No two ceremonies are the same, but these components of a wedding ceremony are a great place to start. From here you can add, omit, adapt and—most importantly—infuse with personality and authenticity.
Procession
Processions are so common that people often overlook them as a ritual, yet this is when the ceremony begins. There’s music from live musicians or a DJ. There’s your inner circle of immediate family and a wedding party paving the way for your entrance. Through the procession you honor people close to you, and your music choices set the tone.
Welcome, centering, and completing community
A welcome is a chance to acknowledge the momentousness of the moment, to invite people to shift their mindset. They may have experienced traffic or confusion on the way there, they may have worried about being late. We need to have them set that all aside to be fully present. We thank them for being there—witnesses are a key element of any wedding ceremony.
This is also a chance to acknowledge people who are missing, those who couldn’t travel and those loved ones who are deceased. Sometimes we name specific people, and sometimes we even make ritual space for them.
Love Story
Your story. Of meeting, of loving, of recognizing this person as your person. Through the Soulful Wedding Roadmap process we’ll decide which parts of your story are right to share on your wedding day. Laughter and tears guaranteed.
Relationship reflection and dreams
This part is often intertwined with the story. But aside from your history as a couple it’s worth waxing on why your relationship works, and how you imagine bringing this forward into your married life.
Readings
Once we’ve established what your marriage means to you, and those around you, we can select readings that help articulate it. Readings can come from almost anywhere—scripture, movie quotes, pop songs, novels, essays, poems written by family members, and more.
Readings do not only have to be about marriage. They can be about love more broadly, about community, adventure, savoring life, nature and more.
Rituals
A ritual is an act that brings change. It brings meaning into a third dimension (not just seeing and hearing the ceremony). An exchange of rings is the most common ritual—the exchange symbolizes the verbal exchange of vows. Yet there are many, many, more rituals we can employ. We can enact or adapt something from a religious tradition and we can invent our own as we discover meaning together.
Read more about my definition of ritual.
Question of Intent / Commitment Statement / Declaration of Intent
This is the critical legal piece. You affirm who you are and that you are willingly entering into this union with your partner. Traditionally the question is asked, “Do you…?” and of course the answer is: “I do!”
Vows
The vows and Question of Intent can be weaved together or separated. Vows can be a ”repeat after me” offering, or you can speak something you’ve prepared yourself. The definition of vow is simply “promise.” The tone, specificity, and grandeur or simplicity of the words will be up to you.
Pause or blessing
Don’t rush off in a surge of adrenaline. Pause to soak in and remember the moment. In a religious ceremony a marriage blessing or a benediction would be offered. For non religious ceremonies, just crafting a moment to go inward is enough.
Proclamation
The grand finale stating what has been done in both a legal and spiritual sense. Most often it concludes with, “I now pronounce you…”
Recession
The grand exit, set to music and a big applause! Logistically, it’s the opposite order of the procession.
Humor, honesty, tenderness, appreciation, gratitude…
Key elements to any ceremony! Woven throughout in the tapestry of your story and promise.
If you’re wondering how to use these elements to craft a meaningful rite of passage, check out the Soulful Wedding Roadmap.
More from the blog
Better than an unplugged wedding ceremony
Molly + Mark's Ceremony Photo Op moment, captured by Chris of Silk City Photo Many couples wonder whether to have unplugged wedding ceremony. My advice is to closely consider the issues at play. A core tension in 21st century weddings is between our compulsion to...
LGBTQ Weddings: Inclusivity Manifesto and Media
So much has changed in LGBTQ weddings I started in the wedding industry in Boston as a photographer in 2008. At that time Massachusetts was one of the only states in the country that allowed queer couples to have a marriage on par with straight couples (as opposed to...
What is ritual?
My definition of ritual, influenced by David Whyte’s definition of poetry. Mosaics For something as vital to our individual and collective experience as ritual I do not strive to have a set definition with clear boundaries. Like the word “sacred” I see the definition...