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Whatever Happened To Fidelity?
Concerned Women for America ^ | 5/23/06 | Janice Shaw Crouse

Posted on 05/27/2006 11:02:16 AM PDT by wagglebee

Broken promises are serious business. Every parent has heard the familiar childhood lament, “But you promised!” More often than not, the scene is highly emotional with bitter tears and anguish that rips your heart out. Sometimes there is blazing anger or hostility. All parents who have experienced such scenes mentally kick themselves for having created impossible expectations.

Thankfully, relationships don’t require perfection, but they do have to be based upon honesty and trust. There is a limit to the broken promises a relationship can absorb. Since we all stand in need of God’s forgiveness, there is no better time to model humility and penitence than in sincerely asking forgiveness when we mess up on something we promised and didn’t deliver.

If promises are often broken, however, the child’s protest is likely to be accompanied by an air of caustic resignation that implies, “I can’t believe you; you never come through.” When an outsider observes such attitudes in children, it is distressing and sad because, in such circumstances, the shameful history behind the development of those attitudes is obvious.

Such situations outrage fair-minded people. They offend our sense of justice and our belief that all children are entitled to consistency and honesty from those entrusted with their care.

Whatever the circumstances, the standard parental reply usually begins, “Yes, but . . .,” as the parent tries to explain to the aggrieved child – frequently justifiably – that something unexpected intervened that was beyond her control. But it better be the truth! Kids develop a special ability for detecting lies not long after they learn to yell “No” and “Mine.” Even if we manage to fool them, something in us, something at the core of our being, is damaged.

Lies do that, you know. Like other forms of injustice, lies consume innocence.

Fidelity, along with its antonym infidelity, is an old-fashioned word. In this era of “me-first” individualism, the significance of fidelity is often minimized. But the realities behind fidelity are integral to our interactions –– our negative responses to a broken promise or other violations of trust are as innate and reflexive as blinking the rain out of our eyes. No one has to teach us to be upset or offended when someone “lets us down.”

Fidelity also counts within our own selves. Break a promise you make to yourself and the damage is as real as when you renege on a commitment to a loved one.

Christ’s second great commandment is to “love your neighbor as yourselves.” On the surface, the commandment seems obvious –– and easy to fulfill. The truth is that it is remarkably easy to break promises to ourselves. And, nothing is a surer road to self-hatred and loathing. Of course, there’s always rationalization – which most of us are very adept at – but a steady diet of rationalization compounds the damage to our self-respect. Experience soon teaches us that there are good reasons not to want neighbors who don’t love and respect themselves or who don’t keep their word.

We all have an innate desire for love, but love without fidelity is meaningless. No one has to teach us this truth; we know it intuitively and it figures in our decisions as to whom we want to know and be known by, in every sense of the word.

What has happened in the last 40 or 50 years to our regard for fidelity and honor? Why have these virtues become so neglected when the betrayal of trust is such a devastating injury?

In part, fidelity has been displaced by phony lip service about being nonjudgmental. Why has this latter virtue – which so many people talk about but few actually practice – become so elevated? Perhaps because not being judgmental seems, on the surface, to be so much less difficult than it actually is; on the other hand, it doesn’t take long to learn that keeping your promises is sometimes going to be an expensive, thankless proposition.

Call it Gresham’s Law of Virtues: pick the virtue that costs you the least.

Sometimes, being nonjudgmental is a rather dignified way of saying, “Hands off. Mind your own business. I’ll live my life the way I please, thank you very much.” More often, it is simply a dodge, a means of rejecting the constraint of moral boundaries.

In recent months, we have seen these principles played out in popular culture by movie star Tom Cruise.

Cruise put aside the vows he made to Nicole Kidman, divorced her just as he did his first wife and, after a couple of high-profile affairs, took up with a much younger (perhaps more malleable) woman who is not much more than a girl. He’s in love, you understand, and he went on television to jump up and down –– telling Oprah and the whole world how deliriously happy this new love has made him. But . . . despite getting Katie Holmes pregnant, he simply couldn’t find the time in his busy, busy, oh-so-very-busy schedule to marry her before their daughter, Suri, arrived.

Of course the public is supposed to join Katie in making allowances for him because he is a celebrity and because he’s rich, famous and charming (at least in the eyes of his fans). Also, there’s his recent revelation that he was abused as a child. Still: Can someone explain to me why this young woman should take Cruise at his word that he loves her? Because she’s pretty? Well, Nicole Kidman wasn’t exactly run-of-the-mill. Why should Katie expect that he will be true to her when at least three previous, beautiful women couldn’t count on his promises? Besides, Katie won’t be pretty forever.

Oh sure, even if they, as the saying goes, “grow apart,” there’ll likely be more than enough money to pay the bills, assuming Cruise has a decent investment advisor. But ask most kids if the money is what’s really most important to them. Those children who’ve been down this road tell a bitter story about how it feels when mom and dad don’t stay together and in love.

At any rate, all the publicity – either because the wedding makes a huge splash, or not – might help Katie’s career. Careers are important, you know. Maybe Mission Impossible III will shore up Tom’s career. Its opening box-office receipts, however, indicate he may be past his peak. Their child, Suri . . . who can say? Maybe she will, and maybe she won’t, have to adjust –– like the star’s other two kids and the millions of other children whose world gets ripped apart when their folks trade down from “'til death do us part” to merely “as long as love shall last.”

Without fidelity, life can have an awful lot of “maybes.”

Please spare me the threadbare cliché about “how resilient kids are.” Sure, wounds do heal . . . but they can leave really ugly scars – some that disfigure and impair – and they tend to last a lifetime. Kids really do have this huge need for unconditional love from the kind of parents who keep their promises to each other and to their children.

And, fidelity? Isn’t that the name of some bank or insurance company?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: cwa; familyvalues; fidelity; lies; moralabsolutes
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To: ConservativeMind

Then there you go, now we have a Biblical reason to divorce an abuser.


121 posted on 05/28/2006 9:10:27 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: ConservativeMind

Similarly, few females consistently submit to their husbands :-) That standard of perfection also applies in cases of adultery, if you take Jesus's statement about lusting in the heart literally.

IMHO, it should come down to what is in the victim's heart... does the victim truly feel that the marriage is unworkable & unlivable because of his/her spouse's refusal to stop sinning, or is the victim seeking an easy out?


122 posted on 05/28/2006 9:15:11 AM PDT by Seamoth (Kool-aid is the most addictive and destructive drug of them all.)
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To: discostu

How is what I am saying condoning the killing of Nicole Brown?

We are responsible for what we do and say. It is that simple.

I am only encouraging people to grow to be solid individuals. Before you sign a contract for life, make sure your head is on straight.

How many months does it take to realize that you have ever once been pulled by your hair by your boyfriend? That is usually understood the first moment it occurs. To continue with that shows a total lack of respect for oneself.

I am sorry your wife stayed with such a man for apparently so long. But that was her choice.

I'm glad she chose to be with someone who respects her back. It sounds like she now respects herself, too.


123 posted on 05/28/2006 9:16:06 AM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: ConservativeMind

But they won't, most people don't believe it. I've seen this many times (known way too many abused wives and girlfriends), people simply don't want to believe that someone they like (like their daughter's husband, or their friend, or fellow congregationist) could do that. Nobody ever wants to think they have such bad taste in people as to actually like (or love, the spouse goes through the same pattern of denial, but eventually the bruises force them to admit the truth, the friends and family never actually get beaten so that form of "persuasion" isn't present) an abuser. So they don't intervene, they don't help, often they abandon the abused because the abused, by their very existence, forces them to aknowledge their own short comings in liking a person that turned out to be bad.

We used to say we excommunicated for such sins, we didn't actually do it. In reality we always considered it an internal problem, something the spouses needed to handle on their own.


124 posted on 05/28/2006 9:16:43 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: discostu
Well certainly giving your wife a black eye violates 5:27.

Violation of Ep. 5:27 is simply that. It is not grounds for divorce. Without a doubt, any spouse that is anything less than perfect violates Ep. 5:27, as I stated in an earlier post.
125 posted on 05/28/2006 9:18:13 AM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: ConservativeMind

Because you're blaming the victim. According to you she should have detected that OJ was an abuser earlier, never married him, never fallen in love, and never had kids with him. According to you having made those mistakes she never should have left him.

People's heads aren't on straight when they get married, that's part of the point, you fall in love and you're head isn't on straight then you get married.

Abusers don't start off right away, many wait until after the marriage. And the don't go full bore right away either, they tend to ramp up, the first time might be a slap in the face during a heated argument, anybody can right that off, then a few months later a slap during a less heated argument, and less heated the next time, and eventually a slap when there was no argument at all.

Abusers are VERY fond of people with a lack of self respect. That's the big invitation to the abuser, they have amazing radar for people like that. Not everybody has good self esteem, not everybody was in the proper environment to develop good self esteem.

Actually she wasn't with him very long at all, he lacked subtelty, he wasn't a skilled abuser, yet. They were young, I'm sure he's learned better.


126 posted on 05/28/2006 9:23:18 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: discostu; Impeach the Boy

Me too. My mother initiated a divorce against my father for emotional abuse against her and for physical abuse against her children.

To say, that she should just have known what she getting into when she married him is just plain silly and then to say she should never marry again is also just plain silly.

All of my parents' friends had absolutely idea or clue as to the extreme amount of abuse that was happening.

It caused them to take sides which was just plain awful.

No one, except for the ones involves knows as to the absolute truth.


127 posted on 05/28/2006 9:24:04 AM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: discostu
According to you she should have detected that OJ was an abuser earlier, never married him, never fallen in love, and never had kids with him. According to you having made those mistakes she never should have left him.

Going ahead with one of those might have been "a mistake" or even "an accident".

Doing them all shows acceptance.
128 posted on 05/28/2006 9:26:37 AM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: ConservativeMind

Well then which verses have to be violated to make it valid?


129 posted on 05/28/2006 9:26:44 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: ConservativeMind

Do we even know when he started beating her? It might have been after the marriage. Stop blaming the victims.


130 posted on 05/28/2006 9:27:27 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: wagglebee
Whatever Happened To Fidelity?

Didn't it merge with Prudential? Or was that PaineWebber?

No, wait, my bad. Fidelity is still around.
131 posted on 05/28/2006 9:28:03 AM PDT by Xenalyte (Anything is possible when you don't understand how anything happens.)
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To: ConservativeMind; discostu

I guess I'm not getting what you are proposing.

One shouldn't stay, ie., married, to an abuser but they shouldn't marry another because if they do they breaking their vow?

So they are then divorced but not really divorced because they are to never be free to remarry?


132 posted on 05/28/2006 9:28:58 AM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: discostu
Look around post 81. Those verses and chapters will help. Please read them yourself. A great online source for different translations is BibleGateway.Com.
133 posted on 05/28/2006 9:29:01 AM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: marajade
Please read the verses referenced in post 81.

If you don't have a bible handy, BibleGateway.com is an excellent free source.
134 posted on 05/28/2006 9:30:51 AM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: ConservativeMind; discostu

"We used to excommunicate for such sins. We used to hold people publicly accountable as punishment and require a repentance process as per the Bible."

My mother went to her priest, and his response: my mother didn't love my father enough and that explained why he was abusing her.

Sorry, personal experience has denied me the belief that "the church" has the right to make decisions in relation to marriage and divorce.


135 posted on 05/28/2006 9:31:02 AM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: ConservativeMind; discostu

"Violation of Ep. 5:27 is simply that. It is not grounds for divorce."

What? You are saying beating the crap out of your spouse is not grounds for divorce?


136 posted on 05/28/2006 9:33:19 AM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: ConservativeMind

There's no list of reasons in there. Only discussion of how to handle things after divorce.


137 posted on 05/28/2006 9:34:54 AM PDT by discostu (get on your feet and do the funky Alphonzo)
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To: Petronski

Vinyl? Wire recording and 1930's style dictaphone man!


138 posted on 05/28/2006 9:35:21 AM PDT by mdmathis6 (Proof against evolution:"Man is the only creature that blushes, or needs to" M.Twain)
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To: ConservativeMind

If it is your idea to insult me by suggesting I read my Bible first before you can respond to my post who would want your brand or idea of Christianity.


139 posted on 05/28/2006 9:35:26 AM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: Seamoth; dakine
If I understand correctly, the acronym DINK stands for Double Income No Kids.

Is a married couple with a double income required to have kids?

140 posted on 05/28/2006 9:55:20 AM PDT by Momaw Nadon ("...with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.")
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