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Difficulties and Benefits

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The following are some of the responses to an email sent to the members of the aifw listserv in January 2008


  The most difficult thing I find about                        The thing I appreciate most about   

  being in an interchurch family is...                           being in an interchurch family is...

 

  • the feeling of having to defend my church's beliefs                              * meeting Christians of other denominations and learning

       (at times)                                                                                                                       from their faith walk.


  • to respect the differences, and to learn about each                             * if we really care to see the good things instead of the

       other faith                                                                                                                       weaknesses, you will learn lots of things

   

  • being keenly and consistently aware of church divisions                     * the chance to participate with two very different parishes,

        which many people don't notice and aren't bothered by                               both of which we really enjoy. 

        understanding the complexities of my husband's fierce

        belonging to the Roman Catholic Church. Supporting                          * an enhanced mindfulness of the outsider. When in a

        over the past several years what seems to me to be a                            Christian setting, I try to speak and behave as though non-

        relatively inactive style of belonging has somehow felt                           members of my community are present and to be included.

        less straightforward than supporting regular dual

        attendance and involvement. But it's about support, isn't it?               * that as our marriage has matured we have grown and

                                                                                                                                        matured ourselves in our individual and shared faith, and

  • talking to other Christians in enough depth, including the                       this has deepened our love for each other in its turn and

        clergy, about our unity in Baptism and Marriage, as very                        enabled us to minister to others, not least our children.

        often others just don't have the experience to identify with

        our situation.                                                                                                     * the huge amount I have learned about my personal

                                                                                                                                        Christian faith and my birth family's (URC+Anglican) and

  • the way same-church couples or fervent + agnostic are                        my worship family's (Anglican - i.e. Church of England given

       accepted easily and we - interchurch families - are                                 where I live) through getting to understand and learn about

       discriminated against/ treated differently at God's table/                       and learn from and enjoy and value the faith-traditions of

       thought difficult/challenging                                                                            the actual spouse and her birth and worship family (Roman

                                                                                                                                        Catholic)

                                                                                                                                        I honestly believe my faith and love of God would not be as

                                                                                                                                        rich and as deep and as well-founded on the Rock as it has                                                                                                                                            been due to my "marrying out" and often therefore "playing

                                                                                                                                        away"! I also think our children have benefited from being

                                                                                                                                        brought up in a family of Christian first, church member

                                                                                                                                        second and lots of flexibility in that church membership,

                                                                                                                                        without preconception that they "cannot be both"; as a

                                                                                                                                        matter of reality they know they belong in the family of

                                                                                                                                        their mother and their father and that we belong in each

                                                                                                                                        other's church family's too

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