Believer and Unbeliver Marriage
Hello! I just recently found out from a friend that the reason why my marriage is not working out is because my husband and I are not "equally yoked." Doing research on this in the Bible, it says for a woman/man not to marry an unbeliever. I'm the believer, my husband is not, but it is not his fault. His parents did not make a spiritual environment in their house for him. He did not grow up learning about God and did not go to Church. I think with a little time I can teach him to become a Believer. Should I give him that chance knowing that I'm taking a chance that my marriage will suffer if he does not become the Believer. What should I do. Before I married my husband I did not know that he was an unbeliever. Should I divorce, should I help him in believing the Word of God? Am I living in Sin?
Believer wed to unbeliever
Quote:
Originally Posted by CFarrish822
Hello! I just recently found out from a friend that the reason why my marriage is not working out is because my husband and I are not "equally yoked." Doing research on this in the Bible, it says for a woman/man not to marry an unbeliever. I'm the believer, my husband is not, but it is not his fault. His parents did not make a spiritual environment in their house for him. He did not grow up learning about God and did not go to Church. I think with a little time I can teach him to become a Believer. Should I give him that chance knowing that I'm taking a chance that my marriage will suffer if he does not become the Believer. What should I do. Before I married my husband I did not know that he was an unbeliever. Should I divorce, should I help him in believing the Word of God? Am I living in Sin?
Of course you are not living in sin. You are living in legal wedlock with the man you fell in love with. You must have known about the differences between your faiths when you married him, so why should it suddenly become an issue? If as you say, you didn't know he was anunbeliever before the wedding ceremony, then you didn't know him well enough to marry him. But you DID marry him, and it is your Christian duty to do what you can to make your marriage work. Don't put all the responsibility onto your husband's shoulders. That is neither honest or fair.
As long as each of you respect the position of the other, then your marriage will work, provided that you are both mature enough to make it work.
If you have to be told by "a friend" the reason for your troubles in marriage, then perhaps you married too young and with too little experience of life and problem solving.
Ge trid of your "friend" and ask your husband what he sees as the major difficulties you have, and then sit down and work out ways to resolve them. Better still, see a marriage guidance counsellor together, and stay with it.
Perhaps you are seeking a way out of this marriage, in which case you should be Christian enough to say so. If not, you should be Christian enough to work at it.
Marriage is a serious business and it requires commitment at a mature level from both partners. One partner cannot tell the other that they will stay if he does this or that. That is blackmail. It's a dirty word, but it's a dirtier action.
Love your husband, work out your problems like millions of other couples do, and send your friend as far away as possible. You might need to attend a different church. One that has more human understanding and can be of more help to you.
I wish you and your husband all the best.
MORGANITE