antishock8 wrote:http://www.meridianmagazine.com/rescue/081210spouse.htmlDear Brother Barkdull,
I have recently become aware of your writings in regards to wayward children. Your messages are full of comfort and hope for parents. So far my children are active. My concern is my wife. After having some doubts about deep doctrinal issues and then learning things in church history that she did not know, she has completely turned from the Church. She no longer attends, has removed her temple garments, no longer pays tithing, drinks coffee (maybe more), and wants nothing to do with the Church.
Obviously this has been a severe blow to me and to the kids. I know there are many promises made by prophets about wayward children, but what about us who are concerned our spouse will not be our eternal companion? Is there any hope for us and them? What can I do to survive this trial and maybe even help bring her back? Honestly, it is hard to picture her ever gaining a testimony (again).
I think there are many people like me. Would you please write about this issue?
Husband of a Wayward Spouse
Seems reasonable. The spouse discovered the Mormon church isn't what it claimed to be, and decided she doesn't want anything to do with it. This is a normal process for a lot of people. Others attend a different church, find another path, or just go about their business.
What's is the Mormon's advice?Dear Husband of a Wayward Spouse:
In my opinion, the only pain that could approach that of a wayward child is the pain associated with a wayward spouse. There are so many emotions and expectations in marriage. We live in a day when the marriage and the family are under attack. We are often blindsided by the world. The only way that I know to repair or hold things together spiritually is to apply the remedy of personal sanctification. Every effort that we make to sanctify ourselves has a redeeming effect on the person for whom we are praying. That is not to say that the wayward person does not have agency. Your effort should not be to interrupt your wife's agency; rather it should be to ask God to place opportunities in her path to urge her to use her agency to choose otherwise.
Over the course of a marriage, spouses take turns carrying the weight of the relationship. Health problems, financial concerns, and other things will intrude on the relationship and cause one of the parties to weaken for a season. You might want to think of your wife's situation as having the flu. You certainly wouldn't insist that she attend church or carry her weight in the family during her sickness. You would tenderly care for her until she was well. It seems as though your wife has the spiritual flu. Only unconditional love and patience will help her to heal. Your loving example will help her, too.
For now, why not set aside the church issues and focus on strengthening the relationship? Court her, give her compliments, love her, validate her feelings without agreeing with erroneous ideas. Give her a safe place to be sick. Be a caring confidant; if the atmosphere is safe, she might begin to share her concerns with you. Be careful how you answer; explain your beliefs only when invited and without debate. Try to pick your battles. Your marriage is more important than her drinking coffee. If and when she reconsiders someday, it will be because you loved her and waited for her. I hope your marriage doesn't end, but if it does someday, let the decision be hers. The lie that she is living will likely drive her to the point of decision; either she will need to give it up or act on it.
Here's the last thing. I doubt that her issue is the Church. People don't casually discard their beliefs and covenants unless they are dealing with something deep-seated. Your wife seems to be trying excessively hard to go opposite the gospel, and she is using anti-Mormon literature as her rationale. I would guess that she has been struggling with other non-Church issues for some time. These issues have probably lain under the surface and gnawed at her testimony until she finally read something that tipped her over. If you can discover that other issue(s) and try to deal with it, the Church issues will probably take care of themselves. Don't debate Church history issues with you wife or spend your effort trying to research answers. Remember, that is not the issue. It is almost certainly something else.
I don't think you can get through this alone. I highly recommend that you, personally, talk to a marriage and family therapist. LDS Family Services is excellent. The best thing that could happen would be that your wife went with you. She needs to talk to a [LDS] counselor to get to the root causes of her feelings and behavior. Don't force this upon her; rather, set the example by going yourself. By all means, talk to your bishop. Beyond being a good man, he has special priesthood keys for this very situation. Your solution needs to be directed by the priesthood.
You sound like a faithful, determined man who loves his wife. You have the priesthood, which is the power to save people's lives. The more you learn about your priesthood, the more power you will infuse into your life. Of all the sanctifying things that you can do to increase priesthood power, the greatest of all is temple worship. Impressions will come in that holy setting. I pray that things work out for you.
Blessings,
LarryIf this isn't a cult, then I don't know what is.
First of all who the hell is Larry and what do I care about what he says? Meridian? Please.
Second, Larrry gives some fair advice for anyone who is having marital issues.
Did he counsel divorce? Did he say dump her and find a more faithful wife?
Religion is a high priority to any active believing LDS family. Of course if one stops believing while the other still does this causes distress.
There is not one damn thing that was cult like about this. He could have been a Born Again Christian advising an active Born Again Christian about dealing with a non believing spouse.
The only major issue I have is with the paragraph all in red. I agree that it is silly to attribute her losing he belief to some underlying issue or sin (he does not say that, he says issue) or whatever. People sometimes find things and decide not to believe.
Anyway, so some advice from some dude at meridian makes the Church a cult? Hardly.