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24 answers

Yes, unless they are both too lukewarm to care.

2007-01-08 18:56:45 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Ideally if there is an understanding and respect between the couple there should be no problem. You marry a person and not his religion. Now if the persom you marry is a religious fanatic then there shall be a problem. Isn't love the greatest religion of all. If your love to each other is true then your respective religions should never be a problem. Always respect the other person's religion and his sentiments and you will get respect in return.

2007-01-08 18:56:06 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Take it from both my personal and vicarious experiences, different religions can cause more tension, heartache, and frustration than about any other problem in any relationship. An example: My friend was supposedly happily married to a girl of the same religion. He was stupid, however, and was caught in bed with someone else twice - believe it or not. In each instance he begged for forgiveness, and it was granted because she really, really loved him for some reason. They somehow managed to straighten things out, and things seemingly went well for several years after that. It was only after he renounced his membership in their commonly shared religion that she said enough was enough - she could apparently understand his wandering libido, but not his wandering spiritual beliefs. They were divorced within three months.
And that is only one example; I have many. Not only is religion the major cause of war on our little planet, it doesn't help perpetuate relationships if the people involved don't see eye to eye on such things, either.

2007-01-08 19:14:47 · answer #3 · answered by Kesokram 4 · 0 1

I personally have limited experience, but from what I have, it won't be a problem until you decide to start a family. I think the important thing to lay out now before any thoughts about marriage is how both parties decide to raise their children. Equally divide the religion, or favor one over the other. It's going to be tough to talk about but it is imperative to do it before the marriage. My wife and I have different religions, (okay, I don't really have one.) but she's not keen on imposing hers and I'm not that anxious about disproving hers, so we get along fine on that.

But talk about it now, in detail. It may avoid a lot more havoc later on.

2007-01-08 18:55:28 · answer #4 · answered by diegomcnamara 3 · 0 0

YES. The Bible says do not be unequally yoked. In the NT there are only 2 races (saved and unsaved). A person who is alive in Christ has no business marrying someone dead to Christ.
When you are dating and think you are in love, you are usually in the process of a lot of changes in your life. Many people get married while they are still in transition (some are not Christians - as in personal relationship with Christ - but only in name - my parents were Christian, i've gone to church at least twice a year since i was born). They think something will not matter, but if they encounter the Christ they profess in a deeper way, they come to find out later it does matter. The unbeliever may fight their desire to put Christ first, not realizing that in serving Christ they should become a better spouse, loving a Christ loved, and submitting as He submitted.

2007-01-08 19:25:27 · answer #5 · answered by Bre 3 · 0 0

This is purely dependent upon the two religions in question, as well as the beliefs & customs of those religions & how they interact with each other. For religions like Hinduism, Islam, & the Baha'i Faith, intermarriage with other religions is not tolerated - not because of intolerance but as a method of upholding one's faith, as marriage with someone of a different religion can severely impact your own beliefs, sometimes even change them completely. It is a matter of protecting the follower from heresy & evil.

Other religions - Buddhism, most Christian sects, Wicca, etc - are not real big on forcibly protecting you from heresy & instead believe that it is possible for you to make the decision for yourself & sufficiently protect yourself.

I am a syncretist (meaning that i pull different parts of various religions that i believe in & accept & fuse them together to create my own personal system of beliefs) & so this may not be the opinion of most but I study religion thoroughly & intermarriage is forbidden for the protection of the believer in most cases.

2007-01-08 18:59:43 · answer #6 · answered by monica_crss 2 · 0 0

generally no. unless the party member's religion explicitly states that no such thing should ever happen and if the practitioner is a devout practitioner.

afterwards if no technical boundaries separate you, you will have to look at how willing the couple will be to get the marriage going. will you be able to deal with each other's practices? set parameters as early as now. this leads to children, what religion should they practice, how they should be raised, catholic school? will you also be able to deal with your partner's friends who practice a different religion to be constantly griping about you?

in the end, love is all it takes. if you really love each other, it will work out. that's a romantic way of looking at it :D

2007-01-08 18:58:06 · answer #7 · answered by masterscribe888 2 · 0 0

Yes, especially if they have children together. Before having kids, the couple would definitely need to figure out how they would raise their children in regards to religion. I'm sure they could settle their differences, but there will definitely be some problems.

2007-01-08 18:53:21 · answer #8 · answered by i luv teh fishes 7 · 0 0

It depends on your understanding with the other partner. If you have a good understanding then you can solve many of the problems by both of you. Study about each other's culture and religion and accept one which is good for both of you and your children.

2007-01-08 18:59:48 · answer #9 · answered by sl_mgr 1 · 0 0

as long as that's barely you 2, there should not be any subject. in case you are able to settle on your companion having a diverse faith, each and every thing's advantageous... in case you had a topic with it, you does not even attain the state of thinking to marry... yet you the two could desire to agree upon the thank you to handle/advance your expected toddlers beforehand. once you start up discussing this concern after a baby being born, it ought to spell doom on your courting - with the harmless baby maximum in all hazard suffering the main...

2016-11-27 22:10:35 · answer #10 · answered by koltz 4 · 0 0

Of course it's a problem...unless one spouse doesn't really care at all about their own particular religion, which would mean they are not a follower of any religion to begin with.

2007-01-08 18:57:15 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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