not getting married in a church. my wedding day will be a glorious celebration of love with nothing to do with religious love. that's cool for others, but we dont want to enter something this serious lying to a priest/preacher, our family/fiends, or each other.
so you have to go through all that catholic shit? FUCK THAT. elope... or at least threaten to. just cause you look like a child doesnt mean you cant pretend to be a man.
salty rev tags are lame. dude's just being real. he seems like a pretty dope man of the cloth to me.
Did a shot a few minutes before walking down the aisle.
You walked down the aisle?
You walked down the aisle?
I had like 2 glasses of wine prior to the ceremony (in the entire day) so I was sober and I remained that way (it was hot, so I drank a lot of water and I was busy dancing/greeting people/kissing/smiling so I drank a few glasses of champagne but not enough to feel it).
I wasn't sober the night before, but I don't remember being hungover (my MOH was super hungover though)
I'd like to get married in a church but I'm religious at all. I also don't have any want or need to be wedded with God or whatever the holy aspect of marriage is, I just like the church as a venue.
And I mean no disrespect, but if you came to me and told me that, I'd refuse. I can't, in good conscience, let you stand before the altar and just lie because you think the church is pretty. But I'd hope that people could respect that and would actually appreciate clergy taking what they do seriously.
I actually found a girl who said yes back in Feb. She's got a vagina and everything
There are 5 posters who were drunk and/or on drugs during their ceremony. Those are the stories I want to hear!
Tough to stay drunk when you are sweating all of the alcohol out of your system within 90 seconds of drinking it.
i've seen guys get escorted down the aisle by their parents (after the groomsmen/bridesmaids have walked down the aisle in pairs)
Also no 1 Corinthians 3, because that was about a fight in the church, not about marriage.
The "proper" (as in making the most theological sense) way to do it is to have the couple process in together, as they are the ministers of the service. They are the ones marrying each other, the priest simply is there to witness and pronounce a blessing. It's amazing how much clergy have to fight Hollywood when it comes to planning the service.
Shocker - The Church refusing to recognize that the modern world and traditions are changing