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Divergent financial views with yours spouse?

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  • #31
    Originally posted by dawnwes View Post
    Lying to who? The priest? His prospective wife?
    Priest, fiancé is aware and is just happy my bro is going along with it.

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    • #32
      I don't see that there should be any reason to lie to the priest in pre-marital sessions. Isn't the biggest part of the program taking a huge inventory on psychological issues, general & specific values (including money related matters!), expectations, and hopes so that you can flush out any potential sore spots ahead of time? And then meeting with long-married couples and other engaged couples? I wouldn't think there is need to lie about any faith related matters, in fact, that would be opposed to the goals of pre-marital counseling.

      I know a woman who was thrilled with the premarital counseling she and her husband got at a church. Just really tickled about it. She was not a member of the church. I don't remember what her husband's thoughts about it were, but he is really low-key, so in contrast to her, his attitude didn't make a lasting impression on me.
      "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

      "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

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      • #33
        Originally posted by AJ444 View Post
        Priest, fiancé is aware and is just happy my bro is going along with it.
        So is he lying and saying he is a Catholic? Saying he believes in God, what?

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        • #34
          Originally posted by dawnwes View Post
          So is he lying and saying he is a Catholic? Saying he believes in God, what?
          Well, he is an Evil, Evil, Baby-Eating Satanist (that's the same as atheist, right? ), so a little lying won't damn him to Perdition any more than he already is.

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          • #35
            Originally posted by Joan.of.the.Arch View Post
            I don't see that there should be any reason to lie to the priest in pre-marital sessions. Isn't the biggest part of the program taking a huge inventory on psychological issues, general & specific values (including money related matters!), expectations, and hopes so that you can flush out any potential sore spots ahead of time? And then meeting with long-married couples and other engaged couples? I wouldn't think there is need to lie about any faith related matters, in fact, that would be opposed to the goals of pre-marital counseling.

            I know a woman who was thrilled with the premarital counseling she and her husband got at a church. Just really tickled about it. She was not a member of the church. I don't remember what her husband's thoughts about it were, but he is really low-key, so in contrast to her, his attitude didn't make a lasting impression on me.
            My view is that it is more about the $ and locking up future members, if I deemed counseling necessary I would seek a secular option with no donation pressure.

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            • #36
              Originally posted by dawnwes View Post
              So is he lying and saying he is a Catholic? Saying he believes in God, what?
              When he was asked what he believed he said he was "raised Methodist", which is actually a response I used to use. Not a lie per se but definitely an omission of fact.

              I believe this is heading into a religious discussion which I don't believe what the OP intended so I won't answer in any more detail on this thread. If you'd like to ask anything further via PM please feel free to send me one.

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