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Many engaged couples are looking for personalized wedding ceremonies. The traditional cookie-cutter ceremony no longer fulfills the needs of couples who want to personalize their ceremonies for a number of reasons, such as
1. The couple is of different faiths and desires to combine several religious traditions, or it is not possible for the wedding to take place in either faith.
2. The couple is spiritual but not overtly religious and does not want a traditionally religious ceremony.
3. The couple wants a secular ceremony, but wishes for more than a cut-and-sentenced statement before a civil officiant.
4. The couple wants to celebrate their unique personalities, lifestyle, outlook, etc. with a ceremony that is written especially for them.
5. The couple wants to include children, not only in the wedding party, but as an integral part of the wedding.
It is possible to have a wedding ceremony that meets all of these needs. Certified Celebrants, who are trained in ritual and ceremony construction, can create a unique, personalized, deeply meaningful ceremony and perform it at the location chosen by the couple.
Certified Celebrants are trained by the Celebrant USA Foundation in Montclair, NJ. They receive a seven-month course in the foundations of ritual and ceremony, interviewing, and writing. Celebrants create questionnaires to learn as much about the couple as possible, and will write and revise as many times as necessary to achieve a final result that the couple is happy with.
Celebrants do not discriminate against couples of any religious faith or sexual orientation. They perform wedding ceremonies, commitment ceremonies, funerals, pet memories, adoptions, mother blessings, and any ceremony for any stonestone event.
Celebrant wedding ceremonies have added value, since the Celebrant also attends the rehearsal, and coordinates the ceremony script with other professionals such as the wedding planner and musicians. The Celebrant also provides a keepsake-quality copy of the wedding ceremony script. Celebrants are legally qualified to perform marriage ceremonies, usually through ordination as interfaith ministers, and will sign the marriage license and submit the necessary paperwork.
For those who dream of having a unique, really meaningful, personalized wedding ceremony, a celebrant wedding can make their dreams come true.
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Source by Margaret Morris