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Mrs. Spaniel, Los Angeles Age and Occupation: 28, Law Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Calamigos Ranch About Me: I'm a third-year law student trying to balance graduating with starting my career, keeping up a relationship, and, oh yeah, planning an Old World, multi-cultural, "mountain lodge" wedding for 180 guests! A South Asian Jewish girl getting ready to marry my handsome Catholic Dane, I'm hoping to blend our cultures in our wedding just a bit more gently than by providing samosas as appetizers and offering æbleskiver for dessert. (Although that would also be awesome.)
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When I told the hive about our officiant-choosing dilemmas, I got a lot of helpful suggestions, like finding a non-denominational minister or having a friend get ordained to perform the ceremony. How did you all get so smart? :)

After a lot of discussions and meeting with a Reform Rabbi from a Los Angeles synagogue that we really liked who was willing to do just about anything we wanted in a ceremony except co-officiate (which I didn’t want anyway), Mr. Spaniel and I finally were able to agree… to find a non-denominational officiant! The truth is that neither of us are religious people, and while he liked the rabbi in general, Mr. Spaniel wasn’t really comfortable with the concept of being married by a rabbi at all. Although it was a difficult compromise to make at first, I realize now that a secular wedding really suits us much better.

We began the search for our officiant where we begin all wedding-related searches: online! After asking the lovely ladies on the boards for some recommendations and doing a few Google searches of my own, Mr. Spaniel and I shot off some emails to a few prospective officiants and talked to our parents for more ideas. We liked the idea of a Unitarian Universalist minister (there are two UU churches in our neighborhood!), since we didn’t expect to find anyone already in our lives to do our wedding. But—serendipity!—it turns out Mr. Spaniel’s family knew the perfect guy, who is a good friend of his parents’, has a nice speaking voice, and is already ordained by the Universal Life Church. Seriously, when do the stars align this easily?

I admit, I was a teensy-tiny bit nervous about it at first, but when we met Fred this weekend, my fears were allayed. He came prepared with his documentation that he was, in fact, ordained, and a pre-written ceremony sample, and we discussed what we had in mind for our ceremony. The current plan is for us to finish writing the important parts ourselves, and then meet with Fred again to discuss and adapt in the next few weeks before we hand everything over to give him time to memorize and practice.

So now that we have an officiant (hooray!), it’s time for us to get to work writing our ceremony! So far, we’ve created the following outline.

1. Ketubah signing. The question about the “first look” that a lot of couples have to think about isn’t actually a question at all for us. Of course we would see each other before I walk down the aisle: we’re signing a marriage contract before the ceremony!

2. Introduction. We’re willing to let Fred take the lead on this as someone who will have just celebrated his fiftieth wedding anniversary the month before our wedding! I’m excited to see what comes up with.

3. Readings. We would like to keep our ceremony relatively short, but we also have a few readings that we are thinking about using, including an excerpt from Khalil Gibran’s “The Prophet” (On Marriage), and an E. E. Cummings poem (”I carry your heart”). We haven’t decided exactly which readings we’ll do or who we will ask to read them.

4. Ketubah reading. The text of the ketubah will be read during the ceremony.

5. Exchange of vows. Catholic wedding vows: “Do you take ___ as your lawful wife/husband, to have and to hold, from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and cherish until death do you part?” “I do.” (source)

6. Exchange of rings. Unitarian ring exchange: “With this ring, I wed you, and pledge you my love, now and forever.” (source) Under Jewish law, the wedding actually becomes valid when the groom “puts a ring on it”. I just thought I’d throw that out there. :)

7. Pronouncement of marriage.

8. Breaking of the glass. Sometimes, people put a light bulb in a cloth napkin and break that instead of a wine glass. Apparently it shatters more easily under the weight of a person’s foot. The glass can also be turned into a work of art after the ceremony.

Are you writing your own ceremony? How did you go about doing it, and what did you include?

Tags: ceremony, religion, traditions |
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9 Responses to “A Traditional, Non-Traditional Ceremony”

1.
Miss Pug
Bee
Miss Pug (message)  3,753 posts, Honey bee

cool! it sounds like it’s going to work out really well. that’s awesome that you found an officiant!

 
2.
Gilneas
Member
Gilneas (message)  1,393 posts, Bumble bee

Finding an officiant can be such a hard thing, and I’m glad you found one and are working on putting together your ceremony! I’m an officiant myself, so finding the right person for our ceremony was SO tough. We’re keeping our ceremony simple, and I’m actually excited that our officiant will write it and I don’t have to :)

 
3.
tea
Member
tea (message)  7,263 posts, Bee Keeper

i’m glad you were able to find someone to officiate for you. it sounds like it’ll work out great

 
4.
GirlWithARing
Member
GirlWithARing (message)  1,579 posts, Bumble bee

We just solved our interfaith ceremony dilemma by asking a friend to officiate. I’m so excited, but have no idea what the ceremony will look like. I think putting together an outline like you did is a great start, so I might do one as well over the holidays. We’ll be using a lot of the same elements as you are, as well as some Ukrainian traditions to honor my family’s heritage.

 
5.
Bee Icon
Bee
Ms Potato Chips (message)  1,193 posts, Bumble bee

This sounds like a meaningful and well thought-out ceremony. Glad you found an officiant you like!

 
6.
Miss Nachos
Bee
Miss Nachos (message)  1,733 posts, Bumble bee

Honestly at this point, I have NO idea what our ceremony wording is going to be. I don’t even know if we have a choice to customize it or if it’s a standard non-denominational ceremony. I’m happy you found someone that fits well with you guys!

 
7.
notasaint
Member
notasaint (message)  140 posts, Blushing bee

In FL a notary can perform a marriage ceremony so we are going this route. I wrote a ceremony (I’m an officient as well) and vows, the notary is fine reading and doing whatever I wish.

 
8.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Guinea Pig (message)  1,377 posts, Bumble bee

I’m glad it sounds like you guys have found the perfect officiant! We’re having a non-denominational officiant as well - she gave us a great ceremony outline to work with plus bunch of suggestions, and we are going to customize it ourselves.

 
9.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Cola (message)  2,868 posts, Sugar bee

We too have mainly written our ceremony (or, taken bits and parts from ceremony wording I found online to create our own), and also have a friend marrying us!

 

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Mrs. Spaniel
Mrs. Spaniel

Mrs. Spaniel, Los Angeles Age and Occupation: 28, Law Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Calamigos Ranch About Me: I'm a third-year law student trying to balance graduating with starting my career, keeping up a relationship, and, oh yeah, planning an Old World, multi-cultural, "mountain lodge" wedding for 180 guests! A South Asian Jewish girl getting ready to marry my handsome Catholic Dane, I'm hoping to blend our cultures in our wedding just a bit more gently than by providing samosas as appetizers and offering æbleskiver for dessert. (Although that would also be awesome.)

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