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Mrs. Ribbons, Washington D.C./Bloomington, IN Age and Occupation: 23, Research Associate for an international development firm Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Proposal Coordinator for contractor Engagement Date: May 2, 2008 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Indiana Memorial Union About Me: I'm an Indiana transplant living in DC with my fiance and our pretty kitty. I enjoy the color pink, I'm obsessed with the Dior New Look and tulle, and I heart my level 80 paladin. I'm a sucker for bad TV, literary theory, and cakes of all persuasion. I also happen to be marrying the cutest closet nerd around! It's all about Bloomington for us because it's where we met -- on the college paper. If there's a theme for our small summertime wedding, it's Dior meets Dorothy Draper on a lark in Bloomington; think poofy, plus graphic prints, bold colors, and a whole lot of prettiness.
About Mrs. Ribbons

Cherry Picking the Ceremony

March 16th, 2010 @ 3:21 pm by Mrs. Ribbons

We have a curious situation with our ceremony. I was raised Catholic and Ribs was raised… well, sort of Jewish? He had a Bar Mitzvah. That’s about it.

We’re doing a semi-Jewish—in the loosest sense possible—ceremony anyways.

As a writer and deeply observant person, I’ve become completely mystified by the world and, even more, the universe. I won’t go New Age on you, but trust me: it all blows my mind.

Having my mind blown by these things, I’m much more “spiritual” than religious. I think there’s a lot of beautiful things about Catholic mass, but the teachings don’t jive with my worldview. However, most of my family does continue to practice Catholicism. I didn’t want to create some humanist ceremony that’s completely devoid of their familiar text—the Bible. I also knew I literally couldn’t have an outdoor Catholic ceremony in a town where I’m nowhere near a member of the church.

So, we’ll adopt a few of the Jewish wedding traditions like the chuppah and blessings, but otherwise, it’s going to be secular. The officiant is a Christian minister of sorts, with a lot of experience in interfaith weddings. This isn’t a sundown thing with a ketubah. We are absolutely cherry picking.

Cherry Picking the Ceremony :  wedding bloomington ceremony Chuppah Chuppah

a chuppah

Another imperative is that the ceremony be inclusive. We both feel very strongly about gay rights and gender issues, so it’s necessary for us to have themes of equality, respect, and understanding woven into the ceremony. For that reason, we’re including an excerpt from Goodridge v. Department of Public Health:

Marriage is a vital social institution. The exclusive commitment of two individuals to each other nurtures love and mutual support; it brings stability to our society. For those who choose to marry, and for their children, marriage provides an abundance of legal, financial, and social benefits. In return it imposes weighty legal, financial, and social obligations … Without question, civil marriage enhances the ’welfare of the community.’ It is a ’social institution of the highest importance.’ It is central to the way the Commonwealth identifies inpiduals, provides for the orderly distribution of property, ensures that children and adults are cared for and supported whenever possible from private rather than public funds, and tracks important epidemiological and demographic data … Marriage also bestows enormous private and social advantages on those who choose to marry. Civil marriage is at once a deeply personal commitment to another human being and a highly public celebration of the ideals of mutuality, companionship, intimacy, fidelity, and family … Because it fulfills yearnings for security, safe haven, and connection that express our common humanity, civil marriage is an esteemed institution, and the decision whether and whom to marry is among life’s momentous acts of self-definition … It is undoubtedly for these concrete reasons, as well as for its intimately personal significance, that civil marriage has long been termed a ’civil right.’

I love the language here; it’s meaningful and significant, which is something important for a ceremony, I think!

What has shaped your ceremony?

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14 Responses to “Cherry Picking the Ceremony”

1.
teaadntoast
Member
teaadntoast (message)  2,595 posts, Sugar bee

I’m glad you were able to find ways to mesh your worldviews with those of your families. We wound up doing something similar - taking the marriage rite from the Book of Common prayer and tweaking particular poritions to better reflect our personal spiritual outlook. The language will be very familiar to a sizable chunk of guests without requiring either of us to profess beliefs we don’t actually hold.

 
2.
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Bee
Miss Frozen Yogurt (message)  2,685 posts, Sugar bee

I love that excerpt. I can’t wait to see how you incorporate it into your ceremony.

 
3.
Miss Giraffe
Bee
Miss Giraffe (message)  4,216 posts, Honey bee

Very nice!

 
4.
Entangled
Member
Entangled (message)  2,616 posts, Sugar bee

I went to a wedding where they used that as a reading. I thought it was fantastic.

 
5.
Amani
Member
Amani (message)  792 posts, Busy bee

I’ve heard that at a couple of weddings (lawyer friends of mine, so not surprising). It’s a great reading!

 
6.
sapphirebride
Member
sapphirebride (message)  1,747 posts, Bumble bee

Those that are religious in our families are Catholic and those that aren’t, aren’t. We’re both agnostics that lean fairly close to atheism, so it’s actually a pretty big deal to us that our ceremony isn’t religious at all. We know that some friends or family members may choose to do a more spiritual/religious reading for us and that’s fine, because we believe that will be more of a representation of their hopes for us than a statement of our own belief.

Anyway, this is a major reason that we’re working with our officiant to write our own ceremony because it’s about the only way to keep it meaningful, beautiful, but not filled with descriptions of marriage that we don’t believe in. I like your civil marriage tie-in! We’re on the look-out for readings that convey similar sentiments.

 
7.
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Bee
Miss Hamster (message)  4,045 posts, Honey bee

Great reading!

 
8.
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Bee
Miss Scissors (message)  7,343 posts, Bee Keeper

Melikes. <3

 
9.
LittlestBirds
Member
LittlestBirds (message)  2,605 posts, Sugar bee

I wish there were any way we could get away with doing a hora dance. Neither of us is the least bit Jewish, but man would that be fun.

 
10.
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Bee
Miss Pudding (message)  1,180 posts, Bumble bee

That’s awesome that you get to pick and choose your favorite parts. There are definitely parts of the Catholic ceremony that I could live without :P

 
11.
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Guest
Daniel Sroka

We also cherry-picked different aspects of our combined Jewish and Catholic traditions for our wedding. This let us honor our traditions, while defining our own combined values. It was an important step in beginning out life as an interfaith couple.

After reading your original post on this, I wrote down some of my own thoughts on creating a wedding ceremony on my blog: http://bit.ly/b3vjjL

 
12.
Miss Shoe
Member
Miss Shoe (message)  105 posts, Blushing bee

We’re doing a similar thing. I’m marrying an agnostic, and I was brought up in a very liberal church so our minister is allowing us to design the whole ceremony. It’s hard; you don’t want people (especially the groom) to feel left out, but you want the ceremony to have meaning.

Finding appropriate readings has been toughest part; thanks for sharing this one, I adore the message within it.

 
13.
Miss Argyle
Bee
Miss Argyle (message)  2,516 posts, Sugar bee

Mostly the Mr. and I really - and my Aunt a bit, too. It’ll be a pretty humanist ceremony - mostly because we aren’t religious at all, so we really want it to be a reflection of our values.

 
14.
veganglam
Member
veganglam (message)  2,267 posts, Buzzing bee

I really, really like your approach to this. FI and I both came from Catholic families and are now agnostic/atheist-leaning, but FI STILL has not told his parents or the rest of his family that we won’t have a church wedding. His mom once said she wouldn’t come if it wasn’t in a church. My parents have in just the past five years become committed non-Catholics, but the rest of my family is still very religious and will also be horrified to find that we aren’t having a church wedding. We’ve been wondering how to make a ceremony that will please us AND our religious families and now I’m going to be stalking your blogs for inspiration.

I also love that reading and might steal it from you!

Also want to echo LittlestBirds’ sentiment: Jewish weddings look SO fun. I feel intense pangs of jealousy whenever I see Jewish wedding photos! I want to smash glass and have people dance while carrying me and FI on chairs!

 

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Mrs. Ribbons
Mrs. Ribbons

Mrs. Ribbons, Washington D.C./Bloomington, IN Age and Occupation: 23, Research Associate for an international development firm Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Proposal Coordinator for contractor Engagement Date: May 2, 2008 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Indiana Memorial Union About Me: I'm an Indiana transplant living in DC with my fiance and our pretty kitty. I enjoy the color pink, I'm obsessed with the Dior New Look and tulle, and I heart my level 80 paladin. I'm a sucker for bad TV, literary theory, and cakes of all persuasion. I also happen to be marrying the cutest closet nerd around! It's all about Bloomington for us because it's where we met -- on the college paper. If there's a theme for our small summertime wedding, it's Dior meets Dorothy Draper on a lark in Bloomington; think poofy, plus graphic prints, bold colors, and a whole lot of prettiness.

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