Seven Things Your Wedding Minister Thinks (but Doesn't Say)
June, as we all know, is the traditional "wedding month." Our sweet friend Erin, whom you may recall as the Kentucky gal who preaches in the desert, and who learned it all from her days as a sorority rush chair, was kind enough to share a few words of advice for all our readers who may be walking down the aisle this month. As always, Erin's essay had me laughing and crying and just being so proud to claim her as my sorority sister and my friend. Y'all can find more of Erin's beautiful writing on her blog, Irreverin.-- HCW
Some Stuff the
Minister is Thinking as you Plan your “Perfect Wedding”
Erin loved getting to marry her brother Chris... |
1. We roll inward eyes a little when you say you want 1 Corinthians 13 read in the
ceremony. Yes, love is patient, love is kind. We get it. But we have to
actually SAY things in the service other than ‘do you take this man/woman,
etc,’ and well…that little gem of scripture has done been said. It’s been said
a lot. Give us something to work with, other than the magic of your love.
2. We
die a little inside when we say, ‘the church will provide a wedding coordinator
for the rehearsal,’ and you say, ‘oh, no, my mother’s going to do it!’ Trust
us. That will not end well for anybody.
3. You
are not going to shock us with your family drama. No matter how many crazy
siblings, inappropriate uncles, or unconventional marriages you bring into the
church, we have seen it all. Oh, and also? 9 out of 10 of us could care less if
you are living together. And even if we did, we know you are lying when you talk
about ‘my apartment.’
...and her other brother Chris! |
4. No,
you cannot take down the purple Advent décor in the sanctuary and replace it
with red and green stuff that ‘matches the dresses.’ Baby Jesus doesn’t care
‘what it looks like in the pictures.’ You want a church wedding? This is a
church.
5. If
your cousin ‘who’s a preacher’
insists on reading something from Genesis, we get to approve which translation
he’s packing.
6. We
triple dog dare you to question our fee. If you do, we will ask you how much
you are paying the caterer, the band, the wedding planner, the hairdresser, the
bartender; and then we will gently
remind you that while our services are the cheapest of any of these, we went to
more school, and spent way more time planning for your perfect day. Grace is free, but our time isn’t. Also—eye rolling and inward groaning aside—from this day forward, til death do you part, we are invested in your marriage. We want it to succeed, and that’s why we’re blessing it. I don’t think the bass player feels the same way about the sanctity of this whole business.
“Perfect” is a dangerous word. For life in general, and for
marriage in particular. Chances are, if you have unrealistic expectations of
this day, you likely have some unrealistic expectations about marriage, as
well. Expect that there will be a big family meltdown, a major
hair malfunction, and/or something in the neighborhood of a bird flying into
the sanctuary and dropping an unwanted gift on your grandma’s corsage. Likewise,
accept that you will gain a few
pounds over the next 50 years, and so will your spouse; you will fight, you
will lose money, you will face disappointment—possibly in each other. Life will
get messy, and even the most perfect-est, magazine-worthy, color-coordinated
and professionally choreographed wedding in the world will not keep that from
happening.
So put down that Southern
Living wedding edition, step the ^!%* AWAY from Pinterest, and get ready to
actually BE married. For better, or for worse. If you go into your special,
perfect day in full awareness of all the ways that the wheels can come off,
then you will actually have FUN at your own wedding. You will see every little
hitch and hiccup as a welcome and introduction to the full, joyful, and
unpredictable life you are about to enter, with the person who is your soul’s
delight. Their shoes will not always
match you hair accessories… in fact, unless you are getting married in high
school (please, don’t) and you still have prom to look forward to (just,
please, no) then your attire will probably never
match again. And yet… a life shared in love—in all its sacred messiness—is
so much better than even the most ‘perfect’ day you can imagine.
Because ultimately—even if we can’t read it without rolling
our eyes a little—love gives you life. It bears all things, believes all
things, hopes all things.
Love endures all things. Even the perfect blush and bashful wedding.
Love never ends.