Here is the text of the homily I shared with the families of our newest married couple: a reflection on God's gift of love and our call to live in love with each other.
Wedding homily for
Kyle Mitchell and Stacey Dorval
Dear friends: today, Kyle and
Stacey have invited you to be present in this church because today they will
speak their wedding vows to each other.
Today, the Mitchell and Dorval families will be united through the
utterance of these few words. It’s
amazing to think that spoken words can have such power, but for as long as
human beings have existed, people have professed their love for one
another. For as long as the Church has
existed, we have witnessed these exchanges and prayed for God’s blessings on
newly-married couples.
Saint Matthew reminds us today
that the one who made them in the
beginning made them male and female. For
this reason, a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife. Kyle and Stacey have already moved out of the
houses in which they grew up. They have
already moved into the house that they now call their own, but from this day
forward, there is an added layer of cement, spiritual cement to hold them
together. With little Charlie and other children that God may grant them, they
will continue to establish their little family as a living sign of God’s love
in our midst.
Kyle and Stacey, in case you
haven’t noticed, there are a number of customs and traditions that have become
associated with a wedding day, including the fact that people will give you
gifts. Most of these will be tangible,
but not all of them. God too gives you
gifts today. Among them are the promise
of his love and the gift of faith: that is, our response to God’s gift of
love. God also promises to always be by
your side as you live out the days ahead, and God is always faithful to his
promises. He will always be in your
midst, so accept this gift, for it is given in love. Set it like a seal on your heart.
The love that God shares with you, and which you have witnessed in the
person sitting next to you is as strong
as death. It is characterised by a passion that is as fierce as the grave:
it is relentless; it is constantly present to us, sometimes like a gently
flickering flame, and at other times like the flashes of a raging fire. Love, the gift of God, is so strong that
nothing we can do will stop it, and that’s a very good thing.
Today is a day of celebration
for you, and for your families. It is
also a day of celebration for our parish, because you are both part of the
family of God which gathers to pray and to support one another in this
place. Today, the entire parish prays
with you; in fact, all of God’s people, in this place and around the world pray
with you, celebrate with you, give thanks to God with you.
Thank you for the witness of
love that you share with us today. We need to see your love in this place. We need you to be witnesses of God’s love and
compassion. We need you to be living
signs of God’s generosity by the many ways that you share generously with your
friends and family and by the quiet ways that you make a point of visiting the
sick and others who are shut in. They
are no longer able to join family gatherings as easily as they once might have,
so it’s wonderful that you make a point of going out to them. Thank you for this commitment, for doing
these things, as Saint Paul tells us, not
from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humble regard for others – always considering
them as being better than yourselves … looking not to your own interests but to
the interests of others.
The love that is spoken of by
Saint Paul and that the disciples witnessed in the life of Jesus while he
walked on this earth is the same love that you profess today to one
another. Jesus shows us that love is not
as something to be coveted or exploited; it is a constant call to empty ourselves
for the sake of another and to always be concerned with bringing joy to
others. If you strive every day to live
your lives in love for one another and for others who are privileged enough to know
you, then you will be highly thought of by mortals and deeply loved by
God. May this love hold you together for
the rest of your lives. May it be made
evident to you in the faces of your children and in the faces of others who accompany
you on life’s journey. May it be strong
enough to sustain you in times of celebration and to strengthen you in times of
trial. May it always fill you with the deep knowledge of God’s closeness and of
his peace.
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