Poems for Weddings

Poems for Use in Weddings

 

Poem No. 1 – Cycles

Wildflowers bloom on a mountainside,

As icy waters on their tumbling ride,

Flow in haste to meet the Sea,

On a cycle that will always be.

Cycles, cycles everyplace,

Even in my life, I face

The fact that cycles often race

With no regard to proper pace.

So I was born and grew up fast,

And now I’m free to love at last,

And need (Bride or Groom’s Name) to complete the chain

Of the cycle that is in my name.

 

 

Poem No. 2 – Two Birds

 

Two birds begin a journey long,

From different points in far off lands;

With a luring urge – in heart a song,

Two novices heed life’s commands.

As they make their great migration,

Their feeble feet turn to taloned hands;

And the two reach their destination

As seasoned travelers in the northern lands.

Still unaware that the other lives,

Each alights upon the very same tree;

And there the two, as if guided by God,

Fall madly in love and marry.

Thus so it is with (Bride and Groom);

Two birds which Heaven’s winds did blow

To this blessed rendezvous of life,

Like the two birds at Capistrano.

 

Poem No. 3 – The Recipe of Love

 

The recipe of love must always include

Some herbs and spices for fortitude;

A tablespoon of forgiveness –

A clove of loyalty –

A cup of faith –

And a sprig of honesty;

A pinch of patience –

A teaspoon of trust –

A cup of friendship –

And a bit of lust;

Mix all these herbs and spices well –

No other recipe could ever excel;

Add (Bride’s Name) and (Groom’s Name) for proper effect;

Then saute the whole in two cups of respect.

 

Poems – Copyright (c) 1983-1996 by Ara John Movsesian

 

Most often used readings

Wedding Ceremonies: The Readings

 

The four readings below are used most often in weddings.

 

The New Testament

 

Paul wrote First Corinthians, Chapter Thirteen a letter to a small Christian group about twenty or

twenty-five years after the death of Jesus. After A.D. 50 the new religion of Christianity was

spreading rapidly across the Mediterranean area. There were many new, growing groups and

there were many political restrictions placed on Paul’s travels. Therefore, he began to keep in

contact with the new groups writing letters in Greek on large sheets of papyrus. He sent out

personal letters to each congregation, intended to be read to the group when they together to

share in a ritual meal. In these letters he tried to respond to questions about proper conduct.

Because information was so meager in those early years of the Christian church, Christians often

copied these letters and sent them around to other nearby churches.

 

Paul was preparing people for the second coming of Jesus, whom he believed was the Messiah.

Today most Biblical scholars believe that Paul thought this second coming was only a few years

away, perhaps only a few months away. Paul’s letters, intended to guide these small churches for

a short time until Jesus returned, are today 2,000 year old scriptures.

 

There are many different translations. One commonly used in weddings is the King James Version

(KJV), called the Authorized Version (AV) in England. However, today most people replace the

word “charity” in the 1611 King James Version with the word “love.” This translation is likely to

be familiar to many persons attending a wedding service. Many of them may have used it at their

own service. They may have heard it at other weddings or as a reading in church. For many

people it is still the Bible, with its phrases and images deeply embedded in English-speaking

cultural history. When you use this reading, you may elicit in people the positive associations they

have with these words. These positive associations come from hearing these words in the past

during meaningful times in their lives.

 

There are many other English translations. The New Revised Standard Version, first published in

1989, is gaining wide acceptance among mainline Protestants. Scholars consider the NRSV the

most accurate revision of the King James Version. Many Protestants also use The Good News

Bible, published in 1976 by the American Bible Society. Roman Catholics use The New

American Bible and The Jerusalem Bible. The advantage of using a modern English translation is

that it is much more understandable. However, modern translations do not carry the long

emotional associations that the traditional King James Version carries.

 

The translators of the King James Version placed some words in italics to showto the reader that

these specific words were not present in the Greek text. The translators inserted the italicized

words for clarification. Below is the most often used reading in American wedding services,

although most ministers, priests and couples change the word charity to love.

 

Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am

become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of

prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all

faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing. And

though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be

burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing. Charity suffereth long and is

kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up; Doth not behave

itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;

Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; Beareth all things, believeth all

things, hopeth all things, endureth all things. Charity never faileth: but whether there

be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether

there be knowledge, it shall vanish away. For we know in part, and we prophesy in

part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done

away. When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a

child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see through

a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even

as also I am known. And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three, but the

greatest of these is charity. First Corinthians, Chapter Thirteen, King James Version

 

The New Revised Standard Version, below, has the advantage of the most recent biblical

research and uses twentieth century English.

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

 

 

A Reading from The Old Testament or Hebrew Scriptures

 

If there were ratings for the books of the Hebrew Scriptures, The Song of Songs (also translated

as The Song of Solomon) would be rated “R.” Full of elaborate imagery, it is a collection of

steamy love-poems, with no references to God. There are no other writings remotely like it

anywhere else in the Bible. The Song of Songs is popular at weddings because it is full of folk

poetry that affirms of the beauty of nature and of the human body.

 

There are many different interpretations of the book. Some believe the groom in the story is

symbolic of God and the bride is symbolic of the Jewish nation. For others the story is about two

lovers, or two lovers and a king. For still others, this book consists of wedding poems. The

poems were part of the seven-day wedding festivities among Syrian peasants. They treated the

groom and bride as king and queen. To honor them, the peasants recited poems describing the

physical beauty of the couple. Today one popular view is that the book is an anthology of secular

love poems .They were collected over five hundred years from the tenth century B.C. to the fifth

century B.C.

 

A prevailing interpretation is that the poems in the Song of Songs are from

 

” . . . ancient Hebrew New Year liturgies that celebrated the reunion and marriage of

the sun god with the mother goddess, which in the ancient world typified the revival

of life in nature that came with the return of the growing season. It is the literary

residue of a myth, a liturgy of life; it harks back to the ancient fertility cult which in its

many forms was found throughout the whole world and is not without its survivals

even in our own day, as witness features in our Easter celebration.”

 

The passage below is often used in wedding ceremonies.

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

Song of Songs, verses 2:8-10, 14, 16a; 8:6-7a

 

New Revised Standard Version

 

 

 

Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare

 

Many couples want more than one reading at their wedding, or they prefer a reading from a

source other than the Bible. This is particularly true of a marriage in which one person in the

relationship is from a non-Christian background. A common reading often used in weddings is

Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare.

 

Shakespeare was born about 1564 and died in 1616; his sonnets were first published in 1609.

The sonnets may describe the author’s association with various persons, or they may have been

written as a story, of which each sonnet is one small part. They express forceful emotions and

strong feelings in a restricted word structure.

 

If you were not an English major in school, you may find Sonnet 116 difficult to understand. The

references in the poem may have been easily understood in England 400 years ago, but many are

not commonly understood today. Here is a rough translation: Shakespeare is saying that he does

not wish to interfere in the marriage of two people who love each other. He then proceeds to

define love. He says that love is not true love, if it changes when the couple disagrees, or if it

changes when the loved one is not always perfect. Love, says Shakespeare, is as reliable as the

North Star is to the mariner during stormy weather, never changing position in the sky. We can

depend on love in the same way sailors in their ships (wandering bark) depend on the North Star

by which to navigate; the nature of the star (and the nature of love) is unknown, although the

navigator can measure the height of the star from the horizon. Love does not change as time

passes, although physical beauty (rosy lips and cheeks) dies with time. Love does not change over

hours or weeks but stays the same, even to doomsday. Shakespeare ends the sonnet by saying

you can never prove him wrong on the subject of love because it is obvious that he wrote many

plays and poems, and that many people have loved.

 

Like scriptural readings, it takes careful practice to read Sonnet 116 well. However, like familiar

scriptural readings, it can bring forth strong positive feelings in the guests at a wedding service. If

you ask a friend or relative to read this at a wedding, encourage them to practice it aloud several

times before the service.

 

Let me not to the marriage of true minds

Admit impediments. Love is not love

Which alters when it alteration finds

Or bends with the remover to remove.

O, no, it is an ever fixed mark

That looks on tempests and is never shaken,

It is the star to every wandering bark,

Whose worth’s unknown, although his height be taken.

Love’s not time’s fool, though rosy lips and cheeks

Within his bending sickle’s compass come,

Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,

But bears it out even to the edge of doom:

If this be error, and upon me proved,

I never writ, nor no man ever loved.

 

Sonnet 116

 

William Shakespeare

 

 

 

A Passage by Kahlil Gibran

 

Many people have not studied Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116 and their reaction to hearing it read at

your wedding will be “I don’t know what this poem means.” Some couples may prefer a reading

written in modern English that all the people who come to the wedding service can understand.

There is a fourth reading commonly used in weddings. It is from The Prophet, written by the

romantic essayist Kahlil Gibran and published in 1923. Born in 1883 in Lebanon, Gibran

immigrated with his parents to Boston in 1895. In 1912 he settled in New York City and devoted

himself to writing and painting.

 

In this passage from The Prophet Gibran says that partners who are getting married should not

lose their individuality after their marriage. Because this desire not to lose our individual identity is

strong in British-American culture, the passage is often read in weddings.

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

The Prophet, pages 15-6

 

 

 

Additional Readings

 

The readings that follow are also used in wedding services. In selecting a reading, trust your

feelings. What words describe your feeling for your partner and your understanding of your

relationship?

 

Here in the space between us and the world

lies human meaning.

Into the vast uncertainty we call.

The echoes make our music,

sharp equations which can hold the stars,

and marvelous mythologies we trust.

This may be all we need

to lift our love against indifference and pain.

Here in the space between us and each other

lies all the future

of the fragment of the universe

which is our own.

 

From Sound of Silence

 

Raymond J. Baughan

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

From Standing by Words

 

Wendell Berry

 

How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.

I love thee to the depth and breadth and height

My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight

For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.

I love thee to the level of everyday’s

Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light.

I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;

I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.

I love thee with the passion put to use

In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith.

I love thee with a love I seemed to lose

With my lost saints,–I love thee with the breath,

Smiles, tears, of all my life!–and, If God choose,

I shall love thee better after death.

 

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

 

 

 

If thou must love me, let it be for naught

 

Except for love’s sake only. Do not say

 

“I love her for her smile–her look–her way

 

Of speaking gently,–for a trick of thought

 

That falls in well with mine, and certes brought

 

A sense of pleasant ease on such a day”–

 

For these things in themselves, Beloved, may

 

Be changed, or change for thee–and love, so wrought,

 

May be unwrought so. Neither love me for

 

Thine own dear pity’s wiping my cheeks dry:

 

A creature might forget to weep, who bore

 

Thy comfort long, and love thy love thereby!

 

But love me for love’s sake, that evermore

 

Thou mayst love on, through love’s eternity.

 

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

e.e. cummings

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

Ecclesiastes 3:1-8

 

New Revised Standard Version

 

Following this reading the officiant might say: “For everything there is a season, and a time for

every matter under heaven. Now is a time for a wedding.”

 

 

 

What greater thing is there for two human souls than to feel that they are joined for life, to

strengthen each other in all labour, to rest on each other in all sorrow, to minister to each other in

all pain, to be one with each other in silent unspeakable memories at the moment of the last

parting?

 

From Adam Bede

 

George Eliot

 

 

 

Love is the simplest of all earthly things.

 

It needs no grandeur of celestial trust

 

In more than what it is, no holy wings:

 

It stands with honest feet in honest dust.

 

And is the body’s blossoming in clear air

 

Of trustfulness and joyance when alone

 

Two mortals pass beyond the hour’s despair

 

And claim that Paradise which is their own.

 

Amid a universe of sweat and blood,

 

Beyond the glooms of all the nations’ hate,

 

Lovers, forgetful of the poisoned mood

 

Of the loud world, in secret ere too late

 

A gentle sacrament may celebrate

 

Before their private altar of the good.

 

Arthur Davison Ficke

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

From To Have or to Be?

 

Erich Fromm

 

 

 

Marriage has certain qualities of contract, in which two people take on the housekeeping tasks of

living, together, to enhance life’s joy.

 

However, marriage is more than a contract. Marriage is commitment to take that joy deep,

deeper than happiness, deep into the discovery of who you most truly are. It is a commitment to a

spiritual journey, to a life of becoming-in which joy can comprehend despair, running through

rivers of pain into joy again.

 

And thus marriage is even deeper than commitment. It is a covenant — a covenant that says:

 

I love you.

 

I trust you.

 

I will be here for you when you are hurting, and when I am hurting, I will not leave.

 

It is a covenant intended not to provide haven from pain or from anger and sorrow. Life offers no

such haven. Instead, marriage is intended to provide a sanctuary safe enough to risk loving, to risk

living and sharing from the center of oneself. This is worth everything.

 

Margaret A. Keip

 

 

 

The hand which you each offer

 

to the other

 

is an extension of yourselves;

 

just as is the warmth and love

 

which you express to each other.

 

Cherish the touch,

 

for you are touching another life.

 

Be sensitive to its pulse,

 

and try to understand and respect its flow and rhythm,

 

just as you do your own.

 

Paul L’Herrou

 

 

 

If your love is to grow and deepen,

 

you must find a way to move

 

with each other;

 

perhaps in a slow and graceful dance

 

(bare feet firmly feeling the ground),

 

a dance, that circles and tests

 

and learns

 

as it gradually moves closer

 

to that place

 

where you can each

 

pass through the other

 

and turn and embrace

 

without breaking

 

or losing any part of yourselves

 

but only to learn more of who you each are

 

by your touching,

 

to find that you are each whole

 

and individual and separate

 

yet, in the same instant,

 

one, joined as a whole

 

that does not blur the two individuals

 

as you dance.

 

The music is there

 

if you will listen hard,

 

through the static and noise of life,

 

and other tunes that fill your heads.

 

You are here,

 

marking time to the music.

 

The dance can only begin

 

if you will take the first (and hardest)

 

tentative,

 

uncertain,

 

stumbling

 

steps.

 

Paul L’Herrou

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

From Gift from the Sea

 

Anne Morrow Lindbergh

 

 

 

Come live with me and be my love,

 

And we will all the pleasures prove

 

That valleys, groves, hills, and fields,

 

Woods, or steepy mountain yields.

 

And we will sit upon the rocks,

 

Seeing the shepherds feed their flocks,

 

By shallow rivers to whose falls

 

Melodious birds sing madrigals.

 

And I will make thee beds of roses

 

And a thousand fragrant posies,

 

A cap of flowers, and a kirtle

 

Embroidered all with leaves of myrtle;

 

A gown made of the finest wool

 

Which from our pretty lambs we pull;

 

Fair lined slippers for the cold,

 

With buckles of the purest gold;

 

A belt of straw and ivy buds,

 

With coral clasps and amber studs:

 

And if these pleasures may thee move,

 

Come live with me, and be my love.

 

The shepherds’ swains shall dance and sing

 

For thy delight each May morning:

 

If these delights thy mind may move,

 

Then live with me and be my love.

 

Christopher Marlowe

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

“Two Trees”

 

Janet Miles

 

* * * * * * * * *

 

It takes years to marry completely two hearts, even of the most loving and well assorted. A happy

wedlock is a long falling in love. Young persons think love belongs only to the brown-haired and

crimson-cheeked. So it does for its beginning. But the golden marriage is a part of love which the

Bridal day knows nothing of.

 

A perfect and complete marriage, where wedlock is everything you could ask and the ideal of

marriage becomes actual, is not common, perhaps as rare as perfect personal beauty. Men and

women are married fractionally, now a small fraction, then a large fraction. Very few are married

totally, and they only after some forty or fifty years of gradual approach and experiment.

 

Such a large and sweet fruit is a complete marriage that it needs a long summer to ripen in, and

then a long winter to mellow and season it. But a real, happy marriage of love and judgment

between a noble man and woman is one of the things so very handsome that if the sun were, as

the Greek poets fabled, a God, he might stop the world and hold it still now and then in order to

look all day long on some example thereof, and feast his eyes on such a spectacle.

 

Theodore Parker

 

 

 

The institution of marriage was begun

 

that a man and a woman

 

might learn how to love

 

and, in loving, know joy;

 

that a man and a woman

 

might learn how to share pain and loneliness

 

and, in sharing, know strength;

 

that a man and a woman

 

might learn how to give

 

and, in giving know communion.

 

The institution of marriage was begun

 

that a man and a woman

 

might through their joy,

 

their strength, and their communion,

 

become creators of life itself.

 

Marriage is a high and holy state,

 

to be held

 

in honor

 

among all men and women.

 

Marriage is a low and common state,

 

to be built

 

of the stuff

 

of daily life.

 

Men and women are not angels, nor are they gods.

 

Love can become hatred;

 

joy, sorrow,

 

marriage, divorce.

 

But human beings are not condemned to failure.

 

Love can grow even in a real world.

 

The wounds of sorrow can be healed,

 

And new life built on the learnings of the old.

 

This is the reason for our gathering today:

 

to renew our faith

 

in the strength of hope

 

and the power of love.

 

Kenneth W. Phifer

 

 

 

You ask what is this love we here affirm, and I answer, it is a covenant you make, one with the

other, a covenant born of commitment to each other’s well being and growth and commitment to

your relationship itself, allowing it the possibility of change and of growth. And so the covenant

reads:

 

Take time for each other and act always from a caring position. Allow each other time alone for

renewal and creativity. Be as honest as possible about feelings as well as actions. Share household

and routine tasks with role reversal as a reality. Listen to each other with intent beyond the words.

Allow other relationships and commitments in your lives. And make room in your covenant for the

children of your love and when the time comes to let them go, do so with joy and caring; then

come your primary relationship with fresh commitments to new beginnings.

 

Betty Pingel

 

 

 

There is an art to marriage as there is to any creative activity we human beings engage in. This art

asks that we pay attention to the little things as well as the big ones that are part of the closeness

of marriage. Never grow too old to hold hands. At least once each day, remember to say, “I love

you.” In so much as it is possible, develop the capacity to forgive and forget and heal quarrels as

they happen so that you do not go to bed angry. Your courtship should not end with the

honeymoon; so pay attention that you do not come to take each other for granted, and remember

to speak words of appreciation and demonstrate your gratitude in thoughtful ways.

 

It is important to have a mutual sense of values and common objectives so that you stand together

as you work through the world and do things for each other, not as a duty or sacrifice, but in the

spirit of joy. Do not expect perfection of each other; perfection is only for the gods. But do give

each other room to grow and cultivate flexibility, patience, understanding, and sense of humor in

your relationship. And your marriage is not just for two people. Use it to form a circle of love that

gathers in your families and the children who may be part of your lives.

 

Find room for the things of the spirit and make your search for the good and the beautiful a

common search. In the words of a counselor, make yours a relationship in which “the

independence is equal, the dependent is mutual, and the obligation is reciprocal.” Remember that

standing together never means dissolving your individual selves into each other, but indeed means

the strengthening of the individuality of each. A good marriage evolves when two distinct souls

face life’s joy and its sorrow in harmony, not in unison.

 

This list sounds very long and very heavy, yet it is only a small part of what is required of two

people who would truly accept that making a marriage over the years is an artistic endeavor

worthy of our best efforts. It is not just another relationship in our lives; it is the one that gives us

courage and the support to reach out to other people in love and wholeness.

 

Betty Pingel

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

From Letters to a Young Poet

 

Rainer Maria Rilke

 

Translated by J.B. Greene and M. D. H. Norton

 

 

 

The Fountains mingle with the River

 

And the Rivers with the Ocean,

 

The winds of Heaven mix for ever

 

With a sweet emotion;

 

Nothing in the world is single;

 

All things by a law divine

 

In one spirit meet and mingle.

 

Why not I with thine?-

 

See the mountains kiss high Heaven

 

And the waves clasp one another;

 

No sister-flower would be forgiven

 

If it disdained its brother,

 

And the sunlight clasps the earth

 

And the moonbeams kiss the sea:

 

What is all this sweet work worth

 

If thou kiss not me?

 

Percy Bysshe Shelley,”Love’s Philosophy”

 

 

 

(This passage is omitted because of copyright protection. It is included in the book, For As Long

As We Both Shall Live, available at your local bookstore or by calling 1-800-238-0658.)

 

Edited and adapted from Ross Snyder

 

 

 

I do not offer the old smooth prizes,

 

But offer rough new prizes,

 

These are the days that must happen to you:

 

You shall not heap up what is called riches,

 

You shall scatter with lavish hand all that you

 

earn or achieve.

 

However sweet the laid-up stores,

 

However convenient the dwellings,

 

You shall not remain there.

 

However sheltered the port,

 

And however calm the waters,

 

You shall not anchor there.

 

However welcome the hospitality that welcomes you

 

You are permitted to receive it but a little while

 

Afoot and lighthearted, take to the open road,

 

Healthy, free, the world before you,

 

The long brown path before you, leading wherever

 

you choose.

 

Say only to one another:

 

Camerado, I give you my hand!

 

I give you my love, more precious than money,

 

I give you myself before preaching or law:

 

Will you give me yourself?

 

Will you come travel with me?

 

Shall we stick by each other as long as we live?

 

Walt Whitman

 

 

 

BACK TO CONTENTS

 

E-Mail :rfritts@his.com

 

URL: http//www.his.com/~rfritts

 

Text – Copyright ©1993, 1996, Thomas Roger Fritts

 

Web Layout – Copyright ©1996, Thomas Roger Fritts

 

Revised – June 3, 1996

Reading by Walter Pinder

 

Everyday you live, learn how to receive love with as much understanding as you give it. Find things within yourself, then you can share them with each other.

Do not fear this love. Have an open heart and a sincere mind. Be sincerely interested in each other’s happiness. Be constant and consistent in your love.

From this comes security and strength. All that we love deeply becomes a part of us on this day of your marriage. Try to commit yourselves fully and freely to each other.

LOVE IS THE REASON

Love is the reason why this day was chosen by you both to begin your lives together and love is the reason why you both will give with all hearts for the good of each other.

Love is the reason that together you will become one; one in hope; one in believing in life; one in sharing the coming years.

TWO LIVES

Two lives, two people, so very different,
yet so similar.

Together we stand as one, sharing our future as it comes. The past is that past.

Buds are yet to blossom, with care and trust, the best is yet to be revealed.

Honesty and kindness, are the fruits of love. Lord bless this day and always to enrich us so our love will
never end.

 

Readings for Weddings

 

  1. Reading – Untitled poem, by Jelaluddin Rumi
    read by

You that love Lovers, this is your home.
Welcome!
Today is a festival!
Clap your hands and say, ‘This is a day of happiness!’
Who in the world is like this bridal pair?

The voices of Love are approaching from all sides.
We are on our way to heaven!
Once upon a time we played with angels.
Let’s all go back up there again.

The earth and the sky are full of sugar.
Sugar cane is sprouting all around.
Watch the dust grains moving in the light.
Their dance is our dance.
We rarely hear the inward music,
but we’re all dancing to it nevertheless,
directed by what teaches us,
the pure joy of the sun,
our Music Master.