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Can a Religious and Non religious relationship work?

Can a religious and non-religious relationship work?

  • Yes

    Votes: 10 29.4%
  • No

    Votes: 3 8.8%
  • It depends on the individuals involved

    Votes: 25 73.5%

  • Total voters
    34

Kenbushway

Captain
Captain
I am not trying to start a religious debate but I saw an interesting topic and thought it would be good to see if anyone had insight.
Question is the thread title, can a religious and non- religious relationship work whether it be marriage or just dating? I don't mean to open old wounds for anyone, but does anyone have experience and insight they are willing to share? Can it work, if so what is the secret to success? Does it depend on the individual?
 
Yes, it can work, depending on the religion. If it's a Buddhist and an atheist, that could work. A fundamentalist Christian and an anti-theist, that very likely wouldn't work, though there is still a chance that it could.
 
It depends on each person being able to be happy for the other person having beliefs that work for them and not desiring to change the other person.

It's not going to work if one person is stressed out that the other person is sucked in/believes nonsense. And it's not going to work if one person is stressed out that the other person is going to hell.

More fraught issues come up if you have children.
 
Just like any relationship, it CAN work if the two people want to make it work. I grew up in a household that only went to church on Christmas and Easter, and my wife grew up in a Catholic family.
After I proposed to her, I decided that I would support her and go to church with her (mainly because I had an uncle who just refused to go to church with my aunt, and he was a real dick about it. Obviously that marriage ended in divorce). Never once did she insist, or even suggest that I go with her.
I did convert to Catholicism in 1998, and have no issues with it.
 
Of course it can. Although sometimes it won't. The question really being asked here is simply, "Can two people with worldviews that differ in some way have a successful relationship?" And of course, that's not really a very helpful question, because it depends on how divergent those worldviews are, how strongly each maintains their worldview, how important it is to them that others share their perspectives on certain issues, etc, etc. I don't see how religion is different from any other major lifestyle preference or aspect of identity. Any prospective relationship, people will be judging how compatible they are and if they feel comfortable wrapping their life around the other's in intimate fashion.
 
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I'm sure it can, though I'm just as certain that it wouldn't work for me. I'm a little ashamed of that fact, actually. I have a lot of religious friends, whom I love and respect entirely, but I just think my worldview is too different from that of the religious to maintain a relationship. Maybe I'm wrong, but that's my feeling now.
 
my friends ex boyfriend started out normal then got increasingly hardcore religious. he didn't seem to realise that hell isn't a threat if you don't believe in it. luckily she told him to fuck off. i think he was arrested for possession of child porn later on. but he was a scumbag and not representative of religious people in general.

doesn't really help answer the question does it?
 
my friends ex boyfriend started out normal then got increasingly hardcore religious. he didn't seem to realise that hell isn't a threat if you don't believe in it. luckily she told him to fuck off. i think he was arrested for possession of child porn later on. but he was a scumbag and not representative of religious people in general.

doesn't really help answer the question does it?

I think its a good answer, you gave an example of how at first it may have been working fine but as one became self-ish in the relationship that is when it ended. So that tells us that when someone tries to force in these kind of relationships it could end bad.
 
I think it can work depending on the people involved. But you, the couple, have to discuss some big issues, should it become serious.
 
I'm sure it can, though I'm just as certain that it wouldn't work for me. I'm a little ashamed of that fact, actually. I have a lot of religious friends, whom I love and respect entirely, but I just think my worldview is too different from that of the religious to maintain a relationship. Maybe I'm wrong, but that's my feeling now.

My sentiments exactly. Of it is very possible that it could work; I just happen to know it would never work in MY particular case. My best pal is rather religious and we get along extremely well and it's never really even been an issue. But my worldview is too different from that of a religious person for me to really feel "secure" in a romantic relationship. My husband and I are both atheists and therefore tend to look at the world in the same way regarding many, many issues.
 
I can't speak to anyone else's experiences, but I could not be in a relationship with a non-Christian. There's no way I could see it working.

Besides, technically, it's literally against my religion!
 
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