The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Kirk’s bridal gloom

Kirk backs stained-glass ceremonies as more couples marry elsewhere

- By Janet Boyle JBOYLE@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Desperate ministers seek out couples at wedding fairs

It used to be most brides’ dream to walk down the aisle of a church to exchange vows at the altar.

Sunlight peeping through stained glass windows as couples pledged their lifelong love was, for a long time, how weddings were meant to be.

That, however, is all changing and the romance of tying the knot in a church seems to be fading fast for many couples.

Figures recently published by the Registrar General for Scotland show that the number of weddings conducted by humanist celebrants have now exceeded those conducted by Church of Scotland ministers.

Now, desperate to keep church weddings on the agenda, a former Church of Scotland Moderator has called for ministers to set up shop at wedding fairs to entice couples.

The Very Rev Dr John Chalmers, former Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and an honorary chaplain to the Queen has put out a call to Kirk clergy to set up shop beside Humanists at marriage exhibition­s.

The honorary chaplain to the Queen feels they should mingle with Humanists, wedding gown makers, cake creators and hotels to big-up Kirk weddings.

Dr Chalmers said: “Almost 40 years ago, as a young minister in the west of Scotland, I could not have imagined such a sea change in society.

“We conducted weddings week in and week out. It was considered an expectatio­n to attend the reception and act as the master of ceremonies at the top-table.

“To refuse the invitation was considered an insult,” writes Dr Chalmers in next month’s Life And Work, the house magazine of the Kirk.

“Ministers today are taking stalls at wedding fairs in order to offer couples, who may be thinking of getting married, an invitation to include God in the most special event of their lives – 40 years ago I could not have imagined having to go to a wedding fair to encourage people to get married in church.”

Last year Rev Mary Ann Rennie and Rev Monika Redman presided over an informatio­n stand at the Glen Wedding show in Dunfermlin­e.

Their mantra was convincing couples that they should marry in a “safe, sacred place.”

Mrs Rennie said the Church was almost doing itself a disservice by not attending wedding fairs.

“We expect people just to come to us but the reality is that is not Christian faith,” she said.

“It is about going to where the public is and a recognitio­n there are people already going to wedding fairs who offer a different understand­ing of marriage.

“Jesus did not hide in the synagogue, he was out there talking to people and for me that is what it is all about at the deepest level.”

But swimming against the tide of weddings in castles, country houses, beaches and even on mountain tops is no mean feat for the Kirk.

The explosion of Humanist celebrants offering a myriad of personalis­ed ceremonies has wooed away thousands of Scots couples.

Humanist celebrant Maggie Kinloch, 63, believes Humanist wedding ceremonies or civil partnershi­ps are personal and unique to couples.

She is professor emerita of the Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland, having served as deputy principal until August 2016.

She said: “Couples ask me to conduct their weddings because they say they are not particular­ly religious and need a ceremony which is personal to them and tells their own love story.

“Some have been brought up in a faith but no longer have those beliefs.”

Meanwhile, the UK’s first same-sex church wedding took place in Edinburgh two weeks ago.

Peter Matthews and Alistair Dinnie married at St John’s Church Scottish Episcopal Church in the city.

It happened after the SEC overturned the Anglican canon law rule of marriage only between men and women.

There has been a sea change in society

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 ??  ?? The Rev Mary Ann Rennie drums up business at a wedding fair
The Rev Mary Ann Rennie drums up business at a wedding fair

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