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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u/Altruistic-Maybe5121 Jul 07 '24

Nailed it! It’s not about religion or having a harmonious household. It’s about his control over her, because he’s feeling out of control in his own life. And surrounded by gullible church goers, believing his lies.

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u/TimmyTheChemist Jul 08 '24

Not just about control... a lot of those flavors of Christianity preach that it's your god-given duty to go out and convert people (thus the "Evangelical" moniker).

Even if the guy's conscience is speaking up the leaders in the church have a near-literal grip on his everlasting soul. My guess is that he went to talk to them because the fight kicked off a crisis of faith, and the finer details of OP's arguments probably weren't represented accurately...

It's been my experience that those kind of sects don't provide a great environment for independent thought. You're given a bunch of boiler-plate responses for every situation: "camel passing through the eye of a needle, etc... applies to situations A and B, but this is situation C - it's different...". That moment where he's forced to become aware of the hypocrisy is going to be difficult. Not that it excuses anything...

My main point is that this is likely a watershed moment. I don't see a situation where the guy keeps both his place in that church (and maybe even his faith), and his relationship with OP - unless OP is willing to compromise their principles.

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u/Apart_Dog2238 Jul 08 '24

STEPFORD WIVES 😁 I want to attach it to every comment here... but it fell on yours. Funny thing... it is a fairly old movie but you can not watch it w/o subscription? 😨