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Do Your Beliefs Match Those of Your Significant Other?

Do Your Beliefs Match Those of Your Partner?

  • I am religious, my partner is not

    Votes: 11 30.6%
  • I am religious, my partner is too

    Votes: 15 41.7%
  • I am not religious, my partner is also not religious

    Votes: 4 11.1%
  • I am not religious, my partner is religious

    Votes: 6 16.7%

  • Total voters
    36

lunamoth

Will to love
If you have a spouse, partner, or significant other, do you share the same beliefs about God and religion?

Have your religious beliefs, or those of your partner, changed since you have been together?

If your partner's beliefs were to change, either from religious to non-religious or the other way around, would you be OK with this?

If you are both religious, do you follow the same religion?

Poll to be posted.
 
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Vorinn

Member
I was actually just thinking of posting a similar thread.

My partner and I have similar beliefs - we're both agnostic - but I see value in the practice of religion, and my partner does not. (I interpreted this for the poll as "I am religious, my partner is not.") I have become more active in practicing over the time we've been together. This has been pretty awkward for me, since I sometimes feel like I'm being judged for it (it doesn't help that few of my other friends are religious either, and none the way I am). I am coming to terms with it, though, and my partner has been wonderfully accepting.

I wouldn't have a problem if my partner did change religious beliefs, as long as our values were still in line with each other. I think that values are much, much more important in a relationship than actual beliefs. I don't think I could be in a relationship with a biblical literalist, or someone who opposed equal rights for gay people. But if their values matched mine, I would have no problem being with a Christian or a Muslim or an atheist or a fellow Pagan or a person from any other religion.
 

Penumbra

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Poll Choice: I am not religious, my partner is also not religious

If you have a spouse, partner, or significant other, do you share the same beliefs about God and religion?
Basically, yes. Neither of us is religious.

Have your religious beliefs, or those of your partner, changed since you have been together?
He was more agnostic a few years back and became more specifically non-religious.

If your partner's beliefs were to change, either from religious to non-religious or the other way around, would you be OK with this?
It depends.

I can't foresee his personality changing to an extent that it would be a problem. If he were to convert to, say, a fundamentalist Christian or to Islam or something like that, I think that would imply that his way of thinking changed radically from how it is now, and that would be a problem for our relationship. If he were to believe some Buddhist or Hindu ideas, I don't think it would be a problem.
 
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Tarheeler

Argumentative Curmudgeon
Premium Member
If you have a spouse, partner, or significant other, do you share the same beliefs about God and religion?

Not really. While I fit into fairly mainstream Jewish thought, my wife fluctuates between deism and and believing in an active God, depending on which question you ask.

Have your religious beliefs, or those of your partner, changed since you have been together?

Definitely. I was a Baptist while my wife was a Methodist-turned-atheist. We've both come a long way since then. Now I'm working on converting to Judaism and my wife is nowhere close to being an atheist.

If your partner's beliefs were to change, either from religious to non-religious or the other way around, would you be OK with this?

Yes. It's natural for people to change as they grow; I think that the key is to find a way to incorporate the changes into your life gradually. In our case, my pursuit of conversion has brought about a lot of changes, but none of them were made overnight. We've slowly introduced aspects of Jewish life, such as dietary laws and observances, into our routine.
 

lunamoth

Will to love
I wouldn't have a problem if my partner did change religious beliefs, as long as our values were still in line with each other. I think that values are much, much more important in a relationship than actual beliefs.
I think this is true. My husband and I share the same values and this, I think, is one of the main reasons we have such a great marriage. My religious practices and beliefs have changed since we were first married, but he just rolls with it. :D
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Does this mean you both worship the cross .....
...walk? :D
It's a religion I once invented to meet a requirement of Good Samaritan Hospital in Baltimore (for surgery on a broken leg).
We're big on immediate gratification.
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
If you have a spouse, partner, or significant other, do you share the same beliefs about God and religion?
No. She's Catholic, I'm atheist.

Have your religious beliefs, or those of your partner, changed since you have been together?
Kinda. When we got married, I considered myself an agnostic. After exploring my beliefs more (including trying to see whether I could ever convert to Catholicism), I realized that the term "atheist" was a better description of my beliefs.

If your partner's beliefs were to change, either from religious to non-religious or the other way around, would you be OK with this?
It would probably cause stress if she became more religious. If she became less religious, or similarly devout but with different beliefs, it would probably be fine with me.

It's a religion I once invented to meet a requirement of Good Samaritan Hospital in Baltimore (for surgery on a broken leg).
We're big on immediate gratification.
A broken leg? So you were a lapsed pedestrian, then. :D
 

Adramelek

Setian
Premium Member
I am a Left-Hand Path practicioner, whereas, even though my partner and I have similar ideas and practices she is more of what could be called a Chaos Magician. The similarities of our ideas and life philosophies adds to our compatability.
 

Onkara

Well-Known Member
I see religion as liberation. My partner sees religion as unnecessary restriction.

Good to see a poll on this, I wonder how much conflict there is between opposite partners.
 

sandandfoam

Veteran Member
I am religious - my wife on the other hand is 100% atheist and thinks the whole god business is nonsense.

Our values are the same though.
 

Levite

Higher and Higher
If you have a spouse, partner, or significant other, do you share the same beliefs about God and religion?

Have your religious beliefs, or those of your partner, changed since you have been together?

If your partner's beliefs were to change, either from religious to non-religious or the other way around, would you be OK with this?

If you are both religious, do you follow the same religion?

Poll to be posted.


I guess my beliefs and my wife's match in a technical sense, given that we're both Jewish.

But she's a Reform rabbi, and I'm a Conservative rabbi, and we have some fairly prodigious differences in theology, methodology, and practice. We had to do a fair amount of discussing about what the ground rules were going to be in terms of our household and future children.

But we make it work.

I think my religious practice has become a bit more pluralistic, thanks to her influence. And her practice has become a bit more traditional, thanks to mine.

Not that I foresee such a thing happening, but if she were suddenly to become a secular atheist, or to decide to convert to another religion, that would indeed be an enormous problem; quite possibly insurmountable. Likewise, were I to (equally unlikely) become Orthodox, I think that would be a major problem for her; potentially insurmountable, depending on how rigid I became in my Orthodoxy.
 
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My husband and I both consider ourselves Christian Universalists. We don't agree on everything - I tend to take things less literally than he does, like rejecting the idea of Jesus actually performing miracles, though he's not what you'd consider a "literalist" if you get what I mean.

We were both raised Christian, although our experiences are quite different. I was baptized Catholic, and then switched to Pentecostal and then Methodist churches as my mother remarried and my parents looked for middle ground. I was also raised to think outside the box, to question for myself, to come to my own conclusions, to see faith as something personal that we each can cultivate for ourselves, understanding that doctrine/dogma/"official position" isn't the only way to look at things.

My husband was raised in a more fundamentalist way, a way where questioning wasn't really encouraged, where there were clear right and wrong ways of looking at things. Looking at things from another point of view or understanding wasn't acceptable (even in his discussing with his sister about his disbelief in hell she says "you were raised better than that")....

We've known each other almost our whole lives (met in 6th grade, when I first fell in love with him), were best friends from the moment we met, though we had never really talked religion before. When we finally got married (about 2 years after we graduated high school) I was going through an identity crisis, you could say, wondering whether my inorthodoxies could disqualify me from being Christian. That's when I found Christian Universalism, which wasn't like finding a new way of thought for me, it was like finally being able to put a name on what it is I've always believed. Religion has always been a big part of my life - we may have been raised in a way where we weren't really indoctrinated, but we were always very involved in church, so much that my stepbrother and pastor would tease me about him training me to go into ministry. I'm always studying, discussing, etc. My husband says that being exposed to such a different way of thought, realizing that people can have different opinions about things, gave him the motivation he needed to really sit down and consider what *he* believes. He just happens to have come to the same overall conclusion as me, in terms of Christian Universalism, though I did mention that we don't line up on all of the specifics.

I'm not one of those who is all about being with someone just like me, though, and other than enjoying religious discussion I haven't pushed him in any way. His path is his to cultivate, and wherever it takes him is fine with me. Not that I don't enjoy that our paths are so similar at the moment, but I'm open to that changing when and if it ever does, if that makes sense...
 
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Onkara

Well-Known Member
why should it matter?

In general? When living close together different beliefs, routines and practices cannot be easily ignored. It can add complications (or remove them).

It is morally correct to say 'live and let live' but when I am chanting in a loud voice whilst my partner tries to watch the TV, morals are not first on the agenda. :D
 
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