And to be fair, from the Catholic perspective, the Church really discourages them anyways. Not that they can't happen, nor should they never happen, but there is no doubt it can be very hard on the marriage and children.
I'm so sorry this happened to you. I promise its a grave sin in the catholic church.Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
Hmm....We didn't have that experience whatsoever. In fact before we were married I met with my former baptist minister and then the Catholic priest. Both told us verbatim the exact thing we should do when considering our marriage....read our bible and pray. I became Catholic after about 8 years of discerning and was always welcomed by the Church and even encouraged by my former youth minister. To me, that was God speaking to us in more than one way.The BQ Jock said:
And to be fair, from the Catholic perspective, the Church really discourages them anyways. Not that they can't happen, nor should they never happen, but there is no doubt it can be very hard on the marriage and children.
Howdy Dammit said:Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
What in the world does Catholicism have to do with cheating?
Captain Pablo said:Howdy Dammit said:Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
What in the world does Catholicism have to do with cheating?
Yeah I'm wondering that as well
747Ag said:Captain Pablo said:Howdy Dammit said:Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
What in the world does Catholicism have to do with cheating?
Yeah I'm wondering that as well
Likely interactions with Catholics here, on F16, and elsewhere given he's not a formal Catholic and not terribly into orthodox Catholicism.
Ah yes, nothing. I was answering the other question about him no longer entertaining the idea of dating a Catholic. Bad reading comprehension. My bad.Captain Pablo said:747Ag said:Captain Pablo said:Howdy Dammit said:Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
What in the world does Catholicism have to do with cheating?
Yeah I'm wondering that as well
Likely interactions with Catholics here, on F16, and elsewhere given he's not a formal Catholic and not terribly into orthodox Catholicism.
But what does that have to do with a cheating wife who happens to be Catholic? What does Catholicism have to do with cheating? How is Catholicism responsible?
BluHorseShu said:Hmm....We didn't have that experience whatsoever. In fact before we were married I met with my former baptist minister and then the Catholic priest. Both told us verbatim the exact thing we should do when considering our marriage....read our bible and pray. I became Catholic after about 8 years of discerning and was always welcomed by the Church and even encouraged by my former youth minister. To me, that was God speaking to us in more than one way.The BQ Jock said:
And to be fair, from the Catholic perspective, the Church really discourages them anyways. Not that they can't happen, nor should they never happen, but there is no doubt it can be very hard on the marriage and children.
My caveat, however, is that we were both focused on the Lord and kept and open mind. We didn't draw a line in the sand and say 'I am stuck in my interpretation of my Christian faith and not open to what the Lord may be showing me'. When you are close minded, it will be difficult....but likely will all other things not related to faith.
Says all christians are the same.BrazosDog02 said:
I wouldn't marry an atheist. But otherwise, all Christians are the same to me. You have to be on the same page. I'm Methodist and married a Catholic, we lived together for a few years, we got married outside the church, and I have never had intentions to convert. The kids are confirmed Catholics and now none of us go to church at all.
But, we are all on the same page about religion and life so it works.
Marrying a hard core Catholic would be a miserable experience for me, we'd have very little in the way of beliefs, and neither would compliment the other, so I think in the OP, the two people are just not compatible. I wouldn't get bent out of shape over it. A life of mismatch is not the way to go.
Well said here.NASAg03 said:
We both try to be humble and willing to reconsider our belief and traditions in light of scripture, and neither of us think any church is 100% correct or perfect.
I mean, what do you even believe about Christianity to tell your kids, 'Hey go dabble with demons as part of your own spiritual journey?' This is page one stuff about the state of this world, demonic forces who are liars and hate God, and what even Jesus accomplished and why.BrazosDog02 said:
I have no doubt you're a better Christian than I am. In fact, at my age, you may well be right. I may not be Christian anymore. At one time I considered myself a good Christian, but as I got older, saw how the world worked, read threads like this one, went to church….the further I got away. I haven't given it much thought until you mentioned it.
Either way, We're pretty proud of having given several faiths a try after having been raised in them and finally saying "this is messed up" and then doing what we need to do to live our lives how we see best fit. Figuring out how to make that work isn't easy and it's clearly something many struggle with and the purpose of this thread as I perceived it. Your post highlights exactly the kind of mindset prevalent in modern religion that frustrates us.
As for the kids being unmoored…..untethered, unbound, free to navigate their own spiritual journey, well, yessir, I do believe we are in complete agreement there as well.
one MEEN Ag said:
If baptism and communion are just symbols - why do them? What difference does it make?
Salvation is no way a one and done prayer. Again, many churches will lead you to believe this by leading everyone in the sinner's prayer and leaving it at that.Quote:
If salvation is one and done salvic prayer - why repent and change your life?
The pastors, elders, deacons and members must all fight for doctrinal integrity. We are all part of the body and must work together. Church discipline is more or less non existent in most protestant churches.Quote:
If each church can be autonomous - how does it receive correction?
Revelation 3:14-16 -totally agree. Don't be like the Laodiceans.Quote:
BrazosDog has found lukewarm expressions of protestantism and, ironically, spit them out of his mouth.
right. the problem was not that he married a Catholic, it's that he married a *****.Howdy Dammit said:Ol_Ag_02 said:
As someone who was married to a Catholic girl for 20 years I would not advise it. Now that we're getting a divorce because of her propensity to have sex with her co-workers I will immediately exclude any Catholic girl from the dating pool.
I'll never set foot in a Catholic Church again and frankly that's a good thing for me. It's really a bad idea. Yes we're both Christians but it's about as far apart as you can get. Non-Catholics should not marry Catholics.
What in the world does Catholicism have to do with cheating?
Jack Boyett said:
The only thing that really bugs me about Catholics is what RAB just said. "mixed faith marriage". I was just reading Butkkers speech, he talks about his wife converting to the faith. Was she Hindu or something? It's not conversion. It's a slight variation of the exact same belief system. Don't yall Catholics think it's just a little bit arrogant when you word it this way?
I find the concept and beliefs of protestantism horrifying at its very core.CrackerJackAg said:Jack Boyett said:
The only thing that really bugs me about Catholics is what RAB just said. "mixed faith marriage". I was just reading Butkkers speech, he talks about his wife converting to the faith. Was she Hindu or something? It's not conversion. It's a slight variation of the exact same belief system. Don't yall Catholics think it's just a little bit arrogant when you word it this way?
Don't get an orthodox dude started. We think Roman Catholics and Protestants are more similar than different. Catholic is very tolerable though and we already kind of get where they are going.
American Protestantism went to wacky town. Most just don't know it because they grew up with it and they don't know any better or have taken the time to research anything.
All of this coming from a former protestant. I find the concept and beliefs of protestantism horrifying at its very core.
My first post was not as charitable as it should have been. So my apologies.BrazosDog02 said:
I'm going to digest this post a bit and go through the links. I appreciate the time you spent putting it together and I appreciate willingness to teach and understanding of my shallow and misguided opinion. I know I am incredibly difficult to bring over to things I've already decided on. I will fully admit that if Jesus showed up today, on my doorstep, told me who he was, healed my ailments, and forgave me of everything bad I'd ever done.....I'd still have a part of me that says "well, maybe this is a big coincidence." And that's why sometimes I ask myself, why doesnt jesus just come back now? Is this world not bad enough to warrant it? If believing in Christ and following Christ is the answer, he can bring that about simply by showing up, wouldn't that just expedite this whole peace thing? It's tough to brush off a guy who can cure cancer and make a quadriplegic walk again. Why not just come back and fix it now?