|
Your
God, My God, and Our God:
Inter-Religious Marriage
It is often the religious symbolism and overtones that give marriage its
meaning. But, what happens in a
marriage when those symbols and meanings come from more than one religious
tradition?
Actually,
I want to talk here about two types of inter-religious marriages.
First is the literal inter-religious marriage in which two persons
from different religions are married.
An inter-religious marriage, for example, might involve persons from
Buddhism and Christianity. Second,
though often referred to as “inter-religious,” is the inter-denominational
marriage—two persons from two different traditions of the same religion. Catholics and Methodists are both Christians, but come from
vastly different traditions within Christianity. Nonetheless, the commonality of basic doctrine is usually
much more similar in inter-denominational relationships.
From
my ministry as a hospital chaplain and pastoral counselor, I’ve had many
experiences of working with couples entering into both inter-religious and
inter-denominational marriages. Here
are some of the highlights of what I’ve learned from those experiences—as
well as from my own marriage.
A good marriage has
more to do with commitment than compatibility.
The question for marrying couples is not necessarily, “How much alike
are we?” Rather, it is often, “How
much energy are we willing to give to making this relationship work?” For me, the most important spiritual issue in religion has to
do with how one’s spirituality serves as a support and strength for
relationships. Religious faith
offers us a belief in something greater than ourselves—a divine object of
commitment that goes far beyond marriage itself.
Such spiritual foundations transcend the hard times and enrich the good
times. In planning a wedding it
might be good to consider how the ceremony expresses this commitment.
There is no way to
measure difference. Some of the
most difficult adjustments I’ve seen persons struggle with have arisen from
what appeared to be the most minute of differences.
Conversely, persons coming from the greatest differences may have the
easiest time coping with those differences.
It seems that any sense of difference can be amplified during a wedding.
Wedding ceremonies don’t have to be just about the ways two people are
alike; differences are important, too.
People change over
time. The level of religiosity of a person on their wedding day
may not predict where they will be years from now.
Significant events in life have a way of activating latent feelings and
values. A person for whom religious
devotion is a low priority may regain a sense of its importance when a child is
born. The religious affiliation of
children can stir long forgotten loyalties and convictions.
Other life passages--such as the death of a loved one—may trigger
similar deepenings of spirituality.
Diversity can be a
strength; and a taxing stress. Incorporating
the variety of religious traditions and values in family life can bring a
richness to significant occasions as well as everyday circumstances.
Children who grow up in a home that is religiously diverse, and
respectful, may learn much of tolerance and find that their own spiritual lives
are enhanced by this diversity of God images.
Families, as we all
know, are seldom ideal. Differences
in religious faith, like any other difference of opinion, can result in tension
and conflict. Rather than an
enriching of spiritual growth, such conflict may dampen it, as things religious
are associated with painful tensions. Furthermore,
children are seldom able to sort out the complexities of religious issues, and
may conclude that religion is a negative influence rather than a positive aspect
of life.
In the final analysis,
relationships are less about who is right or wrong, and more about how we serve
one another with our own uniqueness and gifts.
The beginnings of a truly healthy religious faith is born in the context
of this kind of loving relationship.
|
Reflection:
-
For what aspects of your
relationship do you desire God’s blessing the most?
-
In what ways is your own
life enriched by the faith of your partner?
-
The differences you feel
most keenly . . . in what ways are they possible areas of growth for you?
-
At which times do you
feel most critical of your partner’s beliefs?
Can you say, then, that the issue is really a religious one—or is it an
aspect of the relationship that has yet to mature?
-
As a couple, who are
some individuals that you feel most comfortable with when the topic is
spirituality?
|
---
This article written and copyrighted by Mark S. Jones Program Director , at Faithnet, Inc..---
|