cthia wrote:I am going to restate something I've said several times over. I'm willing to bet the quick fix of having the wedding vow's rewritten, isn't really as simple a fix as that. It might have broken more than it fixed. How is it working out at the center of Emily's and Hamish's religion, their church? Their faith? What problems is it causing the church? What effect did it have on Emily, spirituality? Did she feel she had wronged God, and forsaken the traditional beliefs, her traditional beliefs?
Emily was swept up in a whirlwind romance that wasn't hers. She was rushed to the altar, with Honor and Hamish.
tlb wrote:Since the idea of changing the wedding vows was presented to Honor, Emily and Hamish by leading churchmen from Grayson and Manticore; all the anguish you express is clearly your own, and not that of anyone in the books. If it were all the bother that you think it is, then the leaders of the churches would have been among the first to object.
cthia wrote:You can't have meant this as it reads. You mean to say that Emily, or any spouse, should be amenable to bringing someone else into the marriage simply because it's presented to them by some clergymen in some church on some other planet? My God, man, what are you saying? I certainly didn't know you were so religious. Cool.
At any rate, I'm sure there would be lots of people, who would object if even God himself came down and decreed it. Like he did with the Virgin Mary.
No, that is not what I am saying; but I am not surprised by your misreading. Let me extract the relevant portion of your original comment and try explain in simpler words.
I'm willing to bet the quick fix of having the wedding vow's rewritten, isn't really as simple a fix as that. It might have broken more than it fixed. How is it working out at the center of Emily's and Hamish's religion, their church? Their faith? What problems is it causing the church? What effect did it have on Emily, spirituality? Did she feel she had wronged God, and forsaken the traditional beliefs, her traditional beliefs?
You are stating that changing wedding vows strikes at the very basis of Emily and Hamish's church and faith. You then state, if that is true, that Emily must feel that she had wronged God, and forsaken her traditional beliefs.
The first statement is not true on either Manticore or Grayson, as proven by the fact that leading clergymen from both Manticore and Grayson have proposed it. Clearly that proposal was not a command and could have been rejected by any of the three (especially Emily). They did not reject it, instead assented to a new wedding. Since the first statement is not true and I believe that they had a wedding in the eyes of the church; then clearly Emily does NOT feel that she had wronged God, and forsaken her traditional beliefs.
PS. I am still waiting for the religious schism on Grayson that will destroy the Protector's Restoration, that was to have been driven by Honor's cheating as his Champion.