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Author Topic: SHould non-Catholic women even be considered?  (Read 3934 times)
Jacafamala
My mother, my confidence.
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« Reply #70 on: April 22, 2012, 06:53:PM »

For dating (with marriage as the goal), that is.  At least people in the NO can be more easily converted but I would think that it would be very difficult to get a Protestant to be convinced of the traditional Catholic faith.

Does anyone have some real-life experience to share?

No, buddy. Don't do it! It's Catholic or bust.
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Above all things, preserve constant charity among yourselves; charity draws the veil over a multitude of sins. -1 Peter
cgraye
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« Reply #71 on: April 24, 2012, 09:31:AM »

Hoping people will change will almost always lead to disappointment, and counting on it is dangerous.
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Chris
Norbert
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« Reply #72 on: May 07, 2012, 09:44:PM »

I barely held it together over 18 months with a semi-conservative NO catholic who ended up doing most of what I wanted cause I said so.  (Theologically at least).

I can't imagine a protestant, and non-christians are straight out.
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Cetil
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« Reply #73 on: May 07, 2012, 10:00:PM »

For dating (with marriage as the goal), that is.  At least people in the NO can be more easily converted but I would think that it would be very difficult to get a Protestant to be convinced of the traditional Catholic faith.

Does anyone have some real-life experience to share?


My Dad married a non-Catholic or I wouldn't be here. My Mom always admired Catholic teaching and made sure I learned my catechism and got to Mass and Confession. She raised us in very difficult times and always defended the Faith, a faith she finally accepted herself before she died. It was charity that won her over, not apologetical arguments.

C.
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SaintAndrew
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« Reply #74 on: May 20, 2012, 01:31:AM »

For dating (with marriage as the goal), that is.  At least people in the NO can be more easily converted but I would think that it would be very difficult to get a Protestant to be convinced of the traditional Catholic faith.

Does anyone have some real-life experience to share?

No, buddy. Don't do it! It's Catholic or bust.
Amen to that.
You just can't get involved if she's not Catholic. Your Catholic faith is what's going to help get you to the next world, you know?
NOTHING comes before that.
It's shocking how many single, faithful Catholic women there are on Facebook. Believe that.
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"Devotion to Mary is the epitome of every devotion. It is a definite arrangement with God and a peculiar means of grace, the efficacy of which is best shown by Satan's rage against it." English priest and official translator of "True Devotion to Mary", Father Fredrick W. Faber in 1860

"Qué soï era immaculado councepcioũ"...was the answer She gave Bernadette...


Neo-Floriano
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« Reply #75 on: June 24, 2012, 01:58:PM »

For dating (with marriage as the goal), that is.  At least people in the NO can be more easily converted but I would think that it would be very difficult to get a Protestant to be convinced of the traditional Catholic faith.

Does anyone have some real-life experience to share?

No, buddy. Don't do it! It's Catholic or bust.
Amen to that.
You just can't get involved if she's not Catholic. Your Catholic faith is what's going to help get you to the next world, you know?
NOTHING comes before that.
It's shocking how many single, faithful Catholic women there are on Facebook. Believe that.


Facebook?  Why do you say that?That would be one of the last places I'd look.
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