Akivah
Well-Known Member
interesting.
so would you say that you follow your religious faith to a T? by the book, if you will?
No, but then neither does she. People can share the same basic philosophy without being identical on every facet.
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interesting.
so would you say that you follow your religious faith to a T? by the book, if you will?
how's that going?
how's it been throughout?
We met when I was 18 and she was 19. I'm 42 in a couple of weeks.and how long has it been?
Don't mind at all.if you don't mind.
would you marry someone of a different faith as yours?
I think I could be okay with someone who believes differently from me if that's all it was, but it was her insistence that I should become Catholic myself (while also refusing to answer the difficult questions that stood in the way of me becoming Catholic) and disagreements over how we should raise any kids (which, luckily, we didn't have) that really created a rift.
I think I would be okay with different beliefs as long as there was mutual respect. Unfortunately, disrespect of atheistic points of view seems to be a core tenet of many religions.
Referring to the raising of your possible kids. She wanted to train them in religion, you didn't. How is mutual respect possible when two seperate courses of action are impossible to carry out together?
I would not, and did not....
I am part of a chain of tradition that stretches back millennia, and which I have a responsibility to ensure stretches forward as well.
Yesterday was our 39th anniversary.
Can she cook?
Yes.
But I'm already married, and can't get married a second time.
I agree Tumah. A conversion should be done only if the person themselves want it. Doing it for a spouse, isn't a conversion of your own heart.