Some of you may find this interesting as this is a topic we have discussed a few times:
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/lifesty...tml.csp?page=1
From page 2:
Seems like a very odd point to make.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/lifesty...tml.csp?page=1
“The church is very aware of the issue you raise, and it has been exhaustively discussed over many years,” LDS Church spokesman Michael Otterson wrote last fall to Jean Brody, a former Mormon in Canada who is concerned about being shut out of her grandchildren’s weddings. “This is a sensitive and difficult issue, with many complexities, not all of which are always apparent.”
Jolene has joined with Brody and Michelle Spencer, another Canadian woman, in circulating a petition asking the Utah-based church to allow couples to have a civil wedding first — to which everyone would be invited — then choose when they want to go to the temple for the sealing rather than waiting a year as currently required for LDS couples in North America.
Jolene has joined with Brody and Michelle Spencer, another Canadian woman, in circulating a petition asking the Utah-based church to allow couples to have a civil wedding first — to which everyone would be invited — then choose when they want to go to the temple for the sealing rather than waiting a year as currently required for LDS couples in North America.
Part of the problem has emerged in recent years as society has moved weddings from the sacred to the secular, says Brigham Young University sociologist Marie Cornwall. Marriage was once a church-centered celebration, given that most people’s religious and secular communities were the same. Now they aren’t.
Many of today’s weddings no longer are seen as a holy event before God and witnesses, she says, but rather as a chance to bring everyone together to celebrate the newlyweds.
“Everyone now has relatives who are not religious,” she says. “So weddings have become more and more part of the market. Couples are spending huge amounts of money for celebrations to include all their friends.”
Many of today’s weddings no longer are seen as a holy event before God and witnesses, she says, but rather as a chance to bring everyone together to celebrate the newlyweds.
“Everyone now has relatives who are not religious,” she says. “So weddings have become more and more part of the market. Couples are spending huge amounts of money for celebrations to include all their friends.”
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