My question relates to a religious issue, which I won't post here so the mods don't go crazy. I just want to know morally, who is responsible.
A friend of mine has extremely religious parents. Her husband was having an affair with his legal secretary and my friend found out. She tried and tried and tried to get the marriage back on track, but when she realized that he was even lying in *individual* counseling, and also their co-counseling sessions, she realized he just wasn't interested, and she filed.
I felt that she tried her best and that this was HIS choice to divorce.
Her extremely religious parents felt that she should have stayed no matter what. Her parents also have a myth that hers was the first divorce in their family...which is weird since two of her older sisters were divorced BEFORE my friend was divorced. So take their religious thoughts with a grain of "what's up with their mental capacity" salt.
If you look at the way Ireland used to be, without the legal possibility of divorce until the 90s, and know that it was based on their particular main religion in the country, you know that divorce was really NEVER allowed there.
My great grandmother, who moved here and married here, was deserted by her husband. They were of that main Irish religion, and her church leader would NOT give her religious permission to divorce or have an annulment. She hadn't seen her husband in years, she had no support or child support, she just had to live in limbo. She finally met a nice man and the church leader still said no, for the reason that the man was of a different religion (slightly different, to my eyes). It was at that point that she lost her temper and caused herself to no longer be a member of that church (which is why, to my friends, I'm the most Irish not-of-that-religion person they've ever known, LOL). So obviously to eyes of some higherups in that religion, even utter abandonment was not a reason for the left-alone spouse to have the marriage officially ended.
Of course, there are more liberal-minded officials of that religion.