the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

The Wedding

 

by Marcel A. Duclos

 

 

     
 

A garden embraces the gathering. Tomatoes, cucumbers, beans, beets, radishes and stalks of corn adorn the open-air sanctuary. A newly constructed labyrinth reminds the guests of the preeminence of life as spiritual journey. It is the bride’s parental home.

The Chuppah dances above the heads of the couple. It offers ready protection from blazing sun or threatening rain. The voices of mother and son fill the space with “Lechi Lach” in acapella unison. A car door clicks shut in the driveway. Late arrivals whisper ‘excuse me’ as they take mid-row seats.

Earlier, these words had welcomed the invitees.

Welcome to this time and place: holy ground for a holy purpose.

It would be difficult to find a human relationship that embodies a greater complexity and holds more mystery than marriage. Yet, when we were blessed with a true partner in marriage, there is then a chance to evolve in that complex mystery and to affirm our partner’s sovereignty in the same moment that we affirm our own.

Sovereignty is the ability to be, simply, oneself: to experience autonomous selfhood and to gain self-rule. It is the opposite of control and of surrender.

Partners risk everything to be in the real where both are themselves. It requires brave hearts on both sides.

We are here today to witness the bravery of these two young “old souls”.

Couples nod knowingly to each other. Some breathe deeply to find their faltering bravery.

If a marriage is to last, it must be tied to something more enduring than personal feelings.

Approached this way, marriage becomes one of the primary tools for spiritual growth and for developing the qualities of commitment and responsibility in and through the joys and sorrows of the years. Transcendence of self is the necessary prerequisite for any successful marriage. The two who will exchange their vows before us today have readied themselves for this transcendence. They want their marriage to express justice and charity. They seek enlightenment so that their actions will help heal and repair the brokenness of the worlds.

The assembled bow with the weight of the recent death of a family friend far away near the Tigris.

They marry today; and we will hear them, later in this celebration, exchange together the same marriage vows. They are committed to a day-by-day practice of enlightenment so as to live a conscious relationship.

They want their love for each other to spill over into the world.

The prison chaplain in the front row knows first hand how much love is needed in the heavily burdened hearts of the inmates he visits on borrowed time each week.

They learned this growing up in their respective families. They were nourished in this ancient near eastern wisdom by parents faithful to their religious traditions.

Many bodies shift in their seats. Minds ponder, in distraction. Will hostilities between believers ever stop?

These two love the whole of creation; love the world. They see in it the face of God. In their life together, they pledge to approach each other and each situation with justice and compassion: for they know that each moment holds the presence of God.

The avowed atheist, a few rows away from the speaker, looks down and clenches his social worker fist resting on his lap and thinks, “It’s time for a miracle.” Others also think of the peaceable kingdom.

The celebrant turns and faces the young couple. He calls them by their name.

You have known each other for some years now. You have had time to shed some early illusions and you have come bravely face to face with the realness of the other. You know the other more and you love the other more. You have told me so. I have seen it in your eyes.

It is of the essence of your religious traditions, that marriage is understood as a metaphor for the relationship between human beings and God. You are ready to incarnate that metaphor.

You marry today and you will relive this sacred moment every day of your life. You grace each other today and you will grace each other every day of your life. You stand under the awesome canopy today and you will stand under it every day of your life because you know that you have found your partner in this world – given to you from all eternity.

A three-year-old calls out to his father. His mother, amply pregnant, hugs him and hands him to her husband.

Love spills over into the world.

 
     
 

 

     
 

Marcel A. Duclos, M. Th., M. Ed., Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Human Services, and Alcohol/Drug Counseling, maintains a private practice in Concord, NH. Marcel and co-writer / clinician Connie Robillard give trauma healing workshops. Their book, Common Threads – Stories Of Life After Trauma, was published at the end of last year. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

© all work on this site is copyrighted