liz3564 wrote:Stormy's thread, "The Cost of Leaving", really struck a chord with me. Why is leaving the Church such a dealbreaker in a marriage situation if all of the other issues which make the marriage worthwhile are still in place?
My guess based on my own experience: perfectly happy marriages that break up
only because one partner loses faith in the LDS church are rare. Instead, couples use interfaith differences as an excuse to not have to work on marital problems that have nothing to do with faith. The stress fractures in the marriage were probably there long before the loss of faith.
liz3564 wrote:I am also curious about posters' observations about whether it is more typical for the husband to want out of the marriage if the wife is leaving the Church, or is it more typical for the wife to want out of thee marriage if the husband is leaving the Church?
Personally, I've known far more cases of the husband losing faith while the wife remains a believer, and statistically, that makes sense. Higher numbers of men identify as atheist or agnostic, higher numbers of women are church-goers, and in American Christian denominations specifically (Mormonism included), the number of women in the pews is higher than the number of men. So the latter situation is more likely for that reason alone.
I also think that the church's discriminatory priesthood practices makes this situation harder on the believing LDS woman whose husband has left. If a believing LDS man's wife leaves the church, he still has the priesthood in his home---and while he may mourn the loss of her faith, secretly, he's probably grateful that his wife wears sexy underwear now. The believing LDS woman has to get used to a life of calling on home teachers and male relatives to baptize her children and give blessings, and has to accept that her home is now presided over by an apostate. She's still wearing underwear that turns the hottest body to frump every night while DH is wearing ordinary men's boxers and briefs. It's pretty natural for that to take a toll on the marriage.