highway" stage over any issue, things are not good.

I agree with that. Within marriage, each of us is entitled to have a change of heart, a change of mind, over little and large things. Commitment to a relationship, faithfulness in a relationship, cannot be conditional upon no minor or major changes of outlook and understanding. These changes may, almost certainly will, produce some strains, but they can be worked through. That's what "for better, for worse" involves, amongst other things.

[ 15. May 2012, 09:00: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I think that if someone enters a faith journey, it would be a good thing to inform their partner already in the earlier stages of it. This would reduce the surprise, as opposed to telling them only at the moment when you have already converted. This way, the journey could be made together, even if the partner doesn't believe in it.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I agree with that. Within marriage, each of us is entitled to have a change of heart, a change of mind, over little and large things. Commitment to a relationship, faithfulness in a relationship, cannot be conditional upon no minor or major changes of outlook and understanding. These changes may, almost certainly will, produce some strains, but they can be worked through. That's what "for better, for worse" involves, amongst other things.

Doesn't that presume a universal definition of commitment and faithfulness though?
 
Posted by Poptart22 (# 17096) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
"Two becoming one" does not envisage a loss of individual identity. So far as commitments not to change are concerned, OliviaG has nailed it.

I remember a very funny bit of play-acting by Rob and Marion White (at a Spring harvest event in the 1990s), who were acting out a row.

Rob was demonstrating an indignant recall of things which Marion had said on the issue they were having a row about. After some defences along the lines of "Did I say that?", "Perhaps you misunderstood me?", "That wasn't really what I meant", Marion came out with the clincher.

"Well .. I've changed my mind!"

Hoots of laughter everywhere, followed by "Hmmmm.."

quote:
From Olivia's post:
Like many others, I think the thread title is an artificially-created dilemma. Religion doesn't break up marriages or hold them together, people choose to do so. If a relationship gets to the "my way or the highway" stage over any issue, things are not good.

I agree with that. Within marriage, each of us is entitled to have a change of heart, a change of mind, over little and large things. Commitment to a relationship, faithfulness in a relationship, cannot be conditional upon no minor or major changes of outlook and understanding. These changes may, almost certainly will, produce some strains, but they can be worked through. That's what "for better, for worse" involves, amongst other things.
You may be entitled to it, but it isn't being loving to your spouse if you spring this on them after being involved for a while and are now very active and passionate. Beginning stages of such things need to be brought up. Otherwise the other person could feel betrayed. And I get that.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Commenting on both responses.

@ E to the i pi. Is there a universal definition of faithfulness and commitment? Probably not. All I can say for sure is what I knew I was doing when I took my marriage vows, 44 years ago (when I was not a Christian). When I said "for better for worse", I did mean "for life, without qualifications". Knowing both that we would change and so would our life circumstances. Same applies to "forsaking all others". They are very simple, open ended promises with huge implications. With both of us coming from backgrounds of parents married for over 25 years, we'd seen from the inside what that might mean. And we'd talked about this stuff before we got married. Did we understand completely what we were promising to each other? Probably not.

@Poptart22. I never saw my marriage as a place where I was "entitled" to any expectation that my wife would not change. She had a close, but somewhat sheltered and protective upbringing. One of the things I promised her was freedom. Light and air.

To both of you. I had this quite deep understanding that real love does not insist on its own way - and this was before my conversion. That's a sword which cuts both ways of course. The process of leaning, working through the tension, the difference between eros and agape, learning how to look after, even prefer, each others' needs, is not at all easy, but I think it is the crucible for forging a good long term relationship.

Neither my wife nor I would describe ourselves as paragons of virtue in the way we came to terms with this. We made mistakes, sometimes were less loving, less considerate of one another, than we might have been. Forty four years later, we would both say that we've had the time of our lives coming to terms with what it really means to love someone else.

[ 15. May 2012, 12:43: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
Commenting on both responses.

@ E to the i pi. Is there a universal definition of faithfulness and commitment? Probably not. All I can say for sure is what I knew I was doing when I took my marriage vows, 44 years ago (when I was not a Christian). When I said "for better for worse", I did mean "for life, without qualifications". Knowing both that we would change and so would our life circumstances. Same applies to "forsaking all others". They are very simple, open ended promises with huge implications. With both of us coming from backgrounds of parents married for over 25 years, we'd seen from the inside what that might mean. And we'd talked about this stuff before we got married. Did we understand completely what we were promising to each other? Probably not.

Does that mean you had a church wedding then? Or just that your registrar chose to ape one of the CoE services rather a lot?
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
(Actually, I thought that Barnabas's post was wonderful.)
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Well 44 years ago there wasn't the choice of places to get married that there are now. Weddings in church were much more the norm that they are today.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Well 44 years ago there wasn't the choice of places to get married that there are now. Weddings in church were much more the norm that they are today.

I'd have thought unbelieving church weddings were much more the norm now than then, given the proportionate reduction in the number of self identifying Christians.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Who knows, there has been reduction in the number of church weddings as different options open up. Church is no longer the default wedding venue, but when a couple get married in a church it is a positive choice to.
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Zacchaeus:
Well 44 years ago there wasn't the choice of places to get married that there are now. Weddings in church were much more the norm that they are today.

I'd have thought unbelieving church weddings were much more the norm now than then, given the proportionate reduction in the number of self identifying Christians.
Could be. But he still could have had a church wedding back in the day. Was there a standard form civil ceremony? If not, they might have defaulted to the CoE form.
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
I think some basic non-secular definitions of faithfulness and commitment within a relationship are mutual exclusivity as sexual partners (now, I know that some polyamorous folks might object to that, but I think there's also some parallel train of thought within that way of thinking that assumes some degree of boundaries regarding intimacy with persons outside one's circle, so to speak); mutual respect and care on an ongoing basis, including in cases where one partner suffers a medical crisis or other issue; mutual emotional support both within the household and when engaging with the outside world -- in other words, not disparaging or shaming or making fun of one's partner; presenting as a united front.

I don't think those things extend to demanding that one's partner maintain the same belief system forever and ever, amen, or share the same political ideology, or share the same mindset on any number of things. For one thing, that's not within the power of one person to control in another (and if s/he thinks it is, s/he is delusional); and it's not reasonable. I'm not the same person now that I was 30 or 20 or 10 or even 5 years ago. I think I've changed a lot in the context of being in a committed relationship -- that indeed the relationship itself changes us both over time.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
There has always been standard words that need to be for the wedding to be legal. How much extra (if at all) registrars would add 40 years ago I have no idea.

I do rememebr as I grew up that civil weddings were considered a bit second best. A factory production line.For people I knew, civil weddings were for the divorced/those who could not afford a church wedding etc
Most girls grew up dreaming about 'walling down the aisle' not because it was church but because of the grand event they made out of it.
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
Or even 'walking down the aisle'
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
I think some basic non-secular definitions of faithfulness and commitment within a relationship are mutual exclusivity as sexual partners (now, I know that some polyamorous folks might object to that, but I think there's also some parallel train of thought within that way of thinking that assumes some degree of boundaries regarding intimacy with persons outside one's circle, so to speak); mutual respect and care on an ongoing basis, including in cases where one partner suffers a medical crisis or other issue; mutual emotional support both within the household and when engaging with the outside world -- in other words, not disparaging or shaming or making fun of one's partner; presenting as a united front.

I don't think those things extend to demanding that one's partner maintain the same belief system forever and ever, amen, or share the same political ideology, or share the same mindset on any number of things. For one thing, that's not within the power of one person to control in another (and if s/he thinks it is, s/he is delusional); and it's not reasonable. I'm not the same person now that I was 30 or 20 or 10 or even 5 years ago. I think I've changed a lot in the context of being in a committed relationship -- that indeed the relationship itself changes us both over time.

I'm assuming you mean secular rather than non-secular? I'd also be interested in why you think sexual intimacy should be treated specially as the unique point in which relationships sacrifice freedom for security, and why that alone is assumed not to be going to change?
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
We got married in an Anglican church, and so the promises we made were those included in the Anglican wedding service. As it is now, we made promises to one another, "before God" (who neither of us were all that sure about) and "before this congregation" (family and friends - and we certainly knew them). Making promises to one another in front of the most important other people in our lives was important to us. We wanted them to know for sure what we knew, that we intended to keep them.

Since I've become a Christian, one of the things I've realised is that Registrars may legalise and Churches may solemnise, but essentially people marry each other. Without commitment, there is no marriage. Folks can go through the form "with their fingers crossed" or because "it's the done thing". Neither of those amounts to much unless you mean what you say.

And as I indicated earlier, learning to live with the promises you made, discovering the full meaning of them, is part of the adventure. The time of our lives.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:

Since I've become a Christian, one of the things I've realised is that Registrars may legalise and Churches may solemnise, but essentially people marry each other. Without commitment, there is no marriage. Folks can go through the form "with their fingers crossed" or because "it's the done thing". Neither of those amounts to much unless you mean what you say.

And as I indicated earlier, learning to live with the promises you made, discovering the full meaning of them, is part of the adventure. The time of our lives.

Now that I'd agree with.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:

Since I've become a Christian, one of the things I've realised is that Registrars may legalise and Churches may solemnise, but essentially people marry each other. Without commitment, there is no marriage. Folks can go through the form "with their fingers crossed" or because "it's the done thing". Neither of those amounts to much unless you mean what you say.

And as I indicated earlier, learning to live with the promises you made, discovering the full meaning of them, is part of the adventure. The time of our lives.

Now that I'd agree with.
As gently as I can say this, let me ask: really? Because I'm not sure we're seeing that here.

[ 15. May 2012, 15:27: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
As gently as I can say it, cliffdweller, seeing the rightness of an observation doesn't make it easier to live it out. It reads easier than it lives.

Plus this.

I'm not sure it's in keeping with the spirit of having this thread in Purg to inquire too closely about another Shipmate's consistency or integrity. It's not a C3 thing when someone has put personal evidence out there (that's one of the reasons why we advise caution about how much we say about ourselves and our lives on public boards) but these can be delicate and painful personal issues. None of us is wholly consistent.

I'm posting this with my Host hat off, responding as a Shipmate. Hope it's helpful. I'm sure you catch my drift.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
As gently as I can say it, cliffdweller, seeing the rightness of an observation doesn't make it easier to live it out. It reads easier than it lives.

Plus this.

I'm not sure it's in keeping with the spirit of having this thread in Purg to inquire too closely about another Shipmate's consistency or integrity. It's not a C3 thing when someone has put personal evidence out there (that's one of the reasons why we advise caution about how much we say about ourselves and our lives on public boards) but these can be delicate and painful personal issues. None of us is wholly consistent.

I'm posting this with my Host hat off, responding as a Shipmate. Hope it's helpful. I'm sure you catch my drift.

Agh, yes, definitely. Actually, I was committing another sin as well: not paying attention to which poster I was responding to, and confusing one for another, so the comment was misplaced anyway. Please accept my apologies cuz the comment is completely unwarranted when directed at you. I hear you as well re: the tendency I and others have had on this thread to respond to a personal situation instead of a general question (where would be the proper forum for that, btw, when a non-hellish but debatable personal question is raised?).

So again, my apologies, and would grateful accept the deletion of the post (and this one) if your hosting should lead you so moved.

[ 15. May 2012, 15:46: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Now that I'd agree with.

As gently as I can say this, let me ask: really? Because I'm not sure we're seeing that here.
To try to expand without drawing back into the personal again, I'd agree:

a) Marriage (and relationships) are between people.
b) They don't work if there isn't commitment.

The last word means many different things to many different people and, I would submit will generally be more than just not dallying with one's secretary as LutheranChick has suggested.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I must be getting old, cliffdweller. I hadn't seen that your comment might also be seen as applying to me!

But thanks for your post anyway. I think it's fine to leave it and its predecessor in place.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:

a) Marriage (and relationships) are between people.
b) They don't work if there isn't commitment.

The last word means many different things to many different people and, I would submit will generally be more than just not dallying with one's secretary as LutheranChick has suggested.

That's the nub of the matter. At the extreme end, I'm reminded of Ming's promises to the captive Dale in "Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe". [Plus Brian May of Queen playing Lohengrin - but that's definitely a tangent too far]
 
Posted by LutheranChik (# 9826) on :
 
quote:
I'm assuming you mean secular rather than non-secular? I'd also be interested in why you think sexual intimacy should be treated specially as the unique point in which relationships sacrifice freedom for security, and why that alone is assumed not to be going to change?
Well, I'm not sure how "unique" I think sexual fidelity is vis-a-vis other kinds of faithfulness, except that I think it can bring especially messy, potentially devastating complications into a relationship ("surprise" children outside the marriage -- see the current trial of former Presidential candidate John Edwards for a timely example of that; STDs; the lack of trust issue inherent in sneaking behind one's spouse's back for sexual relations with other people) -- to me that's a whole 'nother level of trust/commitment problem than, say, one spouse having a midlife crisis and deciding to change political parties or switch from Christianity to Buddhism or to become a vegetarian.

I'm not sure that changing religions is a matter of that much import, relatively. Now, if someone changes from a benign viewpoint toward others of differing/no faith to a viewpoint of "Turn or burn, sinner!" that might indeed be unacceptable to the other spouse, and I frankly can't fault that person for feeling betrayed and hurt and questioning the foundations of the relationship. I once heard of a case in my state where one spouse got involved in a Christian cult that was heavily into demonology, and began denouncing the other mainline-denominational spouse and the spouse's family as being "possessed," and that whole thing turning into a very ugly, sensationalistic divorce trial. Would I be able to stick with a partner who came to believe that I was a servant of Satan and who, worse yet, started indoctrinating the children to that effect? -- "See Mommy? She's going to hell because she's an unrepentant sinner who hasn't asked Jesus into her heart, and now she belongs to the Devil..." (One of the accusations leveled at the wronged spouse by the hyper-religious spouse in this particular court case.) Frankly, I'd probably have been at least looking up the names of good divorce attorneys at that point.

On the other hand, is it reasonable to label as unfaithful or voiding the marriage contract a simple change of belief over time, if that change is not accompanied by the sort of emotional abuse described above? What if the change actually makes the other spouse more peaceful and grounded and pleasant to be around? If the angry spouse suddenly had his/her own metanoia moment regarding a belief system, would s/he think that a corresponding level of anger and bitterness on the part of the other spouse was justified, or would s/he expect the same deference to his/her beliefs that s/he is demanding of the other spouse now?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by LutheranChik:
quote:

Well, I'm not sure how "unique" I think sexual fidelity is vis-a-vis other kinds of faithfulness, except that I think it can bring especially messy, potentially devastating complications into a relationship ("surprise" children outside the marriage -- see the current trial of former Presidential candidate John Edwards for a timely example of that; STDs; the lack of trust issue inherent in sneaking behind one's spouse's back for sexual relations with other people) -- to me that's a whole 'nother level of trust/commitment problem than, say, one spouse having a midlife crisis and deciding to change political parties or switch from Christianity to Buddhism or to become a vegetarian.

Doesn't a literal interpolation of those views suggest that if a spouse uses protection, gets regular health checks and tells his or her spouse when he does it so he/she is not sneeking, then an affair is fine providing it makes him or her an easier person to be around? Or have I missed something?
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I suppose the evidence suggests, strongly, that 'forsaking all others' is 'honoured more in the breech than in the observance'. There is more than a hint of 'woman as property' in traditional male attitudes. 'Hands off, she's mine'. Particularly when dowry systems are in operation.

That being said, Mrs B and I both find the notion of an 'open marriage' yucky. Treating sex purely as a recreational activity, which can be enjoyed with others without doing harm to marriage, just feels wrong. Are our attitudes purely conventional?

I suppose that having seen the pain and suffering caused to many couples over the issue of sexual unfaithfulness, my experience tells me that it is a kind of playing with fire. Our sexual desires are very strong. Attraction, curiosity, a desire for novelty, all seem to be at work. My experience of broken relationships tends to confirm that the effects are toxic. I don't know personally any couple who have a happy, 'open', marriage.

In short, it's one of the areas of life where I think that conventional morality is right, and better observed. Lead us not into temptation is a prayer for our own good.

YMMV

[ 16. May 2012, 22:00: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
L*R:
quote:
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions. That seems unfair and frankly unlikely to work...
I sympathize, Bartolomeo; you were in a pretty untenable position. But the question is: Did your veto work? Someone who went harebrained like your spouse did is not going to sit down nicely and say, "Honey, it's occurred to me "that the church is a fundamentally pagan and evil institution that should be destroyed, by force if necessary". Before I adopt that belief, I thought I'd run it by you for approval. What do you think?"

If the belief has not solidified, you might have a chance of persuasion. But unless part of the new belief were total submission to their spouse's will, there would be no power of veto. You could stand by your beliefs, come what may, but that still would not constitute a veto of your partner's thoughts. There could be only pained acceptance, compromise (maybe), constant quarreling, a combination of the above, or a parting of ways. Or...?

No, it wasn't fair. But if someone is of the temperament to adopt extreme opinions, any reasonable prior arrangement for discussion would be dust in the wind.

Ultimately that marriage ended in divorce after my spouse told me that Christ himself had appeared to her in a vision and told her to leave me and pursue a life of chastity. She moved out several days later.

I am now happily married to someone else.

I see this as a positive outcome.
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
Bartolomeo:
quote:
In similar fashion, if the marriage began with the premise of an intellectual atheist and an inactive Christian respecting each others' differences, well, any significant move away from the center of that is going to be disruptive, and it isn't fair (IMO) for one spouse to make such a change unilaterally and insist that the other just accept it.
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions. That seems unfair and frankly unlikely to work; marriage shouldn't be the thought police.
I think there's a line crossed when the new beliefs and opinions reject or trivialize the other spouse and their beliefs. The problem isn't "I believe in God," it's "people who don't believe what I believe are going straight to hell, and you, my dear, are first among them unless you repent."
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bartolomeo:
Ultimately that marriage ended in divorce after my spouse told me that Christ himself had appeared to her in a vision and told her to leave me and pursue a life of chastity. She moved out several days later.

Looks like that would make her someone who is "economical with the actualité"

Another version is "God told me we should marry", which in some circles is evo-pente speak for "I really fancy you, but I'm trying to find something godly to say to show that I'm a seriously good catch".

Mind you, it's hard if you're not a believer and you don't know the code.

Seriously, these things are a kind of variation on "all's fair in love and war", to be avoided at all costs by anyone serious about following Christ.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I suppose the evidence suggests, strongly, that 'forsaking all others' is 'honoured more in the breech than in the observance'.

What evidence exactly?
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Bartolomeo:
quote:
Ultimately that marriage ended in divorce after my spouse told me that Christ himself had appeared to her in a vision and told her to leave me and pursue a life of chastity. She moved out several days later.

I am now happily married to someone else.

I see this as a positive outcome.

So do I. She was a nut.

But there still isn't a veto. There is persuasion and compromise, and then things might work out. Or there is no persuasion. Then someone stays and is unhappy, or someone flounces.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I suppose the evidence suggests, strongly, that 'forsaking all others' is 'honoured more in the breech than in the observance'.

What evidence exactly?
Don't think there is any "exact evidence". But I had in mind these kinds of surveys. Plus I admit to a loose choice of words. A significant proportion of married men and women do not "forsake all others". That would have been a more accurate statement, less misleading statement.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bartolomeo:
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
Bartolomeo:
quote:
In similar fashion, if the marriage began with the premise of an intellectual atheist and an inactive Christian respecting each others' differences, well, any significant move away from the center of that is going to be disruptive, and it isn't fair (IMO) for one spouse to make such a change unilaterally and insist that the other just accept it.
What I can't understand is why someone would insist on a veto on a spouse's new beliefs or opinions. That seems unfair and frankly unlikely to work; marriage shouldn't be the thought police.
I think there's a line crossed when the new beliefs and opinions reject or trivialize the other spouse and their beliefs. The problem isn't "I believe in God," it's "people who don't believe what I believe are going straight to hell, and you, my dear, are first among them unless you repent."
Would someone please be kind enough to define "intellectual atheism" for me? It's not a modifier I've seen used before in this context and I suspect the distinction that springs to my mind (intellectual vs. popular) isn't the one intended.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Would someone please be kind enough to define "intellectual atheism" for me? It's not a modifier I've seen used before in this context and I suspect the distinction that springs to my mind (intellectual vs. popular) isn't the one intended.

One definition would be a follower of scientism - as distinct from science. Scientism is a philosophy where you believe science is the only real source of knowledge, and anything outside of the laboratory should be dismissed as superstition.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Would someone please be kind enough to define "intellectual atheism" for me? It's not a modifier I've seen used before in this context and I suspect the distinction that springs to my mind (intellectual vs. popular) isn't the one intended.

One definition would be a follower of scientism - as distinct from science. Scientism is a philosophy where you believe science is the only real source of knowledge, and anything outside of the laboratory should be dismissed as superstition.
Is that the same as e.g. logical positivism or indeed as scientific empiricism? Also does that imply scientism precludes theism or agnosticism?
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Would someone please be kind enough to define "intellectual atheism" for me? It's not a modifier I've seen used before in this context and I suspect the distinction that springs to my mind (intellectual vs. popular) isn't the one intended.

One definition would be a follower of scientism - as distinct from science. Scientism is a philosophy where you believe science is the only real source of knowledge, and anything outside of the laboratory should be dismissed as superstition.
Is that the same as e.g. logical positivism or indeed as scientific empiricism? Also does that imply scientism precludes theism or agnosticism?
Yes and yes
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
...although I'm still of the opinion that this thread is most likely an academic exercise rather than a real problem between two real people in a real marriage. I could be wrong, but I know where I'd put my money!
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
...although I'm still of the opinion that this thread is most likely an academic exercise rather than a real problem between two real people in a real marriage. I could be wrong, but I know where I'd put my money!

Unfortunately if that were true then I, my wife and several of our friends would not be as upset as we all are. Although I suppose in one sense you could say ours was a marriage between two academics, we're real provided anything else is.

Can I ask what you find so incredible? That my personal definition of commitment includes something that could be poetically described as "Thou shalt have no Gods before me."?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
That my personal definition of commitment includes something that could be poetically described as "Thou shalt have no Gods before me."?

Do you really want your spouse thinking of you as a "god"-- however you might define that??
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
...although I'm still of the opinion that this thread is most likely an academic exercise rather than a real problem between two real people in a real marriage. I could be wrong, but I know where I'd put my money!

Unfortunately if that were true then I, my wife and several of our friends would not be as upset as we all are. Although I suppose in one sense you could say ours was a marriage between two academics, we're real provided anything else is.

Can I ask what you find so incredible? That my personal definition of commitment includes something that could be poetically described as "Thou shalt have no Gods before me."?

Really, it's two reasons

1) Why would an unbeliever air out all his dirty laundry in a christian forum, where most of the people don't even speak the same language as him (metaphorically I mean)?

2) You write in a cool detached way as if it's happining to someone else, and you're the psychologist.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
"No other gods before me"? That's a recipe for disaster. You can't insist on being #1. Relationships work when each person puts the other first, but you can't demand that - it has to be a gift.

[ 19. May 2012, 15:51: Message edited by: RuthW ]
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
"No other gods before me"? That's a recipe for disaster. You can't insist on being #1. Relationships work when each person puts the other first, but you can't demand that - it has to be a gift.

It sounds like a certain faith's Apostacy law!
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Do you really want your spouse thinking of you as a "god"-- however you might define that??

Nope. Hence using a modified quotation without any form of "other" in it.

quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Really, it's two reasons

1) Why would an unbeliever air out all his dirty laundry in a christian forum, where most of the people don't even speak the same language as him (metaphorically I mean)?

2) You write in a cool detached way as if it's happining to someone else, and you're the psychologist.

1) I'm not looking for validation here (that's what my friends give me) and enjoy polite disputation. Just like everyone else I think my laudry is cleaner than other peoples, plus I'm apparently learning a lot of new words for what other groups of people would call me. Although I agree that language is a problem. Practically, not just metaphorically. (E.g. when believers talk of a personal god it always puts me in mind of personal pizzas).
2) That's probably a side effect of my training (in hard science/mathematics, not medicine).

[ 19. May 2012, 16:01: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Really, it's two reasons

1) Why would an unbeliever air out all his dirty laundry in a christian forum, where most of the people don't even speak the same language as him (metaphorically I mean)?

2) You write in a cool detached way as if it's happining to someone else, and you're the psychologist.

1) I'm not looking for validation here (that's what my friends give me) and enjoy polite disputation. Just like everyone else I think my laudry is cleaner than other peoples, plus I'm apparently learning a lot of new words for what other groups of people would call me. Although I agree that language is a problem. Practically, not just metaphorically. (E.g. when believers talk of a personal god it always puts me in mind of personal pizzas).
2) That's probably a side effect of my training (in hard science/mathematics, not medicine).

OK, sorry but you wanted me to be frank. There's a third:

3) It sounds an awful lot like role playing: "Let's pretend I'm an atheist spouse whose wife has suddenly got religion, and doesn't know how to handle it."

You'd then study with fascination the sort of responses you got from various shades of christians. You'd poke a stick at them sometimes to provoke them into revealing how their thought processes worked.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
OK, sorry but you wanted me to be frank. There's a third:

3) It sounds an awful lot like role playing: "Let's pretend I'm an atheist spouse whose wife has suddenly got religion, and doesn't know how to handle it."

You'd then study with fascination the sort of responses you got from various shades of christians. You'd poke a stick at them sometimes to provoke them into revealing how their thought processes worked.

There's absolutely no need to apologise. This is the internet, I do realise that kind of thing goes on.
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
Would someone please be kind enough to define "intellectual atheism" for me? It's not a modifier I've seen used before in this context and I suspect the distinction that springs to my mind (intellectual vs. popular) isn't the one intended.

I would define "intellectual atheism" as a personal conviction that belief in God (or multiple gods or some other higher power) is not only factually wrong but something that actively undermines the superior moral system that is purely a product of logic and reason. Ayn Rand's objectivism is an example, but not the only one.

I don't believe any of that myself but I've encountered it often enough to be able to understand people who do.
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
But there still isn't a veto. There is persuasion and compromise, and then things might work out. Or there is no persuasion. Then someone stays and is unhappy, or someone flounces.

I see it as a veto insofar as there are extreme views that are not amenable to compromise or discussion. What I mean by veto is that it's not a belief set that someone can retain and expect the relationship to continue.

Anyone who postulates the existence of a choice between God and spouse has already decided that the relationship is over.

[ 19. May 2012, 17:52: Message edited by: Bartolomeo ]
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Bartolomeo:
I would define "intellectual atheism" as a personal conviction that belief in God (or multiple gods or some other higher power) is not only factually wrong but something that actively undermines the superior moral system that is purely a product of logic and reason....

Which begs the question, how does any sort of moral system (let alone one which is "superior") derive from logic and reason?

Over to you E to the i pi... (actually anyone can answer)
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Which begs the question, how does any sort of moral system (let alone one which is "superior") derive from logic and reason?

If you're really interested in my personal opinions then:

i) No system of logic alone is going to derive a moral code or system of ethics (whether there is a difference between the two is another question).
ii) Given a couple of extra axioms (e.g. the Golden Rule) then, depending on the axioms, it's either possible or trivial, but being axiomatic these starting conditions are of course not in themselves logical. Indeed portions of many religious works consist of attempting to logically extend the axioms assumed provided by their higher power into a useful moral code.
iii) In this sense only truly rational philosophy of live is an absolute agnosticism (even as to whether life itself exists) that doesn't really provide any useful message as to what to do in any particular situation.
iv) No follower of a coherent philosophy of life ever believes it to be unreasonable.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Which begs the question, how does any sort of moral system (let alone one which is "superior") derive from logic and reason?

If you're really interested in my personal opinions then:

i) No system of logic alone is going to derive a moral code or system of ethics (whether there is a difference between the two is another question).
ii) Given a couple of extra axioms (e.g. the Golden Rule) then, depending on the axioms, it's either possible or trivial, but being axiomatic these starting conditions are of course not in themselves logical. Indeed portions of many religious works consist of attempting to logically extend the axioms assumed provided by their higher power into a useful moral code.
iii) In this sense only truly rational philosophy of live is an absolute agnosticism (even as to whether life itself exists) that doesn't really provide any useful message as to what to do in any particular situation.
iv) No follower of a coherent philosophy of life ever believes it to be unreasonable.

Well... I did ask! [brick wall]
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
...but it sure doesn't sound much like "hard science/maths" to me!
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
...but it sure doesn't sound much like "hard science/maths" to me!

In that case you should really read up on eg. Euclidean geometry. It requires five axioms to be held true to be able to then logically construct most of what people innately hold to be true about shapes. Or you could try Russell's Principia Mathematica but that takes many tens of pages to reach 1+1=2.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
...but it sure doesn't sound much like "hard science/maths" to me!

In that case you should really read up on eg. Euclidean geometry. It requires five axioms to be held true to be able to then logically construct most of what people innately hold to be true about shapes. Or you could try Russell's Principia Mathematica but that takes many tens of pages to reach 1+1=2.
OK - so it sounds like the supposed origins of religion/morals/ethics (which I would have thought of as a "soft" science) actually overlaps into "hard" science/maths, yes?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
OK - so it sounds like the supposed origins of religion/morals/ethics (which I would have thought of as a "soft" science) actually overlaps into "hard" science/maths, yes?

I'm sorry, but I'm not really sure what point you're trying to make. Formal logic is certainly a prime mover in both philosophy and mathematics, although of course the context is slightly different. Previously the gap between philosopher and natural philosopher hasn't always been as large as is assumed today. Pythagoras combined a secret mystic school of mathematics with a religion based on beans. Or look at Aristotle, who seems to have had fans from both sides of the cultural divide, although both groups now see his opinions as outdated or wrong.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
OK - so it sounds like the supposed origins of religion/morals/ethics (which I would have thought of as a "soft" science) actually overlaps into "hard" science/maths, yes?

I'm sorry, but I'm not really sure what point you're trying to make. Formal logic is certainly a prime mover in both philosophy and mathematics, although of course the context is slightly different. Previously the gap between philosopher and natural philosopher hasn't always been as large as is assumed today. Pythagoras combined a secret mystic school of mathematics with a religion based on beans. Or look at Aristotle, who seems to have had fans from both sides of the cultural divide, although both groups now see his opinions as outdated or wrong.
I'm not really making any point, just trying to establish a relationship between (a) your answer to how any sort of moral system derives from logic and reason, and (b) the subjects you read at university.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
I'm not really making any point, just trying to establish a relationship between (a) your answer to how any sort of moral system derives from logic and reason, and (b) the subjects you read at university.

Oh I see. In which case the connection is an understanding of the basic principles of formal logic from having read maths. I admit my later career in mathematics and geophysics has less innate connection.

Does this mean that you see moral systems as innately illogical then? That sounds frightening like the people who say "If it were true there is no God then there would be no reason for me not to kill you".
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
I'm not really making any point, just trying to establish a relationship between (a) your answer to how any sort of moral system derives from logic and reason, and (b) the subjects you read at university.

Oh I see. In which case the connection is an understanding of the basic principles of formal logic from having read maths. I admit my later career in mathematics and geophysics has less innate connection.

Does this mean that you see moral systems as innately illogical then? That sounds frightening like the people who say "If it were true there is no God then there would be no reason for me not to kill you".

I've never heard anyone say that - but it has been suggested that such peoples' (atheists) motive for being good (or appearing to be good) might just be self serving. It has crossed my mind too.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
To be fair, I'm not certain Christians' motives for doing good aren't ever self-serving. At least mine are sometimes. Or always.

[ 19. May 2012, 22:35: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
I've never heard anyone say that - but it has been suggested that such peoples' (atheists) motive for being good (or appearing to be good) might just be self serving. It has crossed my mind too.

It seems to be a surprisingly common counterargument to the non-existence of gods used by the hard of thinking.

If you believe that good can only be done in the name of a higher power then of course by your definition atheists can never do good. Of course this then assumes that your version of truth is the single absolute which pretty much removes any possibility of dialogue.

Does this mean that you do think ethics are innately illogical, or that you think the question makes no sense?
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
To be fair, I'm not certain Christians' motives for doing good aren't ever self-serving. At least mine are sometimes. Or always.

My whole reason for being a christian in the first place was self-serving - I wanted to be saved, but at least I don't pretend it was something more generous than that. If someone said they became a christian to "serve their community" or "to make the world a better place", well, I might question their sincerity.

So the same arguments should be put to humanists/atheists - why do they feel they have to be good? Their sincerity would need to be questioned too.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
I've never heard anyone say that - but it has been suggested that such peoples' (atheists) motive for being good (or appearing to be good) might just be self serving. It has crossed my mind too.

It seems to be a surprisingly common counterargument to the non-existence of gods used by the hard of thinking.

If you believe that good can only be done in the name of a higher power then of course by your definition atheists can never do good. Of course this then assumes that your version of truth is the single absolute which pretty much removes any possibility of dialogue.

Does this mean that you do think ethics are innately illogical, or that you think the question makes no sense?

Well, convince me then - as an atheist what is your motive for being selfless and generous to people who will give you nothing in return?

Let's skip questions about ethics being logical/illogical for now and concentrate on the above question, yes?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Well, convince me then - as an atheist what is your motive for being selfless and generous to people who will give you nothing in return?

I seek to convince you of nothing. My personal philosophy is that I can only reasonably expect others to act at or below the standard that I do myself. If I am to expect help uncalled for then I have also to be willing to provide it. Is that self-centred? Well it's motivation from the internal rather than the external, but I don't really see that as the same thing. Or just do it out of the blue to play with peoples minds.

quote:

Let's skip questions about ethics being logical/illogical for now and concentrate on the above question, yes?

That's hardly playing fair. Quid pro quo and all that.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Well, convince me then - as an atheist what is your motive for being selfless and generous to people who will give you nothing in return?

I seek to convince you of nothing. My personal philosophy is that I can only reasonably expect others to act at or below the standard that I do myself. If I am to expect help uncalled for then I have also to be willing to provide it. Is that self-centred? Well it's motivation from the internal rather than the external, but I don't really see that as the same thing. Or just do it out of the blue to play with peoples minds.

quote:

Let's skip questions about ethics being logical/illogical for now and concentrate on the above question, yes?

That's hardly playing fair. Quid pro quo and all that.

You haven't answered my question - do I have to type it out again?

I'm going to bed now, but if you can give me an answer to what I asked you without evading or changing the question, then we can include "Quid pro quo and all that" in our next discussion. But for now, it's goodnight! You should get some sleep too - it can wait till tomorrow! [Smile]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
I had understood your question to be "Why do you perform altruistic acts?" to which my answer was "Because if I don't act altruistically to others I can't expect them to act altruistically to me". If that wasn't your question then I apologise and can only ask you to restate it in another form.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Marvin: if people on this thread have considered what their reaction would be if the couple in question had started out Christian but one of them decided to renounce their faith. Would the spouse who remains in the church be expected to just suck it up and deal, or would any unhappiness or discomfort on their part be seen as justified?
That's me.

There is a problem but it needn't be a show stopper. Married 30yrs when it happened. You adjust but some doors of intimacy shut. Biggest issue is growing apart but you can work to control what you can as Bible says "strengthen things that remain." (Revelation) You can't have a happy relationship that is controlling other person. Can't look on spouse as pet monkey.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
I've never heard anyone say that - but it has been suggested that such peoples' (atheists) motive for being good (or appearing to be good) might just be self serving. It has crossed my mind too.

It seems to be a surprisingly common counterargument to the non-existence of gods used by the hard of thinking.

If you believe that good can only be done in the name of a higher power then of course by your definition atheists can never do good. Of course this then assumes that your version of truth is the single absolute which pretty much removes any possibility of dialogue.

Does this mean that you do think ethics are innately illogical, or that you think the question makes no sense?

I'm with E on this one. My own motives for doing good are always a muddled business. The more I try to do good out of altruism alone, the more I start to feel proud of myself for doing so... and find that self-serving... or find myself hoping Christ will be pleased... and find that prideful works-righteousness... and so on.

I try to do good. I am pleased when others, whether Christian or not, try to do the same. Beyond that, it's dicey enough worrying about my own motives w/o worrying about someone else's.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
Just to summarise - we have only talked thus far of good works for reward. For example, E to the i pi stated his theory:
quote:
My personal philosophy is that I can only reasonably expect others to act at or below the standard that I do myself. If I am to expect help uncalled for then I have also to be willing to provide it. Is that self-centred?
OK, it isn't entirely self-centred, but it isn't entirely selfless either.

What about the sort of love for neighbour Jesus talked about? Where other's don't even know of your good deeds, and there is no chance of any sort of reward or recompence?

Of the sort of works E to the i pi speaks of, Jesus would say "verily, they have their reward in full".

So, back to the question, which I'll repeat:
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Well, convince me then - as an atheist what is your motive for being selfless and generous to people who will give you nothing in return?


 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Just to summarise - we have only talked thus far of good works for reward.

I fear here we've run into a place where the language of our philosophies don't translate to each other. I'm doing those things observed or unobserved for the same reason, I have no prior reason to expect society to be more ethical than I am myself.

To try a concrete example: if a box of things is left out on the street with a sign saying "Help yourself, please take one only" and I take four, I shouldn't be surprised if the next time I see such a box it's empty.

quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Well, convince me then - as an atheist what is your motive for being selfless and generous to people who will give you nothing in return?

I've said before, I see no reason to try to convince you of anything. You aren't someone who claims to have committed to a relationship to me and you aren't trying to push your opinion on me.

I'd also like to note that my ethics are orthogonal to my theist position. It's perfectly possible to believe the Christian deities exist but not buy their morality, look at tabloid Satanism. Equally one could be a socially Christian atheist, accepting the morality but not the faith.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I fear here we've run into a place where the language of our philosophies don't translate to each other...

Well, in the language of my philosophy, it's called "evading the question".
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
I fear here we've run into a place where the language of our philosophies don't translate to each other...

Well, in the language of my philosophy, it's called "evading the question".
Depends on where you go w/ it. Defining your terms is an essential first step to any conversation, otherwise you end up talking past one another.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
[QUOTE]
I'd also like to note that my ethics are orthogonal to my theist position. It's perfectly possible to believe the Christian deities exist but not buy their morality, look at tabloid Satanism. Equally one could be a socially Christian atheist, accepting the morality but not the faith.

I would completely agree. Which makes our conversation here all the more puzzling, though, since I would think you have here the foundation for a good, productive marriage between two persons of different faiths, but hopefully common ethics & values.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
Well, in the language of my philosophy, it's called "evading the question".

I'm sorry you see it like that. I've tried three times to answer the question I think you're asking. I'll try once more, if this doesn't answer then question you think you've asked, maybe this will give you an idea of how to rephrase the question so that I understand it, or so that someone else can attempt to translate it for me:

I believe you to be asking:

"Why do you, not believing that there's a divine score keeper out there, perform altruistic acts which are not going to immediately reward you?"

My answer is (still) that I believe in a generalised form of the tit for tat system between me and society which doesn't just act in the short term but over the course of my life. I suppose in this respect you could say I believe that no good deed goes unrewarded, or unpunished.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
I would completely agree. Which makes our conversation here all the more puzzling, though, since I would think you have here the foundation for a good, productive marriage between two persons of different faiths, but hopefully common ethics & values.

While my wife was a fellow travelling "Christian agnostic" then yes there was, but my value system is such that I see commitment to false gods as coming out of my pool as it were.
 
Posted by Mark Betts (# 17074) on :
 
I think I'm getting it now.

As far as Jesus is concerned, selfless good works are akin to storing up "treasure in heaven", whereas the "rich fool" stored up treasure for himself in this world.

Anyway, that's (hopefully) set the cat amongst the pigeons. Anyway, I have to get some sleep now - catch y'all tomorrow! [Biased]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
I would completely agree. Which makes our conversation here all the more puzzling, though, since I would think you have here the foundation for a good, productive marriage between two persons of different faiths, but hopefully common ethics & values.

While my wife was a fellow travelling "Christian agnostic" then yes there was, but my value system is such that I see commitment to false gods as coming out of my pool as it were.
Again, that pov seems contrary to the earlier statement I quoted.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
Again, that pov seems contrary to the earlier statement I quoted.

I suppose the word false was rather pointed, but seemed to make the language flow better. I suppose I would make three divisions, the life value system of a religion, the commitment to deities of a religion and the existence of the deities in question. The first question I'd call moral/ethical, the second venerative, and the third theistic. Each of these is in some respects independent, although of course it's probably difficult to venerate something which one doesn't believe exists.

I don't have major issues with a life partner having the first taken verbatim from the Abrahamistic religions. I don't even draw the line at the third, but I find the middle one incompatible with a commitment to me. I suppose to use Barnabas' language I hold "forsaking all others" to apply equally to men, women, goats, geese and gods.

[ 21. May 2012, 00:47: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
And, hypothetically, children?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
And, hypothetically, children?

If you mean the future fruit of my own loins as it were, then I've always seen them as a sort of very expensive, very time consuming joint DIY project. One of the key words being joint.

If you mean the existing children of a potential future spouse, then if she actually venerated her children then I don't think I'd get involved in the first place since she wouldn't be able or interested in the kind of relationship that I was.
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Since very small children are all-consuming, they tend to be practically venerated just in order to survive and thrive.

Well, at least you've learned something from all this: you seem to think that love is a limited resource and that you'd better get the lion's share in a relationship. And you are quite jealous, even to the extent of envying attention to "imaginary" people. Maybe you'll find someone who wants to be so possessed. They say there is someone for everyone.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
And, hypothetically, children?

If you mean the future fruit of my own loins as it were, then I've always seen them as a sort of very expensive, very time consuming joint DIY project. One of the key words being joint.

If you mean the existing children of a potential future spouse, then if she actually venerated her children then I don't think I'd get involved in the first place since she wouldn't be able or interested in the kind of relationship that I was.

The point being that, despite rhetoric to the contrary, children pretty much always come first. And when they don't, there's usually some abusive dynamic going on. So, whether your spouse is a believer or atheist, if you have children, at some point you're going to come 2nd. To be honest, a distant 2nd. Oh, we'll still play lip service to the "you're first in my heart" thing, but it's really just empty rhetoric.

Which, again, is only a problem if you view love as a zero-sum game. Your wife isn't loving you less, her heart is expanding to include a greater love for children (or deity). Attention & time, of course, are zero-sum, which is where compromise and negotiation come in. But love is not.

[ 21. May 2012, 15:55: Message edited by: cliffdweller ]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
Since very small children are all-consuming, they tend to be practically venerated just in order to survive and thrive.

Well, at least you've learned something from all this: you seem to think that love is a limited resource and that you'd better get the lion's share in a relationship. And you are quite jealous, even to the extent of envying attention to "imaginary" people. Maybe you'll find someone who wants to be so possessed. They say there is someone for everyone.

One addition, I want to be possessed to.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
The point being that, despite rhetoric to the contrary, children pretty much always come first. And when they don't, there's usually some abusive dynamic going on. So, whether your spouse is a believer or atheist, if you have children, at some point you're going to come 2nd. To be honest, a distant 2nd. Oh, we'll still play lip service to the "you're first in my heart" thing, but it's really just empty rhetoric.

Which, again, is only a problem if you view love as a zero-sum game. Your wife isn't loving you less, her heart is expanding to include a greater love for children (or deity). Attention & time, of course, are zero-sum, which is where compromise and negotiation come in. But love is not.

I'm interested now, would you give the same advice to someone who's wife was having an affair?
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
The point being that, despite rhetoric to the contrary, children pretty much always come first. And when they don't, there's usually some abusive dynamic going on. So, whether your spouse is a believer or atheist, if you have children, at some point you're going to come 2nd. To be honest, a distant 2nd. Oh, we'll still play lip service to the "you're first in my heart" thing, but it's really just empty rhetoric.

Which, again, is only a problem if you view love as a zero-sum game. Your wife isn't loving you less, her heart is expanding to include a greater love for children (or deity). Attention & time, of course, are zero-sum, which is where compromise and negotiation come in. But love is not.

I'm interested now, would you give the same advice to someone who's wife was having an affair?
No, I wouldn't. fwiw, I've been in that situation.

I'm not trying to lay out an intellectual rationale for why "loving children more than spouse" is ethically or morally right, although I think Lyda did a pretty good job of it. I'm simply stating the reality. It's the way things are. No doubt evolution conspired to make us this way, thus insuring the preservation of the species. For whatever reason, it's the way things are. So, whether you like it or not, whether it's the way you want things to be, if you want to have kids (and I'm hearing perhaps you do not-- which may be for the best), you best make your peace with it (or be content with romantic fictions).

I am suggesting that the priority of God over spouse is more similar to the priority of children over spouse than it is to the relationship of a lover to spouse.
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

I am suggesting that the priority of God over spouse is more similar to the priority of children over spouse than it is to the relationship of a lover to spouse.

You're welcome to suggest it. Indeed you're welcome to believe it. I just happen not to agree. Different strokes for different folks and all.

Actually, I was more eager to have children than my wife was. Certainly I wouldn't get involved in a relationship with someone I wasn't willing to raise children with.
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

I am suggesting that the priority of God over spouse is more similar to the priority of children over spouse than it is to the relationship of a lover to spouse.

You're welcome to suggest it. Indeed you're welcome to believe it. I just happen not to agree. Different strokes for different folks and all.

Actually, I was more eager to have children than my wife was. Certainly I wouldn't get involved in a relationship with someone I wasn't willing to raise children with.

Well, that changes things considerably then. Because I think if you do have children-- with your current spouse or another-- you are going to have to face this issue.

Setting aside the "love for deity" thing, how will you respond when your hypothetical spouse prioritizes children above you?

And (coming back to what's set aside), to put the shoe on another foot, why is that more acceptable than prioritizing a deity?
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:

Setting aside the "love for deity" thing, how will you respond when your hypothetical spouse prioritizes children above you?

And (coming back to what's set aside), to put the shoe on another foot, why is that more acceptable than prioritizing a deity?

The same basic reason it's more acceptable than prioritising a lover I suppose. It's symmetric, a joint endeavour. How will my hypothetical spouse respond when I prioritise the child above her?
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
E to the i pi:
quote:
How will my hypothetical spouse respond when I prioritise the child above her?
I imagine the way many parents do: with some shock at how thoroughly ten pounds of squall soaks up any stray love, time, and attention, and thoroughly messes with what you thought of as your life. [Biased]
 
Posted by E to the i pi (# 16762) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
I imagine the way many parents do: with some shock at how thoroughly ten pounds of squall soaks up any stray love, time, and attention, and thoroughly messes with what you thought of as your life. [Biased]

This is exactly why I'd like to raise kids, with a woman who respects me and I respect.

[ 21. May 2012, 19:29: Message edited by: E to the i pi ]
 
Posted by cliffdweller (# 13338) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by E to the i pi:
quote:
Originally posted by Lyda*Rose:
I imagine the way many parents do: with some shock at how thoroughly ten pounds of squall soaks up any stray love, time, and attention, and thoroughly messes with what you thought of as your life. [Biased]

This is exactly why I'd like to raise kids, with a woman who respects me and I respect.
Yes. And it seems as if that's something you don't have-- in either direction-- w/ your current spouse. Which is a shame. I disagree very much this loss of respect is the necessary outcome of your faith differences-- there's just far too much evidence to the contrary. Nonetheless, if nothing else, it's clear that is the case here, painful as it clearly is for you both.
 
Posted by Bartolomeo (# 8352) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mark Betts:
quote:
Originally posted by Bartolomeo:
I would define "intellectual atheism" as a personal conviction that belief in God (or multiple gods or some other higher power) is not only factually wrong but something that actively undermines the superior moral system that is purely a product of logic and reason....

Which begs the question, how does any sort of moral system (let alone one which is "superior") derive from logic and reason?

Books have been written on this from various points of view.

Ayn Rand's "The Fountainhead" and "Atlas Shrugged" approach this from similar angles. In essence she draws a system from two premises that she considers to require no proof: 1) that any system that is ethical must have the same rules of conduct for everyone and 2) people are entitled to the fruits of their own labor.

John Locke and many other liberal authors take a similar approach but are more outcome based and try to compensate for inequality of intellect, strength, opportunity, etc., by accident of genetics or station.

Both points of view are useful to consider, if for no other reason that they allow us to identify that core of uniquely Christian thought that does not overlap with ethics.
 


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