The wedding day is also the end of a year of
planning and sleepless nights full of checklists and phone calls, hoping that
something important has not been forgotten. Jesus performed his first miracle at a wedding in
the town of Cana in response to an important detail being neglected- the wine
ran short. At the request of his mother,
Jesus turned 6 pots of water into 160 gallons of fine wine.
Unfortunately, such miracles are not a regular occurrence
at most weddings. So, weddings require
courage, patience, fortitude and plenty of planning. But weddings also require faith; faith that
the weather will be good; faith that the flowers will arrive; faith that the
slide presentation at the rehearsal dinner will work; faith that everyone at
the rehearsal after-party will be at the wedding; faith that the wedding
planner really knows what she is doing and can bring all the details together
at the appointed time; faith that the minister can remember the small changes
made to the ceremony at the rehearsal.
But, beyond and higher than faith, at every wedding
there must be love. In 1 Corinthians 13,
Paul says that love never fails. In a
wedding, if love runs as the common thread through all of the details, neither
the weather, nor the flowers, nor any of the other problems that may arise will
matter much.
This past weekend, I was a witness to such love- the
love between two people that transcended all of the details and problems that
any wedding presents. And when the
ceremony was over and the couple kissed, I knew we were seeing something
eternal; a beginning and an end united by love.
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