Getting Handfasted: Start Early on Your Rite! ~by Paul Stephens
So you’ve decided to get married. Everyone is congratulating you and
offering you best wishes. You are going to be busy picking colors and
people to wear them, finding flowers and someone to arrange and deliver
them.
I hate to ask, but have
you asked your priest or priestess if they are available on your happy
day? Have you written the ceremony? Do you even know what kind of
ceremony you would like to have? Did you know that most priests and
priestesses would require that they see you and your mate-to-be for at
least three premarital evaluation sessions to see if they will perform
the ceremony? There is always so much to think about with a wedding or
handfasting that you might well have assumed that this friend of yours
would have nothing better to do than to spend the weekend before your
ceremony and the day of your ceremony with you and all your family and
friends.
Before you start off on the wrong foot, let’s do a
little time travel and look at how you should go about arranging your
pagan wedding or handfasting. As soon as you confirm that you will be
married, six to nine months before the ceremony but before selecting a
particular date, get together with your priestess or priest – or,
better, both – and find out what their calendars have open. They are
busy people who teach classes, run meeting groups and manage circles,
groves or covens. Often, they also attend meetings with various groups
to organize multifaith gatherings – and, unbelievably, they need time
for themselves. Unless you have a very understanding group and a
tolerant priest or priestess, you can forget sabbat rituals for your
wedding day.
Once the four of you have set the date, you can
schedule the evaluation sessions that most pagan priestesses and priests
require before officiating the ceremony. You can discuss who will write
the ceremony and resolve yourself to writing at least part of it. Where
will it be? Outside weddings are always so nice – unless it rains. Be
sure to plan alternatives, or plan for the worse and expect the best.
Speaking of the worst, I am reminded of a priestess who was involved in
an accident a week before she was to perform a wedding. It is a good
idea to have an alternate officiant so that the wedding can go on even
if the worst should happen.
The priest or priestess will supply
some ritual tools and weapons, but you will be required to supply some
materials as well, so now is a good time to make that list. The plans
thus far will take place before we tell Mom or call that nice lady who
makes your robes. It might even happen before you pick the colors.
After spending the better part of a day with your officiant, you can
begin thinking about the invitations, colors, wedding party and
assistants. You can begin writing the ceremony first draft. You can
begin making all the arrangements for flowers, tables, chairs, portable
gazebos, music, gowns or robes and the caterers. Be sure to get a good
night’s sleep, because until after the ceremony, you will have precious
little time for sleep. You are the ones who have given yourselves plenty
of time. You have six to nine months before your wedding.
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