(Continued from last week)
Here
is my proposal.
St.
Dymphna’s in Frostbite Falls will offer the church and the church hall
absolutely free of charge to any parishioner who wants a simple exchange of
wedding vows.
First
let us define parishioner. In these days of cafeteria Catholicism, a
parishioner in my book is someone who has a genuine pastoral relationship with
their pastor, attends Mass faithfully and is registered in the parish.
Canonically I must also include anyone who is baptized and has received their
First Holy Communion and lives in the parish boundaries, even though I may
never have met them and couldn’t pick them out a crowd of two.
Now
let us define simple exchange of wedding vows.
The
wedding party has a bride, a groom and two witnesses, one male and one female,
no more. Parents may walk up the aisle with their daughter or accompany their
son, but that’s it -- no bridesmaids, no wedding march, no little kids, no flower
girl, no ring bearer. One witness can carry the rings. As for music, the parish
organist can be hired, but that’s it. No soloists, even your cousin Hildegard,
no musicians, no harpist, flautist or kazoo players. The groom and the male
witness may not wear rented tuxedos. Just decent pants, shoes, shirt and tie
with a suit jacket if desired. No ridiculous novelty bus, hummer or stretch
limo. There can be a wedding mass or just the exchange of vows as is felt
appropriate. The bride may wear a white dress if appropriate, with sleeves or a
shawl or vest that covers the shoulders. (It has always struck me as odd when
some bride dressed in reams of gleaming white mosquito netting stands there
with her five children.) There may be
photos, but no professional photographer. If you are going to pay the
outrageous cost of a professional photographer, it’s no longer a simple
wedding. The congregation may then adjourn to the parish hall for a simple
wedding breakfast immediately following the ceremony. Finger food, hors d’oeuvres, a cake and champagne or wine for the toast. No music. No beer. No
booze. No DJ. No sit down feast for four hundred -- just a receiving line and a
“nosh”, cake and a toast. The entire expense of the event would be the dress
and the food. No place cards, no long boring videos of the bride and groom as
infants, no roasts, just the sacrament.
Who
would do this? It sounds depressing. It’s a lot less depressing than starting
married life with a huge debt and an aching head, and possibly a fight with the
new in-laws. Use the money to take a trip or buy a house or pay off your
student loans. I have had weddings like this and they are actually elegant in
their simplicity. The simple wedding allows a couple to prepare for a life
together in a relaxed and spiritual way and when the day of their wedding
arrives, they are not at the end of their wits, thinking about nothing but the
screw up with the place cards and the gifts for the bridesmaids and whether
they should acknowledge the groom’s father’s second and third wives thereby enraging
the first wife and risking a brawl in the ladies room and the arrival of the
police at the banquet hall.
I
said much earlier that no one thinks weddings are important anymore except
homosexuals, wedding planners and divorce lawyers. It is time for the Catholic
Church to get out of the wedding business and get back into the business of the
sacrament of Holy Matrimony. The government has never agreed with the Catholic
Church on what a wedding really is. We believe in an indissoluble, covenantal
sacrament that ends only with the death of one of the parties. The government
wedding is a contract that ends when it is convenient to end it. Now
legislators are falling all over each in the attempt to assure the electorate
that they are more tolerant and nicer than their political opponents by being
the first on their block to approve the redefinition of marriage and the family
to include anyone you may please.
When all states and all the legislators have
approved same sex weddings, doubtless they will move on to demonstrate their
open mindedness by approving multiple couples weddings, male and female harems,
and then weddings with pets and perhaps with inanimate objects. What the world
has decided to call a wedding, is not something of which we even approve. I
have said it often enough and will say it again. Some clever Catholic lawyer
should get a class action suit going to make the point that government’s
involvement in weddings is a violation of the separation of church and state.
If I have a wedding for which there is no wedding license, I am guilty of a
FELONY!!! In effect that means I cannot bless a wedding that the state has not
first approved. It will not be long before my refusal to bless a wedding of
which the state approves will come with a fine and perhaps imprisonment. Now
the state is content to tell me who I may not marry. In a very little while the
state will insist on its right to tell whom I MUST marry. The state and the culture have redefined
marriage and thus it is not something with which I care to be involved. We must
dump weddings and return to the old and tasteful wine of the exchange of
marriage vows.
If
you are a couple, and by this I mean an engaged couple, or even people who are
living together in a civil marriage or without benefit of any marriage at all.
What you may ask is the difference between a wedding and the exchange of vows?
Simple. The first is a photo-event and a great pain in the neck. The second is
a simple statement that, “I promise to be faithful to you for the rest of my
life, and to care for you and for any children that God may give us.”
Ladies, if the old goat with whom you are
sharing your life at the moment will not vow before God and the Church in the
most solemn way that he will be faithful to you for the rest of your life, I
would drop him like a bad habit. Change them locks! Get a new phone number,
password and E- mail address. He’s a bum and not worth your time. If Becky Sue,
that hussy, gives you the business about a bargain basement wedding, or some
such nonsense just tell her that she may have had a perfectly lovely wedding,
but you have a husband who loves you, your children and the Lord.
Yours
monotonously,
The
Rev. Know-it-all
P.S.
Fr. Simon of St. Lambert’s in Skokie, a loose cannon if ever there was one, and
a remarkably poor theologian, has
written to tell that his experiment with changing the method of educating
children for First Holy Communion has been a raging success, despite the fact
that he was involved with it. The first
confession class was the best prepared he had ever met and the desire for Holy
Communion was very real and he really recognized the candidates from their
regular participation in Sunday Mass with their parents. Instead of a post-reconciliation
party after the first confessions, there was an enrollment in the Scapular
which was very moving. The program
apparently only met with a sort of mentor once a month. The rest of the time
the parents were provided with teaching materials and they themselves taught
the children. It worked splendidly, the parents and their children spent almost
an entire year growing together in faith and love for Christ. It was amazing to
watch faith become a family affair, rather than a “drop ’em off, pick ‘em up”
sort of thing. The joy of the sacrament shared by parents and children alike
was deeply touching. The parents really fulfilled the hope expressed at Baptism
that they would be the first and best of teachers in the ways of faith. I know
that the program did not succeed because of Fr. Simon. He is a fog-bound idiot.
The credit must go first to the Holy Spirit, and then to Mrs. Dorothy Amorella,
the mentor and Jonathan Rivera, the co-coordinator, and above all to the
parents who loved their children enough to try a difficult experiment.
Kudos
and Many Blessings!
I am chuckling (though seriously) at your fine writing and the very insightful thoughts that you share, Rev. Know-It-All. I must point out to you that now, people are marrying themselves!! Did you know that, Fr. Simon? Yes, that's right, and the thinking is that in loving and taking care of and pleasing oneself, one will come to feel the self-esteem that is necessary to love others.
ReplyDeleteI hope you don't really think that your described exchange of vows would be depressing. It described my wedding almost to a T (my dress was not one of the most expensive elements as I got it for $75 off Craigslist) and everyone thought it was wonderful. It's not a pipe dream, and those of us who value the sacrament over the spectacle are indeed out there. Take heart!
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