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0Scarlett_nidiyilii
Guest
We sang “fair fat and wide.”
Because if the Church allows it, you are allowed to choose it.When you have centuries of great music to choose from (propers, traditional hymns, etc.), why resort to the 70’s folk songs? Besides, none of those songs (i.e., “All Are Welcome,” “Gather Us In,” “We Are Called,” “City of God,” etc.) are really wedding-appropriate.
Yeah, well the Church has “agreed with you” for roughly 50-some years. And “disagreed with you” for who-knows-how-many centuries.It’s a good thing your opinion is not the Church opinion. But let’s play in the sandbox of your theology for a second. Lent, roughly 6 weeks, advent roughly 4 weeks, so that’s 10 weeks, which is roughly 70 days. Plus all fridays as a day of penance minis the 10 fridays in lent and advent that we already counted that’s 112 days, do the same thing for sundays that you do for fridays because of parish logistics of having several Masses for the priest that day and you have 154 days so far that you would ban weddings. About a 3rd of a year. So, in a world and Church where marriage is suffering and misunderstood and failing, you want to relegate anyone who wants to get married to a handful of Saturdays and Tuesdays for weddings!? Or are sorrowful mystery days out too? How about the feast of a martyr? You see? It doesnt reach a logical conclusion. It isn’t practical, nor does it match theology. My wedding was Dec. 15th. It was the first day after my wife’s last final for the semester. It also happens to be my birthday, years later my 4th child was born on my birthday/ anniversary. Appropriate I think. And certainly a day of providence for us. I’m guessing you are not married. But when you are, it is pretty important to keep the solemn nature of the sacrament and do so in a holy manner. I suspect many readers on here have broken the “rules” you stated. Perhaps some saints too. Baptisms, marriages, etc belong some penitential times. Because the life of the Church does not stop. I believe advent is a highly appropriate time to get married. Marriage lays the foundation for children like advent laid the foundation for the Holy Child. And I’m glad the Church, discipline, theology, and calandar agrees with me.
www.ccwatershed.org
The Lohengrin march isn’t “forbidden” for Catholics. It was actually the Lutherans who objected to the Wagner opera it was taken from as containing pagan themes.This song is actually forbidden in a Catholic wedding (I don’t know why, but I think it had something to do with the theology of the lyrics).
Aw, I don’t know. Some folks might see marriage as penitential.weddings should not be celebrated during Advent, Lent, or the Triduum, due to the penitential nature of these liturgical seasons
So, yes, the preconciliar Church did not allow weddings during Advent or Lent. This has been the practice of the Church for many centuries, and only for 50 years or so that the Church has "agreed with you" that it is okay to have a wedding during Advent or Lent.#### Times of year for celebrating a marriage
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Priest reading the blessing at a Catholic wedding, 2018
In the Latin Church, marriage may be celebrated during Lent even within a Nuptial Mass; however, it is considered inappropriate to have such a celebration during Holy Week and impossible during the Easter Triduum. In principle, no day of the week is excluded for marriage.[84] Some Eastern Catholic Churches do not allow marriage during Lent.[85] In earlier times, while the Latin Church allowed marriage to be celebrated at any time, it prohibited the solemn blessing of marriages during Advent and on Christmas Day, and during Lent and on Easter Sunday.[86]