I''ve been to three weddings lately who all have had dramatically different vows.
One had a female officiant who described the bride as coming from a long line of strong women, read a poem, and the bride and groom recited their own short vows i.e "love you always."
The second wedding was in a baptist church, the sermon was on the bride''s role to obey and submit and the husband''s role to love and sacrifice.
The third was a hybrid of the two - removing the obey language from the Christian ceremony, but still had many traditional cultural & religious elements.
What are you doing or how have you felt as a guest? If you''re using the traditional Christian vows (esp. the obey language), are you doing so because of true belief? Or to respect the tradition of your family? Or because you don''t want to kick up a fuss?
If you''re using very non-traditional vows, how did your family and future spouse''s family react to the news? Did you feel something was lost (tradition, sentiment, respect from your guests of the seriousness of the occasion)?
One had a female officiant who described the bride as coming from a long line of strong women, read a poem, and the bride and groom recited their own short vows i.e "love you always."
The second wedding was in a baptist church, the sermon was on the bride''s role to obey and submit and the husband''s role to love and sacrifice.
The third was a hybrid of the two - removing the obey language from the Christian ceremony, but still had many traditional cultural & religious elements.
What are you doing or how have you felt as a guest? If you''re using the traditional Christian vows (esp. the obey language), are you doing so because of true belief? Or to respect the tradition of your family? Or because you don''t want to kick up a fuss?
If you''re using very non-traditional vows, how did your family and future spouse''s family react to the news? Did you feel something was lost (tradition, sentiment, respect from your guests of the seriousness of the occasion)?