Emotions and Will in a Season of Waiting

STEPHANIE FRIES

 

Seasons of waiting and preparation are inherent to the Catholic liturgical calendar. Both Lent and Advent are significant and intentional times to ready our minds and hearts for a new encounter with Christ--through both his birth and his death and resurrection. 

Similarly, seasons of waiting and preparation are embedded into our personal lives, especially in times leading up to significant encounters of relationship. 

Engagement is a space prior to a wedding. Pregnancy is a space prior to the birth of a child. The passage of time can often be a trigger for the rise and fall of emotions. How we manage, process and project those emotions is part of our personal journey toward holiness. 

In the Gospel of Matthew, we are instructed to “be perfect, just as your Heavenly Father is perfect.” In our earthly pursuit of sanctification, we can learn from the perfect human hearts of Jesus and Mary. 

Fully human yet divine in nature, we see that both Jesus and Mary, in their separate experiences of approaching death and childbirth, respectively, were affected by feelings of impatience, fear, or anticipation. 

In the sorrowful mystery of Jesus’ agony in the garden, we read Jesus experienced feelings of sorrow and distress in the final stages of his preparation. Keep in mind how, in many ways, his entire public ministry was all a part of the journey towards his new reality in heaven. The agony in the garden is not his solitary experience of anticipation, but a final culmination of waiting before the new journey to the cross begins. 

Despite his soul being filled with sorrow, he approached God in prayer three times, praying, “My Father, if it is not possible that this cup pass without my drinking it, your will be done!”

He feels the breadth and depth of sorrow, a deep emotional experience, and he admits the ache of his heart! Yet in the same sentence, he unites his own will to God’s will. He surrenders his sorrow to trust in God. 

We hear an echo of this surrender in Mary’s experience 33 years prior when she prepares to conceive, deliver, and raise Jesus as her own son. In the joyful mystery of the angel Gabriel’s Annunciation unto Mary, she responds with a question, a doubt: “How can this be?”  

The dialogue continues between the angel and Mary until she united the questions of her heart to God’s will and says, “May it be done to me according to your word.” Her pregnancy continued through additional experiences as she journeyed--emotionally and physically--to the birth of Jesus. 

In these stories, we read of two human beings who engaged in seasons of waiting with strong emotions, yet perfectly offered their will to God’s desire.  

The Liturgical seasons of the church are intentional times to help us reflect on the posture of our hearts as we approach the ever-new realities of our faith. Even more, the seasons of waiting embedded in our vocations as wives and mothers are real-life opportunities to turn reflections into practice.

As it was with the agony in the garden, the Annunciation or engagement and pregnancy, certain opportunities may be once-in-a-lifetime. This Advent, create a space in your heart for the season of waiting to implant itself deep into your heart so when the opportunity comes, you too can surrender your sorrow, fear, anxiety or doubt to the will of God the Father with hopeful trust.


About the Author: Stephanie Fries is Spoken Bride’s Associate Editor. Stephanie’s perfect day would include a slow morning and quality time with her husband, Geoff, a strong cup of coffee, and a homemade meal (…with dessert). Read more

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Creating Holiday Traditions as a Couple

CARISSA PLUTA

 

Being newly-wed or newly engaged offers couples a unique opportunity to approach the holidays with a new lens. 

Up until now, you may not have thought much about how you will celebrate, but approaching the holidays for the first time as new family may give you pause. How will my new husband and I enter into this holiday together?

As a newly-wed, I couldn’t wait to create special traditions with my husband. And between Thanksgiving, Advent, and Christmas (not to mention all of the upcoming feast days), there is a lot to be excited for. 

If you’re like me and you can’t wait to get started on making festive memories with your spouse, here’s some advice to get you started. 

Talk about what is important to you

With the amount of fun and festive activities available, it can easily become overwhelming for a couple to decide how to spend their energy.

Talk to your husband about what aspects of the season you’d most like to observe and celebrate. Decide as a family what values you want to uphold and how your holiday traditions can reflect that. 

Keep your family favorites

Traditions are deeply tied to family so both you and your spouse will likely bring some holiday traditions into your marriage. 

Discuss with your spouse which traditions you’d like to carry over your new family. It is fun to share in these beloved and memorable activities with your new husband and your future children. 

Be realistic with your expectations. When establishing a new family, you may need to make modifications or even some sacrifices to make the holidays work for everyone. 

Related: How to Decide Whose Family To Visit for the Holidays


Draw from the history of the Church

Why reinvent the wheel? The Catholic Church has over 2000 years of traditions for their members to draw from.

The Church’s liturgical calendar provides a rhythm for your daily life and a framework for the faithful to orient themselves toward heaven. It tells us when to repent and when to rejoice, when to fast and when to feast.

Learn more about the Church’s liturgical calendar and the various traditions that go along with it, then choose a few you want to implement in your domestic church. 

Related: Need some ideas to get you started? Check out “Liturgical Living for Catholic Couples"


Be Patient

Nobody has ever forced a good holiday tradition. (Trust me, I’ve tried). 

Family traditions develop organically throughout the years so don’t be in a rush to try to form something your great grandchildren will enjoy. 

Be willing to try several traditions before the right ones stick. This may even mean that some of the traditions you thought would last are lost over time. 

Don’t be discouraged. One day you will look back and give thanks for the life-giving (and possibly) surprising traditions that your family created. 


About the Author: Carissa Pluta is Spoken Bride’s Editor at Large. She is the author of the blog The Myth Retold. Read more

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The Heart of Marriage: A Husband's Perspective

SAM GUZMAN

 

The following thoughts on marriage, by Sam Guzman of The Catholic Gentleman, is from the coffee table book Spirit and Life: The Holy Sacraments of the Catholic Church, published by Sophia Institute Press and available here. As the Advent and Christmas seasons draw near, consider this volume for the men in your life!

Spirit and Life contains reflections on the beauty of each sacrament by top authors today are featured throughout the book along with Sacred Scripture, high-end original photography and words of the Church Fathers.

Excerpt used with permission.

PHOTOGRAPHY: ST. MICHAEL CATHOLIC CHURCH CHICAGO, IL

PHOTOGRAPHY: ST. MICHAEL CATHOLIC CHURCH CHICAGO, IL

The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses. The answer is clearly articulated by the Catechism of the Catholic Church:

“The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between baptized persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament.” 

Marriage, then, is no mystery but is well defined. And I might well continue to unpack this definition, exploring what marriage is and isn’t by citing Church Fathers, Church documents, philosophers, and theologians.

But this would be talking about marriage from the outside, and it would be a mistake. I want to speak of marriage from the inside. That is, I want to speak from the heart, not about what marriage is, but what marriage means.

For marriage is not merely a solemnly defined article in a catechism; it is not an abstraction or an idea for academics to toy with. Like all sacraments, it is a lived experienced, a concrete reality. And it is of this reality that I want to speak.

When I was younger, and indeed more immature, I viewed marriage as the fulfillment of my longings. It was the answer, I believed, to my hunger for intimacy, to my desire for affirmation, and yes, even to my sexual urges. If only I could find a wife, I imagined, I would be content.

Eventually, I did find a beautiful woman whom I loved, and who, wonder of wonders, loved me in return. We quickly became engaged and began preparing for marriage. I eagerly pored over marriage books and articles and listened to countless talks about how to be a good husband. In my naivete, I was quite convinced that I knew exactly what marriage was about, and I would no doubt be a wonderful and enviable husband.

I understood marriage from the outside, and not from the inside.

But then I got married. No sooner had I done so than I came face-to-face with the ugliness of my own immaturity, my own selfishness, my own pride. It was jarring and unpleasant, to say the least. Wasn’t I better than this? Didn’t I know more about marriage than most young husbands? How can I hurt so often the woman I love? What is wrong with me?

These questions and more plagued the early days of our marriage, for I felt like a complete failure as a husband within a very short time. Despite my real love for my wife, I endlessly chose my needs and desires over hers, and I could not understand why.

What I did not realize then, and do realize now, is that marriage is not about self-fulfillment. It is certainly not about satisfying sexual cravings or about mere emotional affirmation. It is a school of love. And as a school of love, it is a duel to the death with our disordered passions and lusts. It is a daily dying to our sinful selves. It is a moment-by-moment choosing of the way of the cross, which is the way of sacrifice.

Marriage, rightly lived, will indeed bring you more joy than you can possibly imagine. But you cannot find this joy by seeking it directly. This will only lead to disillusionment. “Whoever would save his life will lose it,” our Lord tells us, “and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” Life can be found only through surrendering it. So too with the joy of marriage—it can be found only through self-forgetfulness and self-gift.

PHOTOGRAPHY: SHARAYAH AND BENCE FONYAD

PHOTOGRAPHY: SHARAYAH AND BENCE FONYAD

My wife and I have been married for eight years, and although I know it is almost a cliché to say it, I love her more now than I did when we got married. Through our years of marriage, I have learned much about authentic love and sacrifice (though I still have much to learn). And yet I have also realized that no matter how much I give to my wife, she has given me far more.

It is not enough to know that God loves us in an abstract sense. We must experience His unconditional love and mercy in a concrete way, and we most often do so through other people.

My experience of God’s love has come most profoundly through my wife.

I brought many insecurities and self-doubts into our marriage. I feared fully revealing myself to anyone, lest I be despised and rejected, and as a result, I had erected many defenses to guard myself from emotional vulnerability. Some of these defenses were harmless, while others led me to wound the woman I loved.

But despite my frequent foolishness, my insecurities began to heal one by one through my wife’s relentless love. Through her forgiveness and unconditional acceptance, I received a rare and precious gift—the gift of being fully loved as myself. My defenses began to drop; my heart began to heal. I learned the meaning of true intimacy and the joy that it can bring. And I am still learning it.

Marriage is a sacrament, a channel of grace, a way to know and experience the love of God. St. Paul tells us that it is a great mystery that illustrates the relationship between Christ and His Church. Reflecting upon these truths, I see that there is one defining attribute that characterizes this mystical marriage between the Lord and His people more than any other: mercy.

Why did the Eternal Word, the brightness of the Father, humble Himself, take on flesh, and descend into Mary’s womb? To save us from our sins. Why did the Lord of all creation allow Himself to be beaten, mocked, and nailed to a cross? To forgive us, to reconcile us, to demonstrate His unfathomable love for us. “One will hardly die for a righteous man,” St. Paul says in breathless astonishment. “But . . . while we were yet sinners Christ died for us.” 

Mercy is at the heart of our redemption. And it is at the heart of marriage.

Giving and receiving it. Being healed by it. I am firmly convinced that we come closest to the heart of marriage when we forgive—when we see each other exactly as we are, sins and all, and lay down our lives for one another anyway.

I began this article speaking about sacrifice and self-gift. In our self-indulgent age, these are dirty words. We associate them with pain, discomfort, even misery. Yet, for one who has experienced mercy, sacrifice is no burden. It flows naturally from the heart. It is the greatest joy.

In my marriage, I have indeed given much to my wife and children over the years. But nothing I have done can compare with what they have given me: a glimpse of the mercy and love of the Lord Jesus.

Our marriages, our families, must become schools of genuine love and mercy. For if we love one another unconditionally, if we mercifully accept one another exactly as we are, we will experience a joy beyond description and a very real foretaste of heaven. Even more, our homes will become beacons radiating life and light to a world hungry for the love of God.

Above all hold unfailing your love for one another, since love covers a multitude of sins.

Happy Thanksgiving from Spoken Bride! Holiday Wedding Inspiration + Reflections for the Season.

From us to you, Happy Thanksgiving Day! May the Father draw your gaze to all of his gifts and pour out his abundance in your vocation.

Here, as the holiday season begins, our favorite pieces from the archives on liturgical living, Christmas weddings, creating traditions with your spouse, and more.

Bridget + KC | Traditional Christmas Octave Wedding

Liturgical Living + Advent

A prayer of thanksgiving for couples | Creating Advent traditions in your marriage and family | A reflection on waiting and anticipation, and their surprising fruits during engagement | The sense of waiting continues on into married life. Yet the Lord is ever present and there is much “joyful hope.” | Meditations on Our Lady’s Immaculate Conception, celebrated December 8 | Even Saint Thérese experienced longing and impatience to begin her vocation. Thoughts on embracing seasons of preparation. 

Gifts

bkc_12.28.18__0314.jpg

5 Creative gift ideas for newlyweds | Spoken Bride Vendors share Christmas gift ideas, including many custom and handmade items | A gift guide curated by the Spoken Bride team

Relationship Health During the Holiday Season

5 Tips for balancing family, social events, and time as a couple during the holidays | Distinctively Catholic ideas for celebrating the Christmas season with your beloved

Holiday Weddings

Spoken Bride Features Editor Mariah Maza shares the story of her Christmas Octave wedding and tips for planning your own | Claire and Andrew’s blue and silver wedding in a Tennessee cathedral, celebrated on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception | Bridget and KC’s Christmas Octave wedding, filled with symbolism and intention and inspired by Pier Giorgio Frassati | Natasha and Tim’s Minnesota New Year’s wedding, centered on family and community--down to the bride’s vintage gown | Emily and Daniël’s Praise and Worship-filled Christmas season wedding | Christina and Kristian’s Austin wedding, with holiday colors and Christmas hymns | Genevieve and Dalton’s festive celebration at Rock ‘N Bowl | Caroline and Matt’s elegant cathedral wedding, rich with family heritage | Kaitlyn and John’s New Year’s wedding in blue, gold, and white | Becca and Phil’s Christmas picnic wedding

The team shares favorite winter and holiday date ideas:

“Getting coffee and going to see Christmas lights in the neighborhood. Shopping for a holiday gift or food drive. Local Christmas programs or pageants, and cookie decorating!” - Mary Wilmot, Social Media Manager

“Volunteering at a food shelter.” - Andi Compton, Business Director

“Baking pies!” - Carissa Pluta, Editor at Large

“Seeing light displays and attending a holiday show like The Nutcracker or an orchestra.” - Jiza Zito, Co-Founder & Creative Director

Photography: Wild Elegance LLC, As Seen In Bridget + KC | Traditional Christmas Octave Wedding

Susan + Marty | Small-Town German October Wedding

Five years passed between the day Susan and Marty met and danced the polka to their first date. In those five patient years, they grew and matured in their own lives, not realizing that their dance at Oktoberfest years prior was the first time they had been hand in hand with their future spouse.

Their wedding was an intimate small-town affair, with homages to the Blessed Mother and their German background. Looking back, Susan marvels at unique way God wrote their story.

From the Bride: Marty and I met at Oktoberfest through his cousin who, unbeknownst to me, was trying to set us up. At the time, I actually had a huge crush on his cousin! Still, I was friendly towards Marty, and we polka danced together. After that, he says he developed a crush on me. We saw each other at the same Oktoberfest the next year, where he intended to ask me out, but was crushed when he heard I had a boyfriend.

Marty later decided to enter seminary and cut off communication with most of the women in his life. We eventually reconnected at a mutual friend’s wedding, which was the beginning of his second and most difficult year at seminary. In just a few minutes of conversation, he found out I was single, had quit my job, and was heading to Spain to walk The Camino. 

He had the confidence to call me a few days later and proclaim his love for me. Since he was still in seminary, and I was leaving for Spain in a few days, I left it at “we’ll pray for each other”. Marty tells me now that he wouldn’t be as good of a husband or father without the formation he received during his discernment of the priesthood. 

At the end of the school year he discerned out of seminary, and upon leaving called to ask me on a date. Over five years passed between our meeting and first date. God’s plans are so amazing! 

We quickly became serious, and three months in we prayed a novena to St. Therese. We were at Oktoberfest again at the end of the novena. In the band tent, “Edelweiss” (from The Sound of Music) began to play, and he asked me to dance because it was his grandpa’s favorite song. I asked Marty what edelweiss meant as we danced, and he replied “white flower”. My face said it all. He already knew it was our flower and an answer to our novena, but it confirmed his thoughts when I realized it too. He now calls me his “Edelweiss.” 

On our fourth date he asked about rings, and I showed him a picture of what I wanted. It was an art deco style that looked like a monstrance, and he loved it as well. Around our five-month dating anniversary, Marty proposed with his “Plan C,” with the beautiful monstrance ring, after his first two plans fell through. I always despised the phrase “when you know, you know” but that is the best way to describe our journey!

I’m not the girl who has planned my wedding since childhood--I always figured it would be better to make decisions when I got there with the man I would marry. I also didn’t want to be sorely disappointed if God wasn’t calling me to marriage. I was raised on a farm in the country, and Marty was raised in the suburbs of a city, but we had our wedding in a small town near where I grew up, since that is where we met. 

Our two goals during planning were to be a witness of the richness of our Catholic faith for our guests and to throw a giant, awesome celebration! Marty and I were a good planning pair. I took charge of the reception, and he took charge of the ceremony, but we consulted each other every step of the way. He was passionate about the liturgical music, and I was passionate about the food (we served breakfast for dinner). It was fun to collaborate and bounce ideas off each other as we worked through the process. 

Marty and I had an opinion and a hand in almost every detail of the planning. We chose to do a lot on our own, mostly because of our budget but also because we enjoyed it. I told him our wedding wouldn’t feel as much like our own if we delegated everything to others. By doing most of the work ourselves, it felt much more gratifying when the day finally came, and we could enjoy the fruits of our labor.

We were married on the 101st anniversary of the Miracle of the Sun in Fatima. It was warm and rainy the Friday before and sunny and cool the day of our wedding. Marty pointed out that it was like the sun miracle. Our color palette included shades of blue with gold accents. Not only did blue look good on everyone, but it is representative of October, the month of Mary. 

During our engagement, Marty joked about having the archbishop preside at our nuptial Mass. He knew him personally from university ministry and his time in the seminary. In the end, he asked the archbishop anyway, and he obliged--along with four other priests we knew! Marty’s former seminarian classmates were our servers. We felt blessed and honored to be surrounded by so many faithful clergy. Next, we gathered a choir of friends and former choir members Marty had sung with. The music was amazing and never would have happened without his knowledge and love for liturgical music.

On the big day, my photographer reminded me to pray with my bridesmaids before Mass. My younger sister volunteered to lead the prayer. Up to that point, we hadn’t been incredibly close, but to witness how she had grown in her faith was deeply moving.

We had more of a procession into the church, rather than individual couples one-at-a-time. Marty and I walked in together last. We felt deeply convicted about doing this to emphasize the sacrament we would confer on each other, rather than being “married” by the priest. I could not have predicted the overwhelming joy and love that I felt as Marty and I entered the church. 

My eyes immediately welled with joyful tears. Marty, on the other hand, was grinning ear to ear. He reflected later that that is how he imagines it will feel to enter Heaven some day, surrounded by family and friends.

Marty wanted to build a kneeler for us to use at the wedding and afterwards in our home. I wasn’t convinced he would finish it in time, because he had to travel two hours to my parents’ house for help from my dad and his tools. At one point, we disagreed on a reading and made a deal that if he finished our kneeler in time, we would use his choice. If not, I would get mine. I was thrilled when he did finish in time, because it was beautiful and even had a spot on top for a crucifix he ordered from Europe. Now it’s the perfect addition to our home chapel. 

We decided to invest in seven months of dance lessons to prepare for our first dance. It was also a great activity for marriage prep, because we had to constantly practice, communicate, and work together. The dance was a mashup of five songs, each paired with a different type of dance: the waltz, polka, a line dance, swing dance, and the Viennese waltz. Guests were definitely impressed, but I enjoyed the growth of our relationship in the process the most. 

I was also excited to surprise Marty with a dirndl (traditional German dress). I needed to get out of my wedding dress to be able to perform our dance anyway. He had wanted me to purchase one since we began dating, but I had refused. I ordered the dances strategically: father/daughter, mother/son, and then our first dance so I could change while he was dancing with his mom. It was such a priceless moment!

My father/daughter dance was very special. In my hometown, square dancing at weddings and school dances is common. One of the most well-known dances is called “Farmer’s Daughter.” My dad happens to be a farmer and has three daughters, so we had more of a family dance. Since it takes four couples to perform a square dance, my sisters and their husbands joined in as well.

I did have one dream for my wedding prior to meeting my husband. My childhood home parish had an annual pancake breakfast on Palm Sunday, where they butchered pigs and made fresh whole hog sausage. Because it was my favorite meat, I thought it would be fun to have the groomsmen make the sausage for our wedding at their bachelor party. Luckily, Marty was on board with this plan, and the guys had a blast!

I had a hunch a year or two before we started dating that my husband might be someone I already knew. My hunch was correct, and I was surprised it was a man I didn’t think of as more than a friend for the majority of time I knew him. But this only made God’s plan more clear when he brought our lives together so smoothly and beautifully. He knew we both needed those five years of growth and maturation. I always wanted an interesting love story, and God provided.

In my eyes, Marty is much more faithful to God than I am, but we have different strengths and weaknesses in our faith lives, like all aspects of our lives. He helps me remember that the goal and purpose of marriage is to help each other grow in virtue through life and enter into Heaven. 

When two people are different, they complement each other in unique ways, which works to make us better people. It will forever be a wonderful mystery to me!

Photography: Sarah Ann Photography | Church: St. Augustine, Minster, Ohio | Wedding Reception: American Legion, New Bremen, Ohio | Videography: Kruis Media | Engagement Ring: Etsy | Wedding bands: Claire Green Jewlery  | Flowers: Costco & Hobby Lobby | Dress: Dressilyme.com | Gold leaf crown: Etsy.com | Shoes: Amazon | Stationary: Bethany Cavenaile | Suit: The Tailor Store | DJ: Amplified Digital Entertainment | Bridesmaid dresses: KF Bridal 

How Marriage has Changed my Heart

STEPHANIE FRIES

 

A trusting relationship has the power to transform a person from the inside-out. 

Throughout childhood, I had learned to utilize different strategies to protect my heart. “Don’t let the other team see you cry after a hard game,” and “Be a listener and not a sharer while on retreat” were specific lessons I learned. 

This kind of self-preservation was well-intentioned because we don’t always know who we can trust with our hearts. Unfortunately, this self-preservation inhibits authentic, intimate relationships with those whom we can trust with our hearts. 

If we could draw the spectrum of vulnerability, one side would represent the extreme of  self-preservation. Meanwhile, the other side would represent the extreme of complete transparency and exposure without boundaries. Somewhere in-between is a holy middle ground where we encounter authentic relationship with a balance of boundaries and vulnerability. 

Through the vocation to married life, two become one. Like Adam and Eve in the Garden, spouses stand emotionally exposed, “naked,” in a completely reciprocal offering of self and reception of the other. 

I was not ready to infuse my life to another on the day I met my future husband. Though I would have felt safer learning how to love and be loved in isolation, God began to bring my heart closer to that middle ground through relationship. 

Learning to love and be loved in a trusting relationship has completely transformed my heart--both in hidden and visible ways. The most obvious outward sign of love’s tenderness on my heart is through tears. 

I cry more than ever before! And I can’t blame hormones or the time of the month. Experiencing a purity of trust, desire, love, and empathy has exposed me to a greater breadth and depth of emotion. Rather than fearing and hiding the movements of the heart, I have begun to feel them with freedom. Tears are a sign of a new sensitivity because my heart is more fully alive.  

Many of the Gospel stories involve a physical journey on a path from one place to another; this is a visual and physical metaphor for the internal journey we are called into as we become like Christ. Growing in holiness is an active process of movement, growth, and change. Holiness is in no way static.

For the man and woman united in marriage, the experience of sharing their lives is the pathway toward the narrow gate. Regardless of where you are on the journey-single, dating, engaged, or married--God calls you to holiness. Every season of life presents an opportunity for growth and transformation from the inside-out.

The fruits of the Holy Spirit--love, joy, peace, faithfulness, generosity, patience, kindness, self-control, and gentleness--have transformative power. When received in one’s heart, the seeds of this fruit implant new growth. In turn, the one who received the seed becomes fruitful in their own life and love. 

In what ways has your heart transformed through love? Have you experienced an outward expression of this transformation? Share your experience with our community on Facebook or Instagram.


About the Author: Stephanie Fries is Spoken Bride’s Associate Editor. Stephanie’s perfect day would include a slow morning and quality time with her husband, Geoff, a strong cup of coffee, and a homemade meal (…with dessert). Read more

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Spoken Bride Vendors | Spotlight, Vol. 8

We are proud to serve you through the Spoken Bride Vendor Guide, the first online resource for distinctively Catholic wedding vendors: hand-selected professionals from around the U.S. with not only an abundance of talent, but a reverence and passion for the sacrament of marriage that brings a uniquely personal, prayerful dimension to their client experiences.

With a range of stories, hobbies, and devotions, it’s our privilege to share who our vendors are and connect them with their ideal clients--you, faithful Catholic couples who are energized by working with like-minded, prayerful individuals. Each month, we’ll be introducing, or re-introducing, you to members of Spoken Bride’s vendor community, and we encourage you to learn more through their full vendor listings.

Our Vendors for This Month (click to jump):

 

Gathered Together Events

Wedding Coordination; serving Michigan and available for travel.

Allison Krcatovich--one of our brides!--grew up watching the film Father of the Bride and dreamed of “being the female version of [the wedding-planner character],” she says. In 2018, after the birth of her son and over six years in the hotel event-planning industry, Allison quit her hotel job and founded Gathered Together Events, her own coordination company.

Though Gathered Together Events serves a range of couples, Allison has a particular love--and brings particular expertise--to Catholic brides and grooms. She cherishes the opportunity to act as a resource and support for couples whose top priority is bringing their faith to the center of their celebration. Allison describes her services--including consultations, day-of coordination, full wedding coordination, and custom packages--as “service-oriented, joy-filled, and intentional.”

Favorite saint: Teresa of Calcutta. Her care for others encourages me in my work. My business logo is blue as a subtle nod to her and to our Mother Mary.

The best place I’ve traveled: Dubrovnik, Croatia on my honeymoon.

I’m inspired by: My family. I want to support my family with a job I am truly passionate about because I know it will make me a better wife, mother, daughter, friend. Seeing each of my couples so incredibly joyful on their wedding day inspires me in my own personal family life. 

Learn more about Gathered Together Events

 

Ashley Eileen Floral Design

Floral Design; serving the Denver area.

As her family mourned the loss of her grandfather, Ashley Krupp realized for the first time “ how florists walk with people for very important moments in life, and how flowers really do impact those occasions.” In those moments, she felt certain the Lord was calling her to use flowers as a gift and service to others.

Ashley soon took floral design classes, worked in several floral shops, and was eventually promoted to lead floral designer. In 2018 she used her earnings from the lead designer position to educate herself in business and design and launched Ashley Eileen Floral Design.

Ashley loves the creative pursuit of transforming her clients’ ideas into reality in the design process, as well as the sheer beauty of wedding florals: “Part of the reason I love doing flowers, she says, “is because they are beautiful and reflect the transcendental kind of beauty. I feel called to work with flowers as my ‘small v’ vocation and to affirm the good, true and beautiful in marriages that reflect God’s plan. 

“I like to say flowers aren’t really necessary for someone to get married--at the end of the day, she’ll be married to her husband and that is beautiful. However, flowers reflect the gratuitous kind of beauty or love that God lavishes on us; the kind of beauty that stirs the heart and draws the couple and their guests more deeply into the sacrament. I think the beauty of a wedding done well (aesthetically and theologically) help to evangelize by stirring people’s hearts.”

On my bucket list: To help with the flowers at the Kentucky Derby and Rose parade, to own property with acreage, and to visit Havana, Cuba.

Favorite books: Little Women, Anne of Green Gables, Heidi, Introduction to the Devout Life, Forming Intentional Disciples, and the Harry Potter series.

How my faith informs my business: Everything I do comes back to God, what He’s blessed me with and my desire to share Him with others. I think beauty is a gift that allows us to know him on a deeper level, because it cuts straight to our hearts. I think a lot of millennials have a keen awareness and appreciation of beauty, and I see this as a subtle starting point to also share God’s goodness and truth with others who might not know him otherwise. I’ve designed my business model to be relationship-based; it's important for me to get to know my couples so I can walk and pray for them in a real way.  

Learn more about Ashley Eileen Floral Design

 

Johnna Wilford, Women’s Wellness Coach

NFP Instruction; serving Lexington, Kentucky in person and nationwide through online education.

Johnna first heard of NFP as she converted to the Catholic faith during her marriage preparation--in fact, she says, “I actually think NFP is one of the things that helped me decide to become Catholic! NFP is so empowering, and such a great tool for communication with a partner, so I quickly became very passionate about it.” A serious runner and women’s health advocate who already owned a fitness business, Johnna became certified in NFP instruction and made it an additional pillar of her business.

A recent bride herself, Johnna has a unique, particular passion for viewing women’s health holistically, teaching clients about the relationships between hormonal and reproductive health and physical fitness. She loves walking with her clients as they consider their fertility, fitness and wellness before marriage--”not,” she says, “simply in a ‘fitting into the wedding dress’ way. Women’s Wellness offers in-person and online coaching in fitness, fertility awareness, and reproductive health.

I root for...the Alabama Crimson Tide. Roll Tide! It's sort of hard not to be a fan when you went to college there!

Ministries I’m involved in: I am a member of a local social justice ministry that works to improve policies in the city. This year we are working on improving the drug problem in town, working to improve education, and decreasing  gun violence in the city. I am also an NFP teacher for the Marriage and Family Office in my diocese.

Favorite Saints: My patron saint is Joan of Arc, not only because of the name similarity, but because I have a passion for fighting for what I believe in! I also love Mama Mary and try to pray the rosary every day.

Learn more about Johnna Wilford, Women’s Wellness Coach

 

Something Blue, LLC

Wedding Coordination, serving the dioceses of Indianapolis, Lafayette (Indiana), Evansville, and Fort Wayne-South Bend; available for limited travel in neighboring states.

While sitting at the same reception table at a wedding, friends Joy Foster and Mary Dorhauer discovered they shared a common dream: establishing an event planning and coordination business. As they talked, they wrote down a vision for a Catholic wedding planning business on the spot, hoping to create a service that would “help couples plan a most reverent and beautiful liturgy, along with a really great party; witness the beauty of our Faith and the beauty of the Catholic view on marriage to their Catholic and non-Catholic guests; and be a joyful ministry to brides and engaged couples, so that they and their families could be fully present and enjoy their wedding day, instead of worrying about whether things were getting done or not.”

Joy and Mary’s dreams took root in 2018, when Something Blue, LLC was founded. Along with general inspiration and reception planning, Something Blue specializes in helping Catholic couples plan their nuptial liturgies and personally supports them through the gift of prayer: “Our love of the liturgy and the beauty of marriage inspires us to share that love with couples and their families,” Joy and Mary say. “We customize a novena for each couple and begin it so Day 9 is prayed the morning of the wedding. We offer copies of the novena to the parents of the bride and groom, along with the wedding party, church hostess & clergy, and any vendors that we know are Catholic, should they wish to join their prayers with ours for the couple. We see Something Blue as a ministry, in addition to a business.”

The best part of working on weddings: The joy!  It’s a chance to share in a little slice of someone else’s happiness. Being able to watch the bittersweet moments as fathers tearfully embrace their daughters one last time [during the procession]. Smiling at the triumphant grins on the faces of grooms as the newly minted Mr. and Mrs. exit the church for the first time. Witnessing families come together to celebrate a fresh branch of their family tree. Most of all, the moment during a Nuptial Mass when the priest elevates the Holy Eucharist, with the eyes of the bride and groom upon him, the Body of Christ. It gives us goosebumps every time! 

Favorite wedding-day memory: (Mary): On our first date, my husband and I went to Mass and then covered the car of a mutual friend in Post-It notes. It was revenge for a joke she played trying to set the two of us up. I guess she got the last word though, since we got married and now have two children! 

When planning our wedding, I told our priest I wanted to go straight from the church after the recessional to the Adoration chapel, spending our first minutes as a married couple in front of the Blessed Sacrament. Our priest insisted we walk from the church to our car and drive down the chapel. We went back and forth on this, with me getting more and more frustrated, until I grudgingly gave in. When we emerged from the church, there was our car, covered in brightly colored post it notes spelling out I Do!

We take our coffee: (Joy): black. (Mary): I wish I could say I take it black like a hardcore adult, but the truth is, I need sugar and cream and lots of it. 

Learn more about Something Blue, LLC

Evangelizing as a Family

CARISSA PLUTA

 

As Christians, we are all called to “make disciples of all nations” and those of us called to marriage can live out this call in a unique and very real way.

In Familiaris Consortio, St. John Paul II wrote that Christian married couples and parents “not only receive the love of Christ and become a saved community, but they are also called upon to communicate Christ’s love to their brethren, thus becoming a saving community.”

However, unless you are actively involved in ministry, it is easy for married couples and families to dismiss this call. With jobs and responsibilities at home, we fail to see how we can share the Good News with those we meet.

So, what does evangelization look like for those called to the vocation of marriage?

Investing in friendships and your community

Pope Francis said, "We need a Church capable of walking at people's sides... a Church which accompanies them on their journey." 

Authentic friendships encourage evangelization. Christ invested deeply in a few men by sharing life with them--going fishing together, eating meals together. 

Getting together with friends becomes much more difficult as you get older. With work, kids, and other activities, it is far too easy to excuse ourselves from investing in friendships, both old and new. 

Write a letter or call an old friend. Go on a double date. Grab coffee with another woman from your mom group or join a bible study. Become active members of your parish. Make time to cultivate a shared space for Christ’s grace to grow.

Opening your home

One way married couples can show love to their friends and others in their community is through the practice of hospitality.

Creating a home and inviting others into it allows you to more fully “share life” with others. You can invest more deeply and meaningfully in another when sharing a private and more intimate space.

St. Paul writes in his letter to the Thessalonians: “With such affection for you, we were determined to share with you not only the gospel of God, but our very selves as well, so dearly beloved had you become to us.”

Enjoying a meal or a cup of coffee with a guest gives you an opportunity not only to share your material goods and physical space with another but in some way, yourself. 

Letting others into your occasionally messy and imperfect home grants them permission to come and be loved as they are, messy and imperfect human beings.

Inviting others to pray with you

How do you pray as a couple or as a family? However you do it, invite others to join you in that time of prayer.

Personal invitation can facilitate a powerful encounter with Christ. Even something as simple as praying a rosary or grace before meals can lay the foundation for a relationship with God. 

Praying with others is a great way to accompany them on their faith journey and to demonstrate the deep way Jesus has affected your life and home. 


About the Author: Carissa Pluta is Spoken Bride’s Editor at Large. She is the author of the blog The Myth Retold. Read more

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Liturgical Living for Catholic Couples

ANDI COMPTON

 

Growing up, I never saw the seasons of the Church outside of the Mass. The priest changed colors occasionally, the Church was beyond crowded on Christmas and Easter, and every year Ordinary time seemed to go on forever. As a young adult, I was fascinated to learn about the different ways saints are venerated and celebrated throughout the world. I soon discovered liturgical living. 

The concept of Liturgical Living is simple: make the seasons of the Church come alive in your domestic church.

Over the past twelve years, my husband and I have tried many different traditions and celebrations in our marriage, in our home, and with our children; I share some of our favorites of the Liturgical seasons below:

Ordinary time

Decorate the home with greenery in a vase on the mantle, on the table, or in the windows. Some years we hang a wreath of greenery on our doorway as well.

Celebrate the saints’ feast days. Our go-to celebration includes reading a short blurb about the saint or feast day during dinner, and either cooking a dish from the saint’s home country, where they are regionally celebrated, or creating a dessert and trying to tie it in (ie., angel food cake for Guardian Angels). Some great saints to celebrate are St. Francis de Sales, St. John Bosco, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Agatha, Sacred Heart of Jesus, Corpus Christi, Immaculate Heart of Mary, St. Benedict, Sts. Peter and Paul, St. Kateri Tekakwitha, St. Dominic, The Transfiguration, St. Lawrence, St. Maximillian Kolbe, The Assumption, The Coronation of Mary, St. Monica, St. Augustine, St. Teresa of Kolkuta, St. Therese, Guardian Angels, Our Lady of the Rosary, St. Luke, and St. Cecilia. 

 

Advent

During our first married Advent, we hosted a Church New Year Party. I decorated with purple and pink and made the atmosphere festive. Unfortunately I fell asleep during the party because I was pregnant--true story. I wish I could tell you if the guests enjoyed it!

Wait to put up Christmas decorations. We set up our tree when advent begins and use it as a Jesse tree. Each night we read one or two Bible stories to journey through salvation history from Adam to Jesus. We begin to turn on the tree’s lights on St. Lucy’s Day (December 13), and we put the ornaments up on the 24th. Some years we also wind purple and pink ribbons on the tree.

I created an 8x10 Advent printable that hangs in a frame on our front door until the 24th when it gets swapped for a Christmas wreath.

Celebrate Our Lady of Guadalupe. Some areas will have mananita Mass, but if you can’t find one nearby, you can celebrate the day with a trip to visit a parish with an Our Lady of Guadalupe image and indulge in your favorite Mexican food.

Purchase an Advent wreath and a set of candles. Every night before dinner prayers we shut off the kitchen lights and light the candles while singing “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” and then say prayers. 

Place a nativity in your home. There are so many beautiful options of nativity scenes! I know friends who collect nativities wherever they travel; others have the Fontanini collection and add a piece every year.

 

Christmas

Go to Mass. We usually go to Mass on Christmas morning and open presents afterwards while eating waffles made with the recipe my husband’s grandfather made for them. 

Celebrate the octave of Christmas as the solemnity it is: eight days of feasting! We try to do an outing each day and let the kids (and ourselves) eat dessert every night.

Have a 12th night party for Epiphany. Celebrate Epiphany with gifts. Many cultures celebrate Los Reyes Magos and children receive presents on January 6th instead of Christmas Day. We leave our shoes out the night before and the Wise men leave us oranges, chocolate coins, and sometimes small toys.

Be really bold and leave up some decorations until February 2 for the Baptism of Our Lord. 

 

Lent

Prepare for Ash Wednesday. Before Ash Wednesday Mass, pray and talk about what penances and prayers you’d like to do together and separately. Also consider ways you could serve and give of your time to help the poor in your community. 

Attend Stations of the Cross at your local parish. Many even have a meatless supper afterwards to help build community.

Celebrate Passiontide, the week before Palm Sunday, by covering up all the holy images and items in your home with purple cloth. This has actually become my favorite Lenten tradition. Our home feels so different, so tomblike, without the faces of Jesus, Mary, and the saints watching over us.

 

Easter

Feast for 50 days. I’m not joking, eat dessert as much as you can. We begin with waffles after Mass, and all throughout Easter our kids get to eat the candy from our big neighborhood egg hunt.

Celebrate Divine Mercy Sunday. Say a chaplet with friends and family, then indulge in Divine Mercy Sundaes! We serve vanilla ice cream with two “rays” of whipped cream topped with red and blue sprinkles.

Celebrate the Ascension and Pentecost by saying the mysteries of the Rosary for those feast days and plan a special meal. 

Celebrate the Crowning of Mary. Often times May, the month of Mary, falls within the Easter season. If you have a special statue of her inside or outside of your home, crown her! There isn’t a wrong or right way to do this. You can say prayers, sing Marian hymns, and buy or make her a little crown of springtime blooms. Keep her company this month with lots of rosaries!

The quickest way to begin new liturgical living traditions is to incorporate green, white, purple, rose, and red tablecloths as a visual reminder of the significant day or season. It’s an easy change that makes a big impact in any space. If you’re able to buy or paint an “It’s your special day” plate, it can be used for birthdays, feast days, and to celebrate the anniversary of someone’s sacraments.

What is your favorite way to celebrate the different seasons of the Church? Share your reflections with our community on Facebook or Instagram.


About the Author: Andi is the Business Director for Spoken Bride, combining years of professional event coordination with a passion for helping couples truly enter into the sacrament of marriage. She has been married to her Beloved for 12 years and they have 5 children from toddler to tween.

Ariana + Craig | Romantic Woodland Basilica Wedding

Craig proposed to Ariana at the top of a tall tower at the Holy Hill Basilica in Wisconsin. The sunlit window overlooked acres of stunning green woodland and forest. After three years of dating, this was the moment the Lord had been leading them to.

In that time, they had weathered a medical scare and Craig’s conversion to the Catholic Church, teaching them profound lessons about trusting in God and his everlasting goodness. Their ceremony and reception was a romantic combination of rich emeralds and colorful flowers—a perfect accent to their scenic surroundings.

From the Bride: Craig and I met in college, away from home, but soon discovered we were from the same county. Neither of us were looking for a relationship at the time, but God had different plans. I had just come out of an unhealthy relationship I was pretty distraught about, and I was praying constantly for guidance and for God to find me a good Catholic man--one day, in the not-so-near future. 

Craig casually asked me to coffee his “super senior” year of college, with only a couple months left of school. After some coaxing, I accepted. And after a four-hour conversation, we shut the coffee shop down. Then we began to officially date. 

Craig was religious but didn't attend church regularly. I began inviting him to Mass, and he was very open to it. We had many long conversations about God, and we both came to believe the Lord was vital to our relationship. Later, after much thought and contemplation, Craig announced he would start the RCIA process. He become Catholic about two and a half years into our relationship, and I was his sponsor. 

A few months later, after more than three years of dating, Craig proposed to me at one of our favorite places: the Holy Hill Basilica and National Shrine of Mary Help of Christians.

He suggested visiting Holy Hill to hike some trails and to pray in the church. I agreed, not thinking anything of it. We frequently went there, and the beauty and peacefulness of the place never gets old.

That morning, once "Sub" (Craig's beloved Subaru Crosstrek) was parked in the lot of Holy Hill, he suggested going up to the "Scenic Tower." This was right as the church opened, so no one else was around. We began to climb the million-and-ten stairs to the top of the tower, causing Craig to almost collapse from the gradually mounting anxiety he was not prepared for! 

After enjoying the view and wiping away his sweat, he walked over to me and took my hand, asking if I would say a little prayer with him. Craig leaned back and got down on one knee. It was the biggest, most joyful surprise, and I said, “yes!”

Two weeks before Craig proposed, and after he received permission from my dad, I had a cancer scare. As I awaited test results screening for cancer, Craig and I prayed hard at Our Lady of Good Help chapel. They came back negative. That was a miracle in itself.

After finding out our home parish would be under renovation, we inquired about getting married at Holy Hill. At first we were turned down, but our friend and priest, Fr. Patrick Burns, inquired for us. He never heard back, but told us he would find a way. Three hours later, the priest from Holy Hill, Fr. Don Brick, called Fr. Patrick and said we could have our wedding there. Craig and I were married on the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus the next year, and we now have a very special devotion to the Sacred Heart.

Many of our friends and family gave us spiritual gifts of Mass offerings, prayers, and novenas during the weeks leading up to our wedding. The forecast predicted thunderstorms and heavy rain, and when my wedding day came, it poured all morning. But by one in the afternoon the rain cleared and blue sky came out, just in time for our 2PM ceremony. It didn't rain at all after that. 

Our nuptial Mass was filled with 225 guests, most of whom were not Catholic and some who were not Christian. Mine and Craig’s biggest prayer was to be tools for God to use in the conversion of our friends and family who either did not believe or were of another denomination. 

My dress had pieces of my godmother’s and grandma’s dresses in it. I custom-designed it with the help of a family friend who was also a seamstress. Originally, the dress was strapless, but I designed added sleeves, a gorgeous bodice, and the 22-foot veil I wore in the basilica and for photos.

One of the highlights of the ceremony was presenting the bouquet of flowers to Mary in the Marian side chapel. Much to our surprise, we saw adoration taking place. A close family friend of mine, whom I used to babysit, sang the “Ave Maria,” and it became a very special moment.

Throughout it all, Craig and I learned that God is so good! Always trust in him. If you and your beloved do your part, he will handle the rest.

Photography: Devon Rose Photography | Church: Nuptial Mass: Holy Hill Basilica and National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians
Proposal: Holy Hill Basilica and National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians bell tower | Wedding Reception Venue : Terrace 167 | Catering:
Prime Minister Catering in Cedarburg, WI | Videgraphy: Aaron Moore Video (Moore Memories) | Rings: Kesslers Diamonds | Dress: "Snips" by Linda McCoy - wedding dress made by Linda McCoy and designed by the Bride and BHLDN

The Sophia Series | Jen

JEN LIRETTE

We invite our longtime married readers to share the experiences that have marked, refined, and anointed their marriages; months and years that, by grace, transform the mundane, the bitter, and the incomprehensible into the fruits of holy wisdom. A purification and a clear vision for the path to heaven that lies ahead. The Sophia Series.

PHOTOGRAPHY: PHOTOGRAPHY BY LOUIS

My future husband was right in front of me when I was a little girl, and I didn’t even know it. Logan and I started going to school together in the first grade, but we didn’t get to know each other until our junior year in high school. It didn’t take long for me to know that he was someone I could see myself marrying one day.

We were married in June of 2009—as soon as we graduated college. We were young, but we knew God was calling us to marriage. Even though we anticipated hard times, we felt we were strong enough in our faith to weather whatever God sent our way.

It’s almost like God used our convictions to prepare us for our first year of marriage.

Logan and I decided we were ready for a baby right away but were told it might be difficult to conceive. When we stared at a positive pregnancy test just two months after our wedding, we couldn’t believe it—we were going to have a baby! We thanked God every day for our unexpected blessing.

Through my background in nursing, I knew the chances of miscarriage were at least 25%, and it made me nervous. Logan worried something would happen to our baby too. 

Despite a rough couple of months with morning sickness and headaches, I felt so blessed to carry new life within me. I kept a journal and wrote to our new baby, and Logan talked to our baby and kissed my belly every day. The first trimester of our pregnancy was perfect! And the second trimester brought us relief as the chances of pregnancy loss dropped tremendously. 

On December 8, the feast of the Immaculate Conception, we found out our baby was a boy. This news made our first Advent as a married couple even more special as we waited with our Blessed Mother to meet our baby boy.

Just four days after Christmas, at 22 weeks pregnant, I suddenly started cramping and bleeding.

We rushed to the hospital in the middle of the night, where they tried to stop the contractions. Logan felt helpless as I lay in pain for hours. When my water broke, we knew our baby boy would soon follow; he had a 1% chance of surviving at such a young age. 

My doctor arrived in the morning and decided it was time to deliver our baby. I was quickly wheeled into the delivery room, but the staff never went back to bring Logan in with me.  Even though a nurse had told Logan he could be with me, he wasn’t there when I pushed our baby out or when I heard my doctor say, “There’s no heartbeat.” As I began crying, the anesthesiologist put me under for a D&C.

Eventually, Logan and I were reunited; I woke up from the anesthesia and we were able to hold our baby boy’s body. It almost felt like a cruel joke. Just hours before, we were happily married and expecting our first child. And it was Christmas! Now we were holding our dead baby. Even though we knew hard times would come in marriage, this is not what we ever expected.

The hospital’s chaplain came in later that day to pray with us. She also shared the divorce statistics of couples who lost a child. It was one blow after another. We lost our son and now we might lose each other too? We had only been married for seven months!

It’s hard to explain our experience in the months following the loss of our son. My husband and I grieved very differently. (It wasn’t until later that we learned about the temperaments—and how we have opposite ones.) Since it was the first big loss for both of us, we didn’t realize grief was affecting our marriage. In the midst of our pain, we were still adjusting to life as newlyweds. 

It took several vulnerable moments of sharing our feelings with each other and telling each other we would get through it. When I struggled to pray, Logan prayed with me. It was because of his support—and God’s grace—that I survived that time.

I wish I could say we got pregnant again right away and everything has been great since, but that’s not what happened—does it ever?!

It was 21 months later—after an emotional period of infertility and becoming foster parents—when we finally saw a positive pregnancy test again. We were both elated and anxious. Although we knew another baby was a gift, we also knew we could experience another loss. We were terrified. 

Things got even scarier when an ultrasound showed my cervix opening at just 11 weeks. Strict bedrest, a cerclage (a procedure to stitch the cervix closed), and the rest of the pregnancy on modified bedrest was emotionally hard on both of us, and physically challenging in a unique way for me.

But since we had already endured a tragedy together, we knew we would get through this trial too. And we did. Our oldest son is now 7-years-old, and he has two younger brothers who are now 5- and 3-years-old. Each pregnancy was difficult in its own way, but worth the sacrifice. Our boys are so precious—even our little saint in heaven.

When we think back during those earlier years and all of the unexpected trials, we wouldn’t change a thing. I know it sounds crazy. But we are more in love than ever because of what we’ve been through. 

We look back and recognize how the earliest trials prepared us for additional trials later in life. From the beginning of our marriage, we learned to talk about the hard stuff and to not shy away from our feelings. We learned that grief may last forever and happens in many different ways and forms.

Most importantly, we learned how important it is to truly become “one flesh:” physically, emotionally, and spiritually. There are so many forces preventing couples from doing so.

During the most challenging times in any marriage, each couple has a choice to drift apart or grow closer together. We made a decision for the latter. We know if we made it through that first tragedy, with the odds stacked against us, we can make it through anything.

We joke now that God must have known we’d need our own special prayer warrior. It truly is a blessing to have our son interceding for our family every day. We know his prayers are a big reason why two very imperfect people are still managing to strive for a holy marriage. And since we cannot wait to be with our baby boy again, he motivates us even more to get to heaven! 

What was the most tragic experience of our life thus far ended up being one of our biggest blessings, and we’re so grateful for the growth that has happened in our marriage because of it.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Jen lives in southeast Louisiana with her high school sweetheart, Logan, and their 3 boys. She is an RN but is currently a Stay-at-Home-Mom. Together with Logan, they run Surprised By Marriage, where they share videos, blog posts, weekly marriage challenges, and musings on marriage.

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How to Support Engaged or Newly Married Catholic Couples

CLARA DAVISON

 

People are created for community. For many engaged and newly married Catholic couples, community includes others in a similar stage of life. 

Over the last year-and-a-half since getting married, my husband and I have attended six weddings--and have many more on the calendar for the coming year! Suffice to say, wedding planning and marriage conversations are an ever-present aspect of our lives and the lives of those around us. 

As friends have approached us for advice as they prepare for their wedding day, my husband and I have discovered a new depth to our marriage. Through many conversations, both separate and together, we have enjoyed sharing and supporting others in their journey toward a Catholic marriage. 

Whether you are single, engaged, or married, we summarize four ways you can support other Catholic couples during their engagement and through their first year of marriage: 

Let the couple know you are praying for them—and pray for them

Continually reassure a couple of your prayers during their engagement and leading up to their wedding. This is an exciting yet stressful time in their lives and the assurance that they have friends continually lifting them up in prayer is so important. 

Whether it is praying a novena leading up to their wedding day, offering a special prayer on their monthly anniversary, or just saying a quick Hail Mary when you think of them, prayer is always an important way we can offer support to our couple friends. 

Ask about the less “exciting” and more serious aspects of wedding prep

Weddings are an exciting time and many people will ask about details  like dress shopping and gift registry ideas. But the more serious and important aspects of wedding preparation, such as pre-Cana, do not always receive the inquiry and reflection they deserve. 

Often, Pre-Cana classes and premarital counseling can be stressful for a couple as the magnitude of “to have and to hold ‘til death do us part” becomes a reality rather than a cute wedding tagline. During our engagement, it was difficult to find someone to talk to as I processed the more serious aspects of our wedding and marriage. 

Create space for your engaged friends to discuss the serious parts of preparing for marriage. Ask thoughtful questions to help draw the couple into meaningful conversations beyond just weddings flowers and bridesmaids’ dresses.  

Look for ways to serve the couple during the wedding day

Everyone loves weddings! It is a joy to see people you care about take this big step together; and really, who doesn’t love an excuse to dress up and gather with family and friends? But in the midst of the joyful celebrations, it can be  easy to forget that the couple can feel they just ran an emotional marathon. 

Leading up to my wedding, I was told jokingly that I wouldn’t get a chance to eat at my reception. To my surprise, I found this was the reality as I visited with guests. With this memory in mind, I always try to approach the bride and groom a few times throughout the day with offers of food, water, and an offer to run errands or fetch forgotten changes of shoes! 

Continue to reach out through the first year of marriage

After the wedding day, the marriage is only beginning. The wedding day is filled with family and friends offering love and support, but sometimes it is easy to forget that the couple needs support throughout their marriage. 

I try to reach out and offer support to newlywed couples throughout the first year of marriage, inviting them into conversations about the  ups and downs of early married life. Transitioning into married life is different for every couple, but regardless, support and love from friends is always appreciated.  

There are so many ways to support the couples around you in their engagement and first year of marriage! The primary focus is to simply be available and intentional in your relationships. 

What are some ways you have received or shown support to engaged couples or newlyweds? Share your experience with our community on Facebook or Instagram.


About the Author: Clara Davison has worked as a whitewater raft guide, sex trafficking researcher, U.K. Parliament researcher, swim coach, and freelance writer. She currently works in Brand Management and lives with her husband in North Carolina.   

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Expanding Your Vision of a Bridal Party

DENAE PELLERIN

 

Choosing your bridal party can be one of the most stressful parts of wedding planning. Balancing other’s expectations and feelings while also considering friendship dynamics and your budget can cause uncertainty and fear. It may even feel like “ranking” deeply personal relationships. God has chosen people to come and go throughout our lives, and what makes one person “feel” closer than another does not necessarily measure the significance of their impact on your journey. 

Growing up, I was part of many unique communities and intentionally pursued those relationships for years. The newest friend at my wedding was someone I lived with! My husband and I chose our first and longest friends as our best man and matron of honor. These were people who had been with us “through it all,” and no matter what life would bring in the future, their presence up until the day we were married was unquestionably special. 

Despite this, we still wanted to honor and include everyone we loved on our special day. In Romans 12, Paul outlines that each one of Christ’s followers is given unique gifts that serve the Body of Christ. Drawing on this Scripture, we included many other friends and family in our wedding day, depending on their gifts and roles they played in our lives. 

When we began “breaking the news” about our wedding party to those who were not chosen, we shared with each person their importance to us, what gifts we saw in them, how they impacted us, and invited them to be part of our day in another significant way. In this way, we crafted an “expanded vision” for our bridal party.

And so, reflective of their unique roles in our faith journey, our loved ones took part in our Mass or helped us design the wedding program. This included our godparents, family who introduced us to the faith, and friends who were accountability partners or prayer warriors at crucial times in our life. We also invited priests to co-celebrate the liturgy who were important to the discernment of our vocations and careers. 

Having these intentional people pray over us the day of our wedding reminded us of the life of faith we had lived thus far. It reminded us that we had a strong community to support us as we became a new family through marriage. 

Romans 12 also challenged me to look within our community when I was hiring vendors. Rather than employing a stranger, I first considered family and friends who had experience with hair and makeup styling, photography, videography, calligraphy, graphic design and musical talents. Many of them were excited to practice their art and spend time with me in preparation for the wedding. In fact, getting ready the morning of my wedding felt like friends were coming over on any usual day, and their presence provided me a great sense of calm.

Many of my girlfriends were relieved they didn’t have to buy a one-time-wear dress and be “on display” all day. Instead, they used their gifts of creativity and organization to help me with the little details of the wedding reception. The time we spent together allowed us to share in the joy and excitement of my approaching wedding day with their assistance. It communicated to them that I cherished their presence in the intimate moments of my life. It also relieved a lot of anxiety in the days leading up to the event, because I knew my trusted friends were taking care of things! 

Since our actual bridal party was so small, and we had crafted an “expanded vision” of it, we made sure to schedule time during our wedding day to get photos with other guests. My husband and I chose to do a “first look,” and so, before our nuptial Mass, we invited some of our closest friends to come and take pictures with us. This gave us a special and exclusive moment with people who would have been part of a more traditional “bridal party.” 

In addition, rather than having a receiving line after Mass, we invited guests to join us in the outdoor space near our reception hall during the cocktail hour. This was a great time to laugh and talk with them before the reception. We also took more photos with our cousins, aunts, uncles, and friends. 

At the end of your wedding day, I pray that you cherish how special it was to have everyone you love in one room to celebrate you and your beloved. 

Choosing to include them and honor them in special ways was one of the best decisions we made. When people asked me if I was worried something would go wrong, my response was always “no, because I am in a room full of people who love me and will help me.” It was a blessing to be celebrated by and celebrate the people who have and always will love my husband and I, for better or for worse.


About the Author: Denae Pellerin discovered the truth of Christ at an evangelical summer camp as a youth and later made her way to the Catholic Church because of her public Catholic education. Denae loves Catholic Social Teaching, Marian Devotions, and Women-Centered Pro-Life Actions.

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3 Money-Management Practices That Can Strengthen Your Relationship

Are you and your beloved communicating about money for the first time? 

As you enter into engagement or newlywed life, there’s a new weight to your purchases and habits, with the knowledge that they’ll impact not just you, but your spouse. Managing your daily, weekly, and monthly finances highlights each of your individual temperaments, strengths, weaknesses, and formation from your families of origin. 

Just getting started on your wedding budget? Read our coordinator-approved first steps here.

As these aspects of who you are are more clearly revealed, budgeting and financial matters can actually become a source of growth for your relationship. Good money habits can also be good relationship habits; principles that apply to money management can also apply to improving your communication, honesty, and intimacy.

Here, for the newly engaged and the recently married, three ways healthy money habits can foster a healthy relationship.

The money matter: Considering joint accounts

The benefit to your relationship: Accountability

A Severe Mercy is a memoir recounting one couple’s courtship, marriage, and conversion to Christianity. As the author and his future wife fall in love, they vow never to keep secrets between them, calling hidden thoughts and actions “creeping separateness.” 

Whatever your income, debt, and spending tendencies as a single person—barring serious issues or destructive spending habits—merging your bank account with your spouse’s after your wedding encourages accountability, vulnerability, and a tangible shift in perspective from “mine” to “ours.” Particularly in relationships where one of you tends toward saving and the other toward spending, joint bank accounts can encourage transparency and honesty between you.

Read 4 ways to minimize fights about money.

The money matter: Identifying your priorities.

The benefit to your relationship: Intentionality and hope

Dreaming together is fun. Do you have a house in mind? A special vacation? Even hopes for weekly takeout and movie nights? Taking a moment to list each of your top 3-5 saving and spending priorities in your budget—in both the near and distant future—grants clarity, deeper understanding, and a sense of purpose with your financial goals that you can take on as a team. Knowing what you’re saving for and anticipating can help you both be intentional with your spending and investing.

Categories you might consider prioritizing are travel, education, tithing, dates, hospitality and entertaining, and gifts for each other.

The money matter: Frugality when necessary

The benefit to your relationship: Hearts of sacrifice

If money is tight—or even if it isn’t—considering your spouse each time you make a purchase or payment communicates respect--particularly if you have significantly different spending habits. 

In times you’re tempted to ignore your budget, consider ways to put your finances at the service of your spouse--rather than spending on a temporary or unnecessary item just for yourself, for instance, consider putting it toward a date night or mutual long-term goal, instead. 

The dollars really do add up! Keeping each other in mind, even with small shopping trips isn’t weak, fear-based, or passive; it’s a simple, near-daily way to build habits of sacrifice and looking outside of yourself, towards another: the one you love.

We love walking and growing alongside you in the vocation to marriage. Share the money-related habits you and your beloved have found most helpful in the comments and on Spoken Bride’s social media.

Anna + Patrick | Pennsylvania Country Club Wedding

Anna and Patrick walked together with the intercession of their patron saints through the journey of dating, engagement, and their wedding day. Although the path was not always easy, they trusted in God’s providence and found strength in his love.

Their simple but incredibly elegant wedding overlooked the green Overbrook golf course from a vintage country club in Pennsylvania, a location where other family members celebrated their wedding days as well. It was something very meaningful, a theme that Anna strove to incorporate into even the littlest details.

From the Bride: Patrick is the brother of one of my good friends from Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, and his sister set us up. We started dating the summer after college, once we were back in the Philadelphia area where both our families live. The first time we hung out as friends was at a Dave Matthews concert--music has always been a common love for us--and a few weeks later Patrick asked me out on a date. The rest is history! We dated for about three years, and then he popped the question. A year after that we were married. 

Throughout our relationship, Patrick and I prayed about our future together. We both have strong devotions to St. Joseph and the rosary, so those were two spiritual constants as we dated. During engagement we cultivated devotions to St. Cecilia and St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, because they kept popping up everywhere in random ways. 

Saints Cecilia and Gabriel were the only two saints painted on the ceiling of the church where we got married, though we didn't know it at the time. Was it a coincidence? I think not! 

Eucharistic adoration also became something more important to us as we prepared for our wedding. We felt we needed the extra grace, as engagement proved to be challenging. There was a lot of waiting and trusting in God that stretched us in uncomfortable ways, and this experience was true during most of our dating as well. And yet, God’s hand guided us the whole time, and we see his providence in many ways when we look back.

Our wedding ceremony was something we spent a lot of time planning. Choosing the readings, music, and all the parts of the ceremony that best represented how we wanted to honor God was important to us. Patrick and I wanted to create a beautiful wedding liturgy for our guests. 

Our nuptial Mass was more traditional, with classic music selections such as "Be Thou My Vision," and we splurged to hire a violinist, an instrument we both adore. This was also a nod to St. Cecilia, patroness of musicians, on whose feast day we unknowingly started dating. The presiding priest was a good friend of ours who was newly ordained that past June. He was so intentional and detail-oriented, especially in his homily, which was filled with his words of wisdom and humor. 

The general aesthetic of the day was simple, classy, and meaningful. Beauty is very important to me, as well as incorporating meaning and intention in every detail--I’m a true melancholic at heart! Some of my favorite things from my wedding day were wearing my mother's beautiful, 40-year-old veil with lace appliques, the bride and bridesmaid bouquets with all my favorite flowers, my pearl rosary from Lourdes, France wrapped around my bouquet (which was given to me from a dear friend when we volunteered there), and the pearl and turquoise bracelet I wore with a St. Therese medal attached. The bracelet was my maternal grandmother’s, and the St. Therese medal was my paternal grandmother’s. I have always shared a love for St. Therese with my grandmother. 

I wasn't planning on incorporating all these things initially. I didn't have them all at the beginning of engagement, and I didn’t think of myself as particularly sentimental, but everything aligned perfectly. Once I realized the meaning behind the items, they were incredibly special to me. I felt I was honoring them and the stories they represented. 

Another meaningful element was our reception venue, which was the same venue my sister had for her wedding as well as my parents many years ago! Not only is the location gorgeous and elegant with its old-world, slight “Great Gatsby” charm, but it has become a family tradition, and that made it all the more fun. 

Our wedding day was an absolute blast. In so many ways, it took us four years of hard work to arrive at the start of our marriage, but Patrick and I couldn't have asked for a better kick-off.

From the Photographer: Anna and Patrick's wedding day was an elegant, simple affair with a 20s vibe. From the details that Anna chose to wear: her mother's wedding veil and vintage pearl earrings, to the careful thought and attention they put into selections for their nuptial Mass, it was clear the most important celebration to them was their love for each other, their families, and God. It was such a joy and honor to be welcomed into their day and granted the privilege of documenting their wedding.

Photography: Mary Katherine Photography | Church: Our Lady of the Assumption, Strafford PA | Wedding Reception Venue : Overbrook Golf Club, Villanova PA | VIDEOGRAPHER : A close friend! | DJ: Schaffer Sound Disc Jockey’s | FLORIST: Ambler Flower Shop | Hair & Make-up: The Finishing Touch | CAKE: Nothing Bundt Cake | DRESS: David’s Bridal | BRIDESMAID’S DRESSES: Azazie | GROOMSMEN ATTIRE: The Black Tux | INVITATIONS: Minted

Newlywed Life | Defining Your Identity as a Wife

STEPHANIE FRIES

 

The human person has a natural desire to define their identity in order to know themselves; for as we come to know ourselves, we come to know God who created us. In this process, it can be difficult to differentiate between “who am I?” and “what do I do?”

For example, claiming an identity through a professional vocation may sound like “I am a nurse.” Straight away, this sounds like an answer of who I am! The language is straightforward and consistent with the question. With second thought, however, this sentence holds greater claim to what I do--it defines an occupation more than it defines a person’s being. 

Take the same thought into the ways we identify as a wife. “I am a wife.” This statement is a true and valid identification for many women. Often more personal than a professional vocation, this definition more closely defines who I am because it intuits how God has called woman to a lifelong and all-encompassing relationship to love and be loved. 

What qualities define one’s identity as a wife? By digging a little deeper into this role to answer the question, “Who am I?,” we may uncover a beautiful revelation of our identity as designed and intended by God the Father. 

When my husband was traveling for months at a time this past year, I wrestled with my identity as a wife and recognized this part of my identity was defined by the roles I fulfill in our marriage, in our relationships with others, and in the duties of our home. 

In fact, it seemed my identity as a wife was void without his presence and the opportunities to serve him in tangible ways. I realized my confidence and self-efficacy was the byproduct of productivity and action. Perhaps Satan was trying to strip me of all confidence and joy in our first year of marriage (and I was close to falling in that trap), but God’s grace slowly led me away from isolation and despair. 

Beyond the literal ways we show up and fulfill the wife role and responsibilities--by bringing home a paycheck, wiping babies’ hands, or keeping a home--how does God desire to define our identity through the Vocation as wife? 

In his “Letter to Women,” Saint John Paul II makes a personal address to wives when he says, “Thank you, women who are wives! You irrevocably join your future to that of your husbands, in a relationship of mutual giving, at the service of love and life.” 

What do you give your husband at the service of love and life? 

I invite you to pause and answer this question, noting your initial response. 

My impulse jumps to the tangible acts of kindness and service: I give my husband dinner every night when he is home, I share my body and heart with him in marital intimacy, I have offered up my career in order to partner together and pursue his. This is where I pause, with caution, for there is more. 

God calls husbands and wives into a mysterious, life-giving union. Fulton Sheen says, “existence is worth,” and I believe this simple statement begins to answer the questions of identity in Vocation. 

Living into a spousal union in the image of God is more about existence than it is about productivity. When a wife joins to her husband for the duration of her life on Earth, she is fulfilling her role. It is that simple. Her whole-hearted living presence is the foundation of her identity as a wife.

The gift of self is not always a measurable action. Being a gift of self is being alive, existing, renewing the “yes” we claim in the marriage vows. Being a gift of self and fulfilling the vocation as a wife is the combined offering of everything you are, in who God created you, and everything you do “at the service of life and love.” 

The same is true for Jesus in his spousal presence to his bride, the Church. He concurrently exists in the presence of the Eucharist, and continually offers himself to us through the tangible Eucharistic sharing of his body, blood, soul, and divinity. 

What you do is absolutely a part of who you are; but what you do is not the foundation of your identity. Regardless of your occupation, Vocation, or any other roles you may fill in a day, you were created by God as beautiful, worthy, and whole in your existence alone. Uncovering the mysterious identity as a wife reveals an even deeper affirmation of your beauty, worth, and wholeness through your sheer existence in your marriage.


About the Author: Stephanie Fries is Spoken Bride’s Associate Editor. Stephanie’s perfect day would include a slow morning and quality time with her husband, Geoff, a strong cup of coffee, and a homemade meal (…with dessert). Read more

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Create Joyful Reminders of Your Wedding Day

Husbands and wives navigating the waters of newlywed life: keep daily reminders of your wedding day close by.

During engagement, it’s not hard to have daily reminders that your wedding is growing closer and closer. Countles vendor appointments, marriage prep classes, DIY decorations, and guest lists can become overwhelming. During this season, many brides have so many reminders of their wedding and impending married life that they long for a mental break. But this chaotic season, even if you have a long engagement, is in the long-term so short-lived.

After the wedding is over, the guests have gone home, and you’ve spent a romantic honeymoon with your beloved, life goes back to “normal.” More accurately, your new normal. There’s no more dress fittings to fit into your schedule or bridal showers to plan. The glitter, excitement, and celebration of your wedding day is now a beautiful moment in your history, but the graces and joy of that day don’t have to fade into the past.

The supernatural joy God showers on his children on their wedding day is not a joy contained to those 24 hours. It is meant to overflow into the everyday-ness of newlywed life and then lifelong marriage. As imperfect human beings, however, we are quick to forget the graces and wonder of the most important moments of our lives.

Even moments like saying your marriage vows, when you first enter into the sacrament which finds its meaning in Christ. It is a sacrament full of graces and the potential to form you and your spouse into saints. It will become the foundation of your family and your strength in difficult trials. Something this profound is a cause for daily joy and celebration, and yet so often we hear the stereotype of the monotony of married life. What if after many years with your spouse, the joy and graces of your wedding day seem to have faded into the past?

It’s no different with our Catholic faith. We are quick to forget our complete dependence on God, to get distracted by innumerable material worries, and to feel the “monotony” of our prayer life or relationship with the Lord. But like a good Father who knows the weaknesses and needs of his children, God has given us a very physical Church, with the Eucharist, confessionals, sacramentals, crucifixes, incense, sacred art, and the priesthood, to name a few things. Encountering the physical aspects of our faith everyday plays a huge part in drawing us closer to the Lord and reorienting us back towards his grace--even if we don’t realize it. Little reminders of God’s presence keep us present to him. 

In the same way, little reminders of your wedding can keep you more present to your spouse and the marriage you’re building together. Like the physical mementos of our faith you keep present, create mementos of the joyful day your one-flesh union began, because your sacramental marriage is the beating heart of your home.

Related: Read contributor Hannah’s reflection on why she calls to mind her wedding day often, even after her and her husband’s first child.

Revisit your wedding photos. Because one of the most powerful reminders of your wedding day is the ability to look on those beautiful moments all over again...and again. Take some time to sit with your spouse and flip through your wedding photos on a laptop or in a scrapbook you keep out on the coffee table. Hang your favorite images in frames on your walls where you’re most likely to notice them. 

If you had a special rosary wrapped around your bouquet, make that the rosary you and your spouse use to pray together. Play music or hymns you chose for your nuptial Mass or first dance. Preserve your wedding bouquet in a shadowbox you can display in a place of honor. In some way, make your wedding a part of your home, one that you’ll see or use everyday.

God wants you to experience that joy over and over again, and to use that joy as a channel for grace and protection against anything that would wear away at your marriage. 

Your wedding is the beginning of a sacrament meant to live on throughout your life and as a reminder of the next, when we celebrate the eternal wedding feast of the Lamb.

Can Catholics Write Their Own Vows?

The wedding industry today feeds brides the lie that their wedding day is all about them. 

PHOTOGRAPHY: KARLY JO PHOTOGRAPHY

You must personalize the whole day, right down to the words you say to pledge your love for your spouse.

Couples spend months trying to find the right words to highlight what makes their relationship special and adequately express their deepest thoughts and feelings.

The Church, on the other hand, does not permit couples to write and say their own vows during the wedding ceremony. 

The Catholic Church does not desire to snuff out the uniqueness of each couple by requiring the traditional vows, but rather desires the couple to make of themselves a more complete gift to one another and the church. 

Unity of Liturgy

As Catholics we proclaim that the Church is one, holy, and apostolic. 

You can attend mass anywhere in the world and still understand the miracle taking place because our liturgy reflects this idea that we are members of a united Body. 

Whether or not you choose to have a full Mass as your wedding ceremony, Catholic wedding vows are said within the context of a liturgy which contains certain essential parts. 

These immutable elements, instituted by God and guarded by the Church, cannot change without affecting the validity of the sacrament. 

But even more importantly, the traditional Catholic wedding vows remind the couple that they are part of something much larger than themselves. 

They unite the couple, not only with one another, but with the entire Body of Christ across time and place. 

Related: Why it matters that we are getting married in a Church

       

Canon Law

According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “The Church holds the exchange of consent between the spouses to be the indispensable element that ‘makes the marriage.’” 

Consent in terms of Catholic marriage means that the couples acknowledge that the come freely and wholeheartedly to promise their fidelity to each other, and their acceptance and upbringing of children. 

Consent is vital for a valid marriage in the eyes of the Church.

And since a couple declares consent during the wedding vows, the Code of Canon Law requires that the wording of the consent is made abundantly clear. 

If the vows contain wording that place conditions or limits on the marriage, than the Church may have reason to doubt the validity of the sacrament. 

Related: Why I’m grateful for traditional wedding vows

Sacred Covenant

“The sacred character of the marriage rite must not be compromised at the altar with romanticism,” wrote Archbishop Socrates Villegas of Lingayen-Dagupan.

Despite what the wedding industry will try to sell you, your special day is about more than just you and your feelings for your spouse. 

The day contains a sacredness that goes far beyond the couple. And human words will ultimately fall short of the depth and mystery of the eternal weight which is contained in this special moment. 

When the couple recites their vows, they not only enter into a deeper relationship with one another, but they establish an eternal and unbreakable covenant with God Himself. 

The vows given to us by the Church are divinely inspired and reflect the sacredness of the moment in which the two become one.

They allow you to look beyond the joyful feelings of the day and openly receive the grace to help you through the seasons of difficulty. 

And they invite God to be the foundation upon which you build your life together. 

Editors Share | How I Chose My Wedding Gown + Theme

It’s our privilege to be invited into your story and vocation. In gratitude, we love to share ours with you, as well. Today, for any bride just beginning the wedding planning process, the team shares the stories of how they chose their wedding gowns and an overall theme for their big days.

 

Mariah Maza, Features Editor

Planning a winter wedding in Arizona is beautiful. When I woke up on my wedding day, the weather outside was sunny and in the 70s. But what I really loved about our date, December 30, (although I didn’t love the idea of a winter wedding at first), is that it was during the octave of Christmas! That meant the church would already be decorated with beautiful trees, greens, and florals. The Christmas “stress” would already be over for most of our guests, yet the joy of the liturgical season would still remain. And within the following couple days, we could celebrate our newlywed joy with the start of a new year.

Once I let go of the summer wedding I thought I wanted, I fully embraced the joy of the Christmas season. I chose colors for our theme that were more wintry than Christmas-y: navy blues, emerald greens, maroon, and gold as an accent. I incorporated beautiful wintergreens, berries, and gold stems into the bouquets for me and my bridesmaids. I realized that my favorite Christmas hymns could be incorporated into my nuptial Mass as well, if I wanted. 

Read Mariah’s planning tips for a Christmas Octave wedding.

For my wedding dress, I chose dainty cap sleeves and a very full A-line skirt that looked more like a ballgown, with a cathedral length veil that trailed far behind me in elegant lace. A sweetheart/illusion lace neckline lined with pearls completed the look. What other day of your life can you dress in princess attire? And I loved getting married during the mild coolness of an Arizona winter, instead of sweating it out in the 120 degree summer!

 

Mary Wilmot, Social Media Manager

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We got married in August in Houston, so we definitely had to make choices that would be practical in the heat. I am Filipino on my mother’s side, so my husband opted for traditional barongs instead of suits. These shirts are formal in Filipino culture and way more breathable in hot, humid temperatures than suits or tuxes.

Our anniversary is also the day before my parents’, so that reflected a few decisions, as well. My bridesmaids wore pale yellow dresses, like my mom’s did, which I felt was fitting and fun for summer. I also always knew I wanted to wear my mother’s wedding dress, which was still in great shape. Surprisingly, it didn’t even need alterations, so I just had it cleaned by a local wonderful seamstress. 

I made the dress my own by choosing unique accessories. The dress is ivory and has spaghetti straps, so after quite a bit of hunting online with no luck, I finally found a perfect bolero at the local David’s Bridal. I definitely felt it completed my bridal look for Mass.

My favorite part of my wedding attire was my veil. I stumbled upon the perfect lace-edged veil at a bridal shop while on pilgrimage in Lisieux, France during my engagement. I have a strong devotion to Saint Thérese and also knew St. Zélie, her mother, was a lacemaker. My now-husband and I were long distance at the time while I finished grad school up in Europe, and for me, that felt like a special sign that the Lord was guiding us, along with some powerful intercessors, while we prepared for marriage. I also wore silver glittery heels (purchased on a layover in London at Heathrow airport—another fun story!), along with an ivory fascinator from BHLDN during our reception. 

 

Stephanie Calis, Co-Founder & Editor in Chief

As a born-and-bred Marylander, I’ve always been drawn to classic, preppy styles and bright colors. For our July wedding, I hoped for a casual and summery vibe, choosing navy, pink, and green for décor, florals, stationery, and wedding party attire.

I wanted a gown that reflected the lightness of the season, as well; an unfussy style I’d look back on and think of as timeless. I loved ballgown-style dresses and didn’t want a train or beading, but struggled to find the clean, unembellished look I hoped for. Ultimately, I found a USA-made line of simple styles available in a variety of fabrics, and chose a strapless ballgown with a bow sash in textured slub silk.

 

Andi Compton, Business Director

CIRCLE HEADSHOT Andi.jpg

By the time I was 15 I had planned several weddings (I even had a binder like Monica from Friends—she gets me!), so when I got to finally set things in motion for myself, I was thrilled! My family throws big, formal weddings and my favorite colors are black and white, so we went with those, with silver as an accent. As far as décor, I just wanted over the top white florals. All my husband Matt said was, “No pink, and I’m wearing my own dress shoes.”

We had already decided to get married several months before Matt proposed, so when I visited Houston with my parents we went to the Priscilla of Boston shop I had been dreaming of since I was a teen. I tried on a giant ball gown with tulle, silk, and tons of beadwork and both my parents said it was what they’d always pictured for me, but we didn’t buy it since we didn’t have a date yet.

Fast forward to when I began working at a bridal store with my friend, and the same dress was on display when we walked in for our first day. She told me it was my dress, but I wasn’t sold yet. After a few months of modeling wedding gowns at the store I had tried on over 50 dresses, so I knew what I wanted: my giant beaded ball gown. It just needed a tulle bolero to be ready for Mass, cathedral length veil, and a tiara. 

 

Carissa Pluta, Editor at Large

I don’t think we really had a “theme” for our wedding. Getting married on Long Island, where my family is from, we couldn’t really have the simple wedding we wanted—Long Island weddings tend to be extravagant. So we made a lot of decisions about colors, flowers, stationery, and décor based on our desire to make sure our own personalities weren’t lost in the planning. For example, we chose sky blue and yellow as our colors because it was my favorite combination.

As for my dress, I wanted something timeless and elegant. My mom and I went looking at a small bridal boutique; the attendant there took my vision and immediately pulled the perfect dress off the rack. It was a cap-sleeved fit-and-flare dress, perfect for a May wedding. When I tried it on, I felt beautiful and so much like myself. 

 

Stephanie Fries, Associate Editor

In truth, I was not much of a wedding daydreamer at any point in my childhood or engagement! I was eager to be married, but empowered my sister, an experienced event planner, to make many of the wedding planning decisions.

Shopping for a wedding dress was a spontaneous activity one afternoon with a friend. I had set a budget, but had no idea what I wanted. I was intimidated by the process and grateful to follow my friend’s exuberant enthusiasm. The professionals at the dress boutique were amazing and kind; they quickly helped me build a vision for my wedding dress. 

After trying on a few dresses, I knew I wanted something feminine, simple, and modest. Most importantly, I wanted to feel confident and beautiful. With those qualities in mind, I went back to the third dress I’d tried on and called it mine! I FaceTimed my parents, sister, godmother, and future mother-in-law to include them in the final decision before I said yes. 

I walked out of the store that day with my dress, a lace-trimmed Cathedral veil, a simple bridal veil and a thin belt--all under budget. The ease of this process was absolutely an answered prayer.

 

Danielle Rother, Pinterest Manager

As a life-long Disney enthusiast, I always hoped my wedding dress would not only be the most beautiful dress I’d ever wear. I also dreamt this dress would make me feel like a princess. The dress I chose certainly did not let me down!

While we didn’t have a particular theme for our wedding, I was greatly inspired by the live-action Cinderella movie starring Lily James. Inspired by the film, I knew I wanted a ballgown-style wedding dress similar to the sparkly blue gown Cinderella wore in the movie. I wanted something elegant, timeless, romantic, and—of course—magical! 

After a long search, I finally found the perfect dress at Raffiné Bridal. It was a pure white ballgown with a multi-layered tulle skirt, designed by Stella York. It had a sweetheart neckline and was overlaid with lace at the top, which added the perfect modest touch for our Latin Mass wedding.

Planning a nuptial Mass in the Extraordinary Form? Looking for fairytale-style inspiration? See Danielle and her husband Jeff’s wedding feature here.

For a more traditional look, I chose a cathedral-length veil, made by my mother-in-law, and a crystal necklace, earrings, and a jeweled comb. I also had the seamstress (aka fairy-godmother!) replace the jeweled appliqué around the waist for a crystal belt. Just by altering that little part truly made it for the wedding dress of my dreams! For a day I literally felt like Cinderella. And though the magic has since worn away (not all the magic—I still have the shoes), I am more blessed because of that day and so thankful to Our Lady and Our Lord for making my dreams a reality.

Alli + Marshall | Atlanta Spring Cathedral Wedding

Alli and Marshall’s home parish, the Cathedral of Christ the King, became a recurring character in their love story. They met there, were engaged there, and finally exchanged wedding vows there at the altar. Alli describes it as the best day of their lives, thus far.

From the Bride: In our relationship, one thing is for sure: the Lord brought Marshall and I together in his timing. A few years before I met Marshall, I started praying more and more for my future husband. I asked St. Anthony to send me a man full of faith, devotion, and love for his family. Years went by, and I continued to pray. 

Marshall and I were active members of the Cathedral of Christ the King’s young adult group, and our paths crossed a few times. At a mutual friend’s wedding, he asked me to dance (to Aerosmith!), and we went on our first date to Mass and dinner the next weekend. After a year of dating, we got engaged in the very same church where we met. 

In May, we exchanged our wedding vows during our nuptial Mass, and married life has been full of blessings! Marshall continues to pursue my heart everyday, and we know the Lord will forever be the center of our past, present and future life together.

Our home church has been at the center of our relationship since we met, and it was important for us to get married there. Marshall and I are very traditional, and our wedding Mass reflected that. It embodied everything our relationship is based on: Jesus’ love for us and his love working through us.

Our wedding day was the best day of our lives, thus far. I experienced a lot of nerves before the ceremony, because managing all the planning wasn’t my favorite part. However, as soon as I walked down the aisle I felt calm and confident. I knew Marshall was the one the Lord had given to me, and I felt entirely present during our nuptial Mass. 

Perhaps my best advice to brides is to enjoy every moment. Enjoy the celebration of your married, sacramental love!

Photography: Once Like a Spark | Church: Cathedral of Christ the King in Atlanta, GA | Wedding Reception: The Metropolitan Club in Alpharetta, GA | Invitations: Minted (minted.com) | Bride’s Dress & Bridesmaid Dresses: Formally Yours (formallyyoursga.com) | Grooms & Groomsmen Tuxes: Mens Warehouse | Cake” Frosted Pumpkin Gourmet (frostedpumpkin.com) | Music: Nathan Angelo (nathanangelo.com) | Makeup: Formal Faces (formalfaces.com) | Coordinator: A Peachy Keen Wedding (peachykeenwedding.com)