antishock8 wrote:Alter Idem wrote:Hi Cinepro, As an active, believing LDS woman, I can understand completely why this is a concern for both you and your wife. I really admire you for how you are supporting your wife's desire to raise your children in the church. You encourage harmony in the home by having family scripture study and family prayer and you attend with her. These are good things that can help your children develop moral values and help them to grow to be good and successful members of society.
That alone is a good reason to encourage church attendance, though I'm sure your wife wants more than that for her children. She wants them to develop testimonies; however, that is something that you as parents do not control. Your son may never develop a testimony; that will be up to him. But for now, as a 10 year old, he should be able to understand there are other reasons for participating in religious activities. You can explain to him that attending church, reading scriptures and praying are family activities that are important for family unity and that as a member of the family, he should participate.
You can use yourself as an example; You can explain to him that you also have doubts, yet you participate because you love your wife and this is important to her. A little guilt can be useful:) Let him know that it is very important to his mother that he participate with the family in the faith that you and your wife have chosen to raise your family in. Point out to him that there are some things we do for eachother because we love and support eachother and three hours on Sunday and a little time during the week is not too much to ask to help his mother feel that she is being a good parent and training her child. You can even point out D&C 68:25-28--that as LDS Parents, you believe you have a responsibility to teach and train him. When he is an adult, he can choose to leave the church, but as a child, he should allow his parents to fulfill the duties you feel are part of your responsibility in raising your family.
When he turns 12, I would not push him to receive the Priesthood, unless he has a desire to receive it and I would not push him to attend early morning Seminary later, if he doesn't want to. Of course, by that age, he might want to attend for social reasons. As long as he is willing to attend church with his family and will participate in family scripture and prayer, that's probably enough to ask of him, if he has no belief.
Anyway, I think the best thing your wife can do is pray for him and also pray for understanding of his particular situation and needs--hopefully the spirit will guide her to know how to help him and also grant her peace and comfort regarding this situation, so that you all can still enjoy a close and loving family relationship regardless of the direction he chooses to go when he is an adult.
Yeah? Because we all know that things will get really f*****g un-harmonious if the woman doesn't get her way on this issue. I get the message. Do what she wants or your life is going to be Hell.
Jesus. What a cult.
Goodness sakes, what a twit! (This isn't MADB, anitshock, and if you're going to trash my post with a rude one-liner, you're going to get a slap right back). And why you had to turn it into just one more chance to attack the church, I have no idea. My remarks were in general to all faiths-not just Mormonism, but apparently you couldn't read past "Mormon" and had to react in your typical knee jerk fashion.
I don't know, but I suspect I hit a nerve (as Wade pointed out). Sorry, but them's the breaks. When people get married, they tie themselves to the desires of another person. Whether it's where to live, how to spend vacations, how to spend money, or save it or what to do on a Friday night, that's part of being married. And some people don't figure out that if you consistently fight against or ignore the desires of you spouse, you'll find yourself in an unhappy marriage and if you keep it up, you'll find yourself divorced. That's life and you can think it's sucks, but it won't change it.
If a person does not want to be tied to someone else's desires, hopes, dreams, goals, then they absolutely should not get married. And anyone who would suggest to a person to ignore the feelings of their spouse because they don't share those feelings, is giving very bad advice which will only cause friction and misery.