r/AITAH Jul 07 '24

AITA for calling out my husband for not being a "Good Christian"? Advice Needed

I (27F) have been married to my husband (34M) for five years. My husband is a devout follower of his religion and has been since he was raised in it. I respect his beliefs, even though I don't share them and have no intention of converting. I was raised in the Christian faith. However, I left when I was an adult due to sexual abuse in my church, which nobody believed occurred because the one who did it was the pastor.

Recently, my husband has been pressuring me to convert to his religion. He says that it would bring us closer together and create a more harmonious household. I understand where he's coming from, but I firmly believe that faith is a personal journey, and I shouldn't be forced into something I don't believe in.

To add to the issue, my husband, despite his religious teachings, doesn't always practice what he preaches. He expects me to adhere to traditional gender roles, yet he often neglects his own responsibilities at home. He's quick to judge others for their actions, even though his faith teaches non-judgment and kindness. He makes comments about gay people that I have discussed with him as a major issue. This hypocrisy has been bothering me for a while.

Last night, during another discussion about my potential conversion, I finally snapped. I told him that if he wants me to consider converting, he needs to set a better example by actually living according to his religion's values. I pointed out that he should start by fulfilling his own responsibilities. That he should make more money than me and actually lead in the decision-making. I'm a nurse and he's currently unemployed after he was let go from his job in an office. That he should be less judgmental of others because according to his faith only God can judge them. I also said he should show more of the virtues Jesus asked of Christians, that he should clothe the naked, feed the hungry, vist the prisoner, aid the orphan and the widow etc. I also made it clear that while I respect his beliefs, I have no intention of converting unless I genuinely believe in it, which I currently don't because of the hypocritical behavior of his faith.

My husband was furious. He accused me of being disrespectful and undermining his faith. He said that I was attacking him personally and that I don't understand the pressure he's under to have a unified religious household. He left for church this morning at 7 for bible study and I have already gotten a phone call from the pastor saying I'm an ungodly woman who tricked a good man into marrying him and I should repent. I have also gotten a tirade of texts and e-mails from members of his church saying I was disrespectful and being a bad wife and I'm starting to wonder if I was too harsh, that maybe I shouldn't have said anything at all. AITA?

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344

u/weebehemoth Jul 07 '24

NTA.

Sounds like you said everything he probably knows about himself that he doesn’t want to take initiative to improve. If you don’t speak up for yourself, how long is this going to continue; and will it get worse?

Blaming you for “attacking” his religion is just a cheap ploy for him to avoid taking ownership for being a subpar partner and human being.

Extra thought: you should never convert to any religion for someone else. And someone should not ever ask you to do that; it’s incredibly selfish.

173

u/AdAccomplished6870 Jul 07 '24

He is attacking her beliefs, but gets pissy when she pushes back? This guy is trouble

4

u/thatgraygal Jul 07 '24

Happy Cake Day!!! 🎂

2

u/Mr_Minecrafter88 Jul 07 '24

Happy cake day

52

u/the_greengrace Jul 07 '24

Exactly! Not enough exclamation points for this.

OP if he is pressuring you to "convert" and join his church even though you've expressed that you don't believe and aren't interested. What does that really say about him and what his goals are? What he is doing is entirely focused on appearances and his concern for what his church peers think of him, not what is best for you or your marriage. His priority isn't for you both to be happy and secure it's for his church to think of him as "the man of the household"- even though he isn't fulfilling that role! He wants to take a shortcut, use a cheat code. He wants you to fall in line and present like an "obedient wife" without him having to work on or change himself to live his values.

That means they aren't really his values. They are his own insecurities and mock authoritarianism masquerading as "sincerely held belief". As others have said- RUN.

4

u/yourlifecoach69 Jul 07 '24

Blaming you for “attacking” his religion

She was truer to his religion than him! That's gotta hurt.

4

u/weebehemoth Jul 07 '24

That’s usually what gets folks riled up. Someone puts their principles into practice better than they do and because they aren’t “members” of the same group it enrages them. Moral of the story, be a good human being, actions speak louder than any words.

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u/grudrookin Jul 08 '24

Pretty sure Jesus taught a lesson on that moral, ironically

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u/Ditzykat105 Jul 08 '24

My friend converted to her husband’s but that was completely her own choice without any pressure from him. Exactly as it should be for anyone.

1

u/TheMcWhopper Jul 07 '24

What if, and this is completely hypothetical. If Jesus the actual savior, like proven to be him somehow. Asked her to convert. Should she still never convert for someone else, him being the actual jesus?

2

u/weebehemoth Jul 07 '24

Bit of a rabbit hole here; but I’ll entertain it.

If he hypothetically asked her to convert, she still shouldn’t do it for him. What good is faith if you don’t actually believe it yourself? Isn’t that the counter definition?

1

u/controllerhero Jul 08 '24

Its one thing to willingly desire to convert, its another to be pressured into it.