So I have a concern that hopefully those of you who got married Catholic can help me address.
My fiance and I are Catholic. He was born and raised Catholic but I did not come into the church until I was 20 (I'm 22 now) so I'm new to this in a lot of ways. I went to a Catholic high school but I never paid any attention to the religion. My family is not practicing. Not that it's a bad thing but I just need to "set the stage" so to speak.
We are graduating this May (my fiance and I) and we are looking for apartments. We will be getting married August of 2013 which is a little over a year away. We have been looking to get an apartment together since it does not make sense for us to pay rent seperately given that we share the same pool of finances.
My mom and dad have been really supportive--they're pretty excited actually. We've been looking at some nice apartments near work and my parents are scrounging around for left over things in their house that we can put in the new apartment (furniture, silverware, appliances, etc.)
His parents tell me that the Catholic church will not marry you if you're cohabitating with the guy you're going to marry. All of my friends who are uber Catholic inform me that this is true and have shunned me as a sinner for having considered the possibility! I am at a total loss. And I am not kidding when I tell you that I have lost a friend for having considered living with my fiance (we havn't settled on an apartment so nothing is official) and she has no interest in being part of my life anymore. I am completely caught off guard.
What do I do? I suppose we can get seprate apartments but in honesty we're going to be at eachother's places so often it will just be a huge fianance for no reason.
Re: Cohabitation for Catholic Couples
[QUOTE]So I have a concern that hopefully those of you who got married Catholic can help me address. My fiance and I are Catholic. He was born and raised Catholic but I did not come into the church until I was 20 (I'm 22 now) so I'm new to this in a lot of ways. I went to a Catholic high school but I never paid any attention to the religion. My family is not practicing. Not that it's a bad thing but I just need to "set the stage" so to speak. We are graduating this May (my fiance and I) and we are looking for apartments. We will be getting married August of 2013 which is a little over a year away. We have been looking to get an apartment together since it does not make sense for us to pay rent seperately given that we share the same pool of finances. My mom and dad have been really supportive--they're pretty excited actually. We've been looking at some nice apartments near work and my parents are scrounging around for left over things in their house that we can put in the new apartment (furniture, silverware, appliances, etc.) His parents tell me that the Catholic church will not marry you if you're cohabitating with the guy you're going to marry. <strong>All of my friends who are uber Catholic inform me that this is true and have shunned me as a sinner for having considered the possibility</strong>! I am at a total loss. And I am not kidding when I tell you that I have lost a friend for having considered living with my fiance (we havn't settled on an apartment so nothing is official) and she has no interest in being part of my life anymore. I am completely caught off guard. What do I do?<strong> I suppose we can get seprate apartments but in honesty we're going to be at eachother's places so often it will just be a huge fianance for no reason.
</strong>Posted by ntursich[/QUOTE]
You Answered your own question. You either move in together realizing you may lose some friends, have a harder time finding a priest that will marry you and you are going against the religion. Even those who accept it, usually will still back that you shouldnt be intentionally making choices you know are sinful, and there may or may not be reprecussions in your church life (taking communion, being a ministry leader) all might be compromised by living together. So it depends what is more important to you, a "clean image" to not cause friction within your friend groups and church, or the money saved by living together. I wouldn't say either decision is wrong, but thats the choice you have to make, and you say "no reason", in your friend and possibly churchs eyes, integrity and being right before God would be the reason, both sides will likely have reprocussions, and only you can decide which is more important to your values.
Having said that, I don't beleive living together is 'wrong', I wouldnt encourage it, but I am also not against it, and would be living with my FI for practical reasons except for my very christian parents. I would break thier hearts if I moved in with my FI before we got married and they would consider me to have lost thier respect, and I would be looked down on in the church and would be asked to step out of ministry (I volunteer with the youth group and kids church). So I am sucking it up and moved back in with my parents to save money instead, it SUCKS, but my relationship with my parents and with my church are more important to me then having to wait a few more months to get married before I move into the house we bought together. I mean in the long run we have forever to live together after the wedding, but the impact it would have on my relationships with friends and family would be distroyed if I moved now.
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It could happen that you will find a priest you is willing to marry you but will ask you to do something like commit to being abstinent for a period of time before you are married. (Since it's not technically against Church precepts to live together if that's the extent of it; it's the "other stuff" that the Church dislikes.) You may also be asked to go to confession.
DH and I are non practicing Catholics and while we took the precana classes, we were not married in the Church. Part of our reason was that we lived together for a long time before getting married. I've had friends do an end run around this by making sure one of them uses a parent's address on their church paperwork - but I don't like the idea of lying to the Church this way.
Only you and your FI can decide if you want to live together before marriage, knowing the potential consequences with friends and family and with the Church. I'm glad DH and I did - we know each other so well and confirmed we can live with the other's quirks.
[QUOTE]So I have a concern that hopefully those of you who got married Catholic can help me address. My fiance and I are Catholic. He was born and raised Catholic but I did not come into the church until I was 20 (I'm 22 now) so I'm new to this in a lot of ways. I went to a Catholic high school but I never paid any attention to the religion. My family is not practicing. Not that it's a bad thing but I just need to "set the stage" so to speak. We are graduating this May (my fiance and I) and we are looking for apartments. We will be getting married August of 2013 which is a little over a year away. We have been looking to get an apartment together since it does not make sense for us to pay rent seperately given that we share the same pool of finances. My mom and dad have been really supportive--they're pretty excited actually. We've been looking at some nice apartments near work and my parents are scrounging around for left over things in their house that we can put in the new apartment (furniture, silverware, appliances, etc.) His parents tell me that the Catholic church will not marry you if you're cohabitating with the guy you're going to marry.<strong>All of my friends who are uber Catholic inform me that this is true and have shunned me as a sinner for having considered the possibility! </strong>I am at a total loss. And I am not kidding when I tell you that I have lost a friend for having considered living with my fiance (we havn't settled on an apartment so nothing is official) and she has no interest in being part of my life anymore. I am completely caught off guard. What do I do? I suppose we can get seprate apartments but in honesty we're going to be at eachother's places so often it will just be a huge fianance for no reason.
Posted by ntursich[/QUOTE]
These people were never your friends or really much of Catholics. You can hate the sin but love the sinner and frankly they should know better than to stand in judgment of another.
You have to do what you feel is the right thing to do. You'll probably get some answers on the Catholic Board (under Cultural wedding boards). I know a few of the ladies there lived with their DH's before they were married and would be able to help you out.
As far as these "friends" are concerned, anyone who would just drop you like that over this is clearly not your friend. A friend may not agree with your choices, but should support you in any way they can in your ability to make them. They're clearly not living up to the "love they neighbor" credo. My thoughts go out to you on this - You do not have to justify your life to them.
Enjoy your wedding and your marriage with many blessings.
We do not live together, but in our church it is not an issue. My sister married last April and she was already living with her fiance for 2 years prior to that.
Sorry to hear about your friends, but if they can't love you for who you are, mistakes and all, sins and all, maybe it is not worth it
In this economy it really is sensible to live together. My soon to be sister-in-law and her fiance also live together and the first priest they met with said no big deal, but their priest has since left the church and now they have a new, younger priest who came in, and he made them have a meeting with him to discuss their living arrangement. It is a shame but he basically out right told them that he does not approve of them living together before marriage. She was pretty upset. I was appalled as well, because even if they are living together does not necessarily mean they are sleeping together and I don't think any priest should assume so. Tell the church your plans of moving in together and see what they say is the only advice I can give. At this point you have to decide which is more important and if it is very important to marry in the church at all. Is there any way you can technically move back in with your parents and have FI get his own apartment? I would assume you would spend many nights there even if you didn't live there anyway. Not that you want to lie to the priest, but if you technically aren;t living there it isn;t lying.
It really has nothing to do with whether a priest is "liberal" or "traditional". Priests have to feel comfortable that the couple is serious about marriage and is serious about the faith. I know many "traditional" priests that understand that everyone sins and deserves the opportunity for repentence if they desire it. There is no rule against a cohabitating couple being married, however this could be sign to the priest that the couple is not serious about the faith. Some priests gain comfort in other ways, and therefore are willing to marry the couple. Others will ask the couple to live "as brother and sister" until the wedding, which means separate beds and abstinence. Some may not be able to gain comfort otherwise and would therefore turn down the couple. None of the cohabitating couples I've known personally have had that happen. The best thing to do is to be honest with your priest and be clear with your intentions. Be sure to understand the reasoning behind this rule, as I think that would help!
GoodLuckBear is 100% right about your friends and it upsets me when Catholics behave this way. We must love one another. We are all sinners. My sins are no better/worse than yours. Nothing is achieved by shunning and shaming each other. I would remind them of this, and if they don't have a change of heart, I wouldn't spend more time with them. I wish you all the best!
BTW, the Catholic Church doesn't "shun" anyone. Your so-called friends are borrowing lingo from some other religion (I can't remember which, at this moment). If you're not quite sure which parish you and your FI will join, just talk to the priest at the Catholic center at your university.
[QUOTE]Please feel free to hop over to the Catholic Board with any other questions you may have! It really has nothing to do with whether a priest is "liberal" or "traditional". Priests have to feel comfortable that the couple is serious about marriage and is serious about the faith. I know many "traditional" priests that understand that everyone sins and deserves the opportunity for repentence if they desire it. There is no rule against a cohabitating couple being married, however this could be sign to the priest that the couple is not serious about the faith. Some priests gain comfort in other ways, and therefore are willing to marry the couple. Others will ask the couple to live "as brother and sister" until the wedding, which means separate beds and abstinence. Some may not be able to gain comfort otherwise and would therefore turn down the couple. None of the cohabitating couples I've known personally have had that happen. The best thing to do is to be honest with your priest and be clear with your intentions. Be sure to understand the reasoning behind this rule, as I think that would help! GoodLuckBear is 100% right about your friends and it upsets me when Catholics behave this way. We must love one another. We are all sinners. My sins are no better/worse than yours. Nothing is achieved by shunning and shaming each other. I would remind them of this, and if they don't have a change of heart, I wouldn't spend more time with them. I wish you all the best!
Posted by Riss91[/QUOTE]
Riss - you stole the words right out of my mouth! <div>
</div><div>In all honesty, OP, the consensus here is right - the best course of action is to talk with your priest. An option, as well, would be to get a 2 bedroom apt and sleep in separate rooms. There's a definite difference between sharing a residence and living as husband and wife.</div>
One thing to remember: The wedding is just one day. The marriage is all the rest of them.
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http://catholicweddinghelp.com/questions/cohabitating.htm
Good Luck and Congratulations on your engagement.