my fmil and her family are hardcore catholic im also catholic but not as much. my wedding is on april 22 which happens to fall on goodfriday and she wants me to change the date because it is a day of fast and abstinence remembering the lord passing for us. am i being unreasonable to not change my date?
Re: good friday wedding. made some people mad oops
Speaking as a Catholic I would not attend your wedding. As long as you are aware there will be hurt feelings and I would suspect many of your Catholic relatives would not feel comfortable going. You also are aware that the church will not marry you on this day? Or any day in Lent for that matter.
I hope you and fi will reconsider.
[QUOTE]my fmil and her family are hardcore catholic im also catholic but not as much. my wedding is on april 22 which happens to fall on goodfriday and she wants me to change the date because it is a day of fast and abstinence remembering the lord passing for us. am i being unreasonable to not change my date?
Posted by cierranbrandon[/QUOTE]
<div>I'm not Catholic but if my FMIL or any other immediate family felt religiously that it would be insulting to have a wedding on a certain religous day I would respect it and move the date. So in this case, you really should choose another date, something small as a date should not be something to try to stand your ground on specially if it's openly disregarding your FMIL and other people's religious beliefs. </div>
Churches are stark and free from any decoration. Music is used sparingly or not at all. Catholics not only fast, but abstain from meat, particularly on Good Friday.
If you keep your date, your guest list will be extremely small. If your future in-laws are as "hardcore" Catholic as you state, I cannot believe your fiance was unaware of this date.....or OK to retain it.
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See... the difference between your post and the post below this one is this: Your future mother in law is refusing to come because of a religious holiday. I know some people nowadays don't put much stock in religion, but, to many people, religion is extremely important. To her (and all Christians to differing degrees), Good Friday is not about celebration, but reflection. And it's your fiance's MOTHER who is having the problem. If immediate family can't make your date (due to good reason), most people (myself included!) strongly recommend changing it.
In the post below this, it's the future mother in law's friends that can't make it because they have other plans. It's not his mother, but her friends. They are a completely different level of importance in the wedding, so it is generally considered okay not to change the date.
I'm also shocked that you booked a wedding date without talking to your FILs first. We definitely ran our potential dates by both sets of parents to make sure there were not conflicts. I think you should reschedule. Going forward with a Good Friday wedding will start you off on very bad footing with your new in-laws.
Edit: by the way I wouldn't exactly call this a little "oops" mistake. This is a major one.
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You say you're Catholic too, so honestly I'm amazed you didn't realize the problem sooner. You don't have to be 'hardcore' Catholic to celebrate Good Friday. I'd be particularly shocked that any chuch is willing to marry you on this date.
I work in a Presbyterian church. We would not schedule a wedding on Good Friday, and I would absolutely not attend a wedding that day.
If it's this year, then you have some big problems ahead, and I too am curious about how/why you scheduled a wedding for the day that is considered one of the holiest days in the Christian church.
Your choice to continue to hold your wedding on that day will be considered by many to be insulting to observant Christians.
By not changing your date you are not only being unreasonable, you are being selfish and disrespectful if you are planning a joyous wedding on this day.
I think this is mud. I can't think any Catholic would scheduled a wedding on Good Friday, I just don't believe it.
[QUOTE]I think this is mud. I can't think any Catholic would scheduled a wedding on Good Friday, I just don't believe it.
Posted by skippylouwho[/QUOTE]
I agree.
There isn't a Catholic church in existance that would allow a wedding on Good Friday.
ywia
I still think this is MUD
But as far as her not being "allowed" to marry on Good Friday in the Catholic Church, she does not say in her post that she is planning on getting married in the church. Mentioning how religious her future in-laws are might indicate she is, but she doesn't actually say so, so that's not a given.