charity wrote:I think you could change the circumstances and come up with what parents in bitter disputes do all the time. I have seen non-LDs couples do it with all kinds of situations. Individuals who have been hurt and betrayed often fall over the edge like that.
But I think the spouse who is leaving the faith bears a lot of responsiblity in how that happens.
I have a daughter, married in the temple, whose husband has left the Church. They have a strong and happy marriage. The husband remained respectful and supportive of her continued faith. They have family home evening, home teachers, he goes to Church to hear the kids speak or perform, does not complain about her attending the temple or doing her callings. He does not try to convince the children to leave the Church.
I also know a family that has broken up, the couple divorced, the dad with Wednesday night and every other weekend with a child. The husband decided the Church wasn't true, constantly harangued his wife over how stupid she was to stay with it, would complain at any effort she made in a church calling, would not allow home teachers, would not allow her to have family home evening.
It isn't about whether a person is a member of the Church or not. It is about respecting and loving your spouse and wanting them to be happy.
I have to take the opportunity to post that I agree with Charity here (shocking!). I've had a little experience to work with interfaith couples, and the last line Charity wrote is absolutely the key --
both ways.
When one in a relationship has the attitude that they will "hang in there" while the other works through their "problems," and that they are waiting for the other to change their beliefs, there is no true intimacy possible. The flame dies.
For intimacy to flourish, there must be absolute unconditional love, and they must be able to look the other in the eye and say "I love you
as you are," and really mean it! That is possible with interfaith couples, but a challenge given the teaching that one must be married to a faithful, card-carrying member to get to the best heaven....
When a person can focus on the attitude of "my karma ran over my dogma," it can be done, but only then.