Topic: married someone out of your religion | |
---|---|
i dont think it should be a problem to married someone with a different religion. i need a lady from Suriname and am wondering if its hard to find one that will talk to me even if our religious beliefs are different.
|
|
|
|
Yeah well throw a Christian woman and a Muslim man into a marriage and you will be able to sell popcorn to the crowd listening to the fights outside that house
|
|
|
|
i dont think it should be a problem to married someone with a different religion. i need a lady from Suriname and am wondering if its hard to find one that will talk to me even if our religious beliefs are different. good luck. I think it really depends upon how rigidly or extreme their religious beliefs are and whether they are more founded in tradition or 'righteousness' I have a christian cousin who has been in a LTR with a muslim and they both respect and love each other, they share values in terms of being good to others and they work well. But I feel it would be difficult for the deeply devout due to the 'unequal yoke' and if kids ever come into the picture, agreeing upon how to raise them. I personally would choose a fellow Christian, because I have kids and a way I wish to raise them, so being 'equally yoked' is a thing for me. But like I said, everyone is different, and each person in a religion has their own set of priorities and standards when it comes to a mate. |
|
|
|
marrying someone outside of your religion can work if you live in a free society such as America, Canada, the UK, Australia,NZ where their societies are plural.
Marrying someone outside of your religion and living in a society that isn't plural isn't a good idea for obvious reasons. |
|
|
|
Religion is a personal choice. It's not always set in stone what are religion is or what were born with. Our beliefs change as we get older cause we change. Marriage doesn't change us. You love your partner as a whole package.
|
|
|