P
Pug
Guest
For me, by far the biggest expense involved in getting married was to pay for the church and the organist. All the flowers cost $25-35 dollars and my dress $100. The church and organist were like $500. And yes, I paid it, just like the priest told me to, even though I was in debt (school loans). No one suggested to me that I could request a reduction in the fee, but you are right that I probably would not have taken it if offered. And it was my mother who paid for the dress, though I paid for the flowers.
- Finally, it helps people prioritize. This is sort of the flip side of number 2 above. I’ll be honest. It bothers me when a couple spends thousands, maybe even tens of thousands, of dollars on a wedding–renting tuxedos, dresses, a limo, hiring a DJ, a professional caterer, providing an open bar, hiring a professional organist and cantor, etc–and is offended when asked to contribute $500.00 to the Church to help pay the custodian who has to clean up after them, to pay the DRE who helped with their marriage prep, to pay to have the lights on in the Church, the AC on, and to rent the Church. (Let’s not forget that just because we are members of a particular parish, we don’t OWN that parish.) It’s a matter of priorities. “Where your heart is, there your treasure lies.” I know one priest, God bless him, who, in lieu of a set fee, asks a couple to tithe ten percent of whatever they are spending on their wedding to a charity. It could be the parish. It could be another worthwhile cause. He told me that he’s never, not even once, had a couple take him up on it–and he’s not what you would call “newly ordained.”
But I have grown up into someone who would be frustrated if asked to pay $50-100 for a baptism class which, since I teach the RCIA baptism class, would seem a rather superfluous hoop to “prove” I know the material and that I am serious about baptism. I find the fee structure scandalous as often found in practice.
I would not assume the objectors to fees are making poor decisions about priorities.