Well his bishop is his judge in Israel, and the Church handbook of instruction spells out rather clearly how things work when it comes to a confession that puts your membership in jeopardy. He may find that his old bishop or high council disfellowshipped him. I know that different bishops react differently to sins, but this is the big, second-only-to-murder, deal that we all think it is.
The covenant of marriage demands fidelity, even in an extra-religious sense.
He violated the covenant, the wife has a right to know. Is that right at this point an odious horrible burden to shoulder? Hell yes! But, does her right to know overwhelm his need to tell her, her comfort, her ability to enter the Gospel and accept it. If he gets sealed to her in the temple without telling her, that's as much a betrayal as anything because he would be lying, and the ceremony reminds us, in plain language, that God will not be mocked. He would be mocking her and mocking God by entering into the greatest of all covenants unworthily.
He has to tell her. No matter how much it sucks for both of them, if she continues in the Gospel, he has to tell her.
Sometimes we have to forgive ourselves, but this one violated a covenant he made her, even if it was before the law, it was still a promise he broke.
This is just dreadful; I think by not telling her he is continuing his infidelity because he fears worldly consequences more than spiritual consequences.
If my wife had had an affair, I would be crushed, but I would forgive her. I love her no matter what or who she does. If she didn't tell me about the affair, I would be crushed. I would want to know.
If I were him, I'd go talk to my current bishop. Even though he's just someone who lives in his ward, he holds the keys.
The covenant of marriage demands fidelity, even in an extra-religious sense.
He violated the covenant, the wife has a right to know. Is that right at this point an odious horrible burden to shoulder? Hell yes! But, does her right to know overwhelm his need to tell her, her comfort, her ability to enter the Gospel and accept it. If he gets sealed to her in the temple without telling her, that's as much a betrayal as anything because he would be lying, and the ceremony reminds us, in plain language, that God will not be mocked. He would be mocking her and mocking God by entering into the greatest of all covenants unworthily.
He has to tell her. No matter how much it sucks for both of them, if she continues in the Gospel, he has to tell her.
Sometimes we have to forgive ourselves, but this one violated a covenant he made her, even if it was before the law, it was still a promise he broke.
This is just dreadful; I think by not telling her he is continuing his infidelity because he fears worldly consequences more than spiritual consequences.
If my wife had had an affair, I would be crushed, but I would forgive her. I love her no matter what or who she does. If she didn't tell me about the affair, I would be crushed. I would want to know.
If I were him, I'd go talk to my current bishop. Even though he's just someone who lives in his ward, he holds the keys.
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