Love and support them just as you would if your husband was a carpenter. Keep things going and see what happens. After our first kiss she lets me know she won't have sex with me because she's mormon and we'd need to be married first. You don't have to believe them yourself, but you need that respect in thought as well as action, and you need to frame this as your own journey because you can only change yourself. But I am very lonely indeed, I have married to a doctor for 5 years, he has been struggling with his career change for years with achieving different fellowships and residency in different countries. A forum for ex-mormons and others who have been affected by mormonism to share news, commentary, and comedy about the Mormon church.
I recommend that talk. Things I have and continue to think about. Word to the wise, wait a day or two. Unless you have some super amazing other dating prospect there isn't a huge reason to cut this relationship off now. Ask her right out if she is at all interested in leaving TSCC. I have to breathe. He might just be unpracticed at your "love language". It is the greatest sadness of her life. Now I look at his job and his schedule and his tiredness as a part of both of our lives, rather than something that is just his life that I have to deal with. The Mormon girl has the light of Christ shining through her, and you were drawn in.
As I started to date and fall in love with my husband, almost everyone I knew was against it. Everything was fantastic, his family adored me, and he told me that he is going to marry me. He is absolutely, hands-down my favorite human being on the planet. I also definitely don't want her raising my future children, though, and I'll be very clear about that. If she is open to questioning her faith, perhaps she can chase you down. And for your husbands, you are that person.
You will only have a happy relationship if either you both believe in the Mormon Church, or both do not believe. I can say this. Plan on rolling your eyes A LOT at family get torturers together. This is not to say that I need to be the center of attention all the time, but just that I think all the time spent alone makes it more difficult to connect with each other. So any support on how to deal with ocd behavior, heavy handed opinions, would be helpful. Harmony will prevail if the husband appreciates the value of church service and attendance.