Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
Another divorce question
- Josh
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Re: Another divorce question
Well. I can tell you what I’ve seen in CA circles: about half the time. The family sides with family and finds endless excuses to tolerate their adulterous son or daughter.ABC 123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:34 am Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
About half the time, they recognise their child has fallen into sin.
In our own church, church leadership including impartial “outside” leaders get involved in these cases and adjudicate where fault lies, and excommunicate the guilty party. Infidelity is the most common reason, or else other forms of gross immorality. Sometimes both parties are expelled.
Some families have an attitude of always protect their own and then get upset with the church for doing this. They will actually complain their son or daughter got expelled for adultery and blame the poor wife or husband for not loving or pleasing their spouse enough. In extreme cases, the whole family leaves the church over it - and will go to an evangelical church with a sob story of how a “cult” forced them to leave, but conveniently leave out the blatant affairs their son was having, or visits to strip clubs and seedy truck stop establishments.
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- steve-in-kville
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Re: Another divorce question
Not to hijack your thread, and maybe this should be a thread of its own, but what if a child came out as being gay? What then? How should a parent react?
(must have double posted with Josh )
(must have double posted with Josh )
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- Josh
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Re: Another divorce question
The same way as if my child decided to “come out” as a fornicator.steve-in-kville wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:48 am Not to hijack your thread, and maybe this should be a thread of its own, but what if a child came out as being gay? What then? How should a parent react?
(must have double posted with Josh )
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Re: Another divorce question
I can see your point.Josh wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:50 amThe same way as if my child decided to “come out” as a fornicator.steve-in-kville wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:48 am Not to hijack your thread, and maybe this should be a thread of its own, but what if a child came out as being gay? What then? How should a parent react?
(must have double posted with Josh )
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Re: Another divorce question
We have a lady working for us who has an interesting story. She grew up in a broken home with no Christian influence. When she was in her late teens, she started dating a young man who grew up in an Anabaptist church but never joined. He brought her with him to his parent's church and she joined the church. They got engaged but she ended the relationship when she realized that he was not living for the Lord. The young man continued on in his adulterous ways, and she continued on in her walk with God. His parents and siblings and the church have embraced her the last 20 years as part of the family of God.
When I heard her story, it reminded me of the verses about some people being cut off in order that others could be grafted in.
When I heard her story, it reminded me of the verses about some people being cut off in order that others could be grafted in.
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Re: Another divorce question
In most cultures, when you marry someone, you also marry their whole family, in a sense. That "in-law" is not a distant person, they are your child. When one of your children hurts another one of your children, you protect and nurture the one who was hurt, offer them comfort and a place to heal. And you scold the one who did the hurting.ABC 123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:34 am Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
1 x
Re: Another divorce question
For the record, this is how I would view it. A situation I know of has the family defending the adulterer simply because he is the natural born child.Praxis+Theodicy wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2024 5:21 pmIn most cultures, when you marry someone, you also marry their whole family, in a sense. That "in-law" is not a distant person, they are your child. When one of your children hurts another one of your children, you protect and nurture the one who was hurt, offer them comfort and a place to heal. And you scold the one who did the hurting.ABC 123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:34 am Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
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Re: Another divorce question
Who says you have to take sides?ABC 123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:34 am Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
Especially if there are children involved.
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Re: Another divorce question
Yep… seen the same thing.ABC 123 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2024 5:26 pmFor the record, this is how I would view it. A situation I know of has the family defending the adulterer simply because he is the natural born child.Praxis+Theodicy wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2024 5:21 pmIn most cultures, when you marry someone, you also marry their whole family, in a sense. That "in-law" is not a distant person, they are your child. When one of your children hurts another one of your children, you protect and nurture the one who was hurt, offer them comfort and a place to heal. And you scold the one who did the hurting.ABC 123 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 8:34 am Thinking about this due to several situations I am aware of...
If you are a CA and your adult son or daughter lost his/her way and divorced (their spouse), what would your response be? The world says to side with your own child and let the in-law go.
What do you think? In-law is devastated but a faithful Christian. Your own child is an adulterer.
What reasons do they possibly have to justify adultery?
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