| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
To make a long story short, I am begging
you to please provide some spiritual guidance in reference to my faith.
I am 29 years old and was born and raised a Catholic. I am legally married
and have three children. When I married, my husband agreed we would get
married through our church once his mother could be present (lived in another
country). She has since passed on and I waited some time to ask my
husband about getting the blessing through the church. He denied. Since
then, I have asked him, begged and prayed that he will change his mind,
but he told me this week he will never do it. He is Catholic, but
my belief is he is mad at God for things that have happened in his life.
He says he doesn’t believe in God and he wishes I could live his life
style.
I have been with him for a little over
seven years and I feel completely broken. I long for God! I am empty, sad,
drained, and completely desperate; not to mention how spiritually wounded
I feel. I need God in my life and I cannot go on like this. As a result
of our conversation this week, I asked him to do me a favor and leave the
house. I told him, if this is your true position, we need to separate.
Since then, he has been acting as though nothing has happened. He thinks
I will forget about it and carry on like I have for these past few years.
I have talked to two priests and one said
to keep praying and trust God. He will re-convert him and one day we will
have the blessing. He said my husband doesn’t beat me or abuse me so
I should just be patient. Another priest said to give it time. As a result,
I have become extremely confused and I feel like my life is up in the air,
terribly lost. I heard another priest the other day and he said to me,
to run the opposite direction when someone or something is keeping us from
God.
My question to you: Should I carry through
with the separation, knowing that he has verbally said he will never marry
me and doesn’t want any part of the Church?
If the case is waiting, how long is long
enough? I know it’s God’s timing, not mine, but what to do while waiting?
What can I do in the meantime for my spirituality, considering I cannot
participate in communion? What do I tell my children when they ask me why
I never go up for communion? Please help me, what does our church say about
a case like this? Thank you in advance and God bless you for all you do.
Sincerely,
Patience N. Carnat
Dear Patience,
I am publishing your entire letter because
it may do a lot of good. I found it heartbreaking. You will be in my prayers.
First let me give you the practical details. You have mentioned separation.
I’m not sure that’s the best idea. You have three children. Perhaps
at least for the time an “in house” separation would be for the best.
If you are not having relations with your husband and do not intend to
until you are married in church, there is nothing stopping you from making
a good confession and receiving Holy Communion. Perhaps this would be a
less drastic solution than an immediate and complete separation. There
is also something called “Sanatio in Radice” (“healing at the root,”
Code of Canon Law 1161 and following.)
It may apply. In certain circumstance any
invalid marriage can be validated without an actual ceremony. This is a
bit obscure and rarely done. Your parish priest would have to help you
pursue it. I am more concerned about the wider issues involved. You
have three children. What is the best thing for them? You have got to get
to some good Christian marriage counseling and family counseling. My suspicion
is that his refusal to allow you to be married according to your religious
beliefs, regardless of his convictions is a form of manipulation. He is
in control. I worry about what form this control might take in the future.
Marriage is not about who is in control. It is about two people who do
the best for one another and for the children God may see fit to give them.
It may seem that this is a new development in your relationship. I don’t
think so. This is the man you married. He was probably like this when you
married him in a civil ceremony. It just took a few years to become obvious.
As for your situation; I wish I had a time
machine. I would go back and tell you to think twice. That’s why I published
your whole, heart-breaking letter. Perhaps some young star-crossed
lovers will read it and think. There is a saying in the religious marriage
business. “He marries hoping that the little dear he married will never
change. She marries thinking ‘I can change him.’” My advice then
to those considering marriage is taken from the great American philosopher,
Forrest Gump; Marriage “...is like a box of chocolates. You never know
what your going to get.” There will be coconut, and heaven forefend there
will be that awful raspberry creme filling. Marriage is hard. It is a sacrifice.
I have just spent two week kvetching about the diocesan priesthood, I suppose,
were I married it would take four or five weeks to kvetch about married
life. The Christian life is sacrificial. Celibacy and marriage are both
sacrifices. The problem is that the world tries to tell you that celibacy
is a sacrifice and marriage is all strawberries and cream. At this point,
I can’t resist commenting on a side issue.
There is some famous priest from some tropical
country, Fr. Cutey, or some such, who was recently caught smooching a bikini
clad ingénue on a beach. Good Grief! For a week, one would have thought
that tragedy had ceased and the press was bored! So many empty-headed,
hair-helmet news reporters thought the incident called celibacy into question.
The poor fellow should be allowed to marry.
Fr. Cutey himself said that celibacy should
be optional. My thought about the incident was a bit different. Celibacy
isn’t the modern problem, chastity is. The air heads who tell us what
to think, be they elected or anointed, don’t want to do away with celibacy.
They want to do away with chastity. If Fr. Cutey were allowed to marry
because he has, well, “urges,” how many times should he be allowed
to marry in order to satisfy his natural “urges” if the object of his
“urges” puts on weight and develops an irritating facial tick? All
this from the progressive media that believes one should, in all fairness,
be able to marry one’s pet iguana.
Marriage is not about urges. Both celibacy
and marriage, in the Christian understanding, are about sacrifice. They
are both ways in which we are called to pour our lives out in love for
others. The beauty and oneness for which marriage is designed by God is,
as the marriage blessing says “the one blessing not lost in original
sin, nor washed away in the waters of the flood.” Still, because of that
sin of our first parents, the marriage bed has also become an altar for
sacrifice. My heart breaks for your pain at the rejection by a man who
you so love. It breaks for the pain that this may cause your children.
My heart also fills with rage for those corrupt teachers who let you think
that it was okay to marry civilly and then get around to the real thing.
It was not okay. It was a sin. I know this sounds harsh. What I am about
to say will sound even more harsh, but remember, you and I are in the same
boat, we are both sinners saved by grace.
SIN HAS INEVITABLE CONSEQUENCES!
I live everyday with the consequences of
my sins. So do you. This is not about how you can feel better. It is about
how, at this point in your life, you can do the right thing, the right
thing for yourself and your eternal salvation, the right thing for your
children, and the right thing for this sad man who didn’t understand
what Jesus said, “For this a man leaves his mother and father and clings
to his wife and the two become one flesh.” When he married you
civilly he had no intention of leaving his mother. His mother has now left
him, but he still won’t leave her. So my advice is, do what’s right.
I would recommend that you two live as brother and sister for the time
being, until you can get some good counseling. This would enable you to
go to confession and return to what we ancients used to call “a state
of grace.” This would allow you to receive Communion. If he persists
in refusing to recognize a serious problem, perhaps the situation has to
change. I worry that he may become more overtly abusive with the passage
of time. It may take years. But what are years when you think of the lives
of three children and their immortal souls? Eternity is very, very long.
Rev. Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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Should I leave
him or not? |
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