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Wedding Favors by
HansonEllis
Today's
Wedding Ceremonies Are Creative, Personal and Meaningful!
Here's How to Figure Out the Kind of Ceremony YOU want
By Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway
In this new age of wedding ceremonies, anything goes!
Unless a couple chooses to be married in a religious ceremony that
will follow a time honored religious protocol, they can be as
creative as they like. The range of options is vast.
Finding your personal style is a matter of deciding the type of
ceremony most suited to you, and getting a sense of which rituals,
blessings, prayers, readings, and cultural or religious aspects are
personally meaningful.
In my line of work as an interfaith and non-denominational wedding
officiant, it’s all about blending. First we assess the general type
of ceremony that is right for each couple. Then we seek ways to
blend in the traditions they do like, with creativity, romance and
personal touches.
These personal touches can be anything from aspects of their
religions or cultures, to honoring and involving family, to
including a humorous story about how they met or a poignant poem
that captures their feelings. Or all of the above!
As a reference point, I like to explain to couples that there are
several types of weddings to choose from.
Traditional
These are typically faith-based and culled from the
tradition the bride and groom were born into.
Non-denominational
A spiritual ceremony that includes reference
to God, but does not adhere to any particular religious protocol.
Non-religious
Usually includes no reference to faith and
typically does not mention God. (Some people call it a civil
ceremony, but in fact a civil ceremony often mentions God).
Interfaith
This is a blending of two or more faiths, by including
aspect of religion or religious rituals or readings that are
symbolic of each faith.
Intercultural
This is a blending of cultures – such as a Filipino
veil ceremony with a Chinese red string ritual and yet can certainly
also blend religious aspects.
That said, from my perspective, you can do all of the above in one
specially tailored ceremony. The biggest issue is deciding if you
want to reference God at all – some couples clearly do, but would
rather not have religion, or clearly don’t, and want to have
something that is more about their love and relationship. The trick
is to find a creative officiant who is not bound to a particular
religious protocol.
These are some of the questions I ask couples when consulting with them
about creating a personalized wedding.
1. Where does religion fit in – or does it? Would you like to
include an aspect of the faiths you were born into without the
dogma? Do you want to include mention of God – or would you prefer
blessing upon your union without mention of Divine presence?
2. What kind of ceremony would be most suited to the two of you?
Would you like something personal yet that includes aspects of your
traditions? Or would something romantic and offbeat be more your
style? On the spectrum between a formal and traditional ceremony and
the wackiest exchange of vows you can think of, where are you?
Somewhere in the middle, or somewhere on the edge, wanting to be
different?
3. What are your special needs? Think about the requirements you
each may have. Is one of you more religious than the other? Is one
of you atheist or agnostic? Are you an interfaith pair? Do you hail
from different cultures? How much do you want to honor your heritage
and the traditions of your parents and family, etc? Is there
anything you abhor about those traditions and would never want in
your own ceremony?
4. What do you two truly want? Most importantly, be completely
honest with one another (and then, your officiant). Make sure you
are creating this ceremony for the two of you – not just to please
others.
I give couples this mantra to adhere to as they seek to create a
ceremony all their own: "We will create our wedding ceremony our
way."
© Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway, 2006, all rights reserved.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway is a leading interfaith and
non-denominational wedding officiant who specializes in creating
unique and romantic wedding ceremonies for couples of all faiths,
backgrounds and cultures. She is also widely recognized as a bridal
stress expert devoted to helping brides-to-be tap into their inner
power and poise. She is the founder of annual Blessing of The Brides
and author of WEDDING GODDESS: A Divine Guide To Transforming
Wedding Stress into Wedding Bliss (Perigee Books, May 2005).
For a review of her book, please click
here
or you may visit her at
www.WeddingGoddess.com.
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