Marriage, Wine, and Sleeping Beauty 1/ 07 / 04 Last weekend I had the great joy of seeing my good friend, Richard Logan, get married. He’s the first of my friends to marry, so it was almost as big of a day for me as it was for him! His bride Jen was beautiful, the Mass was beautiful, Father’s sermon was beautiful… it was a perfect day. (Congratulations Jen and Richard!) Thus inspired, I’d like to share a few thoughts with you from a marriage talk that I heard this summer, based on the wedding narrative of John 2. As everyone
was
celebrating at the marriage feast in When I was little, I looked forward to one day meeting the perfect woman, the girl who would make me unimaginably happy for the rest of my life. In her, I would find total fulfillment and earthly happiness. After all, this is what we always see in the fairy tales: the young man and woman get married and “live happily ever after.” Prince Charming alone will make Snow White happy for the rest of her life; Princess Fiona alone is enough to fill Shrek’s heart with everlasting joy. The truth is
that
such happiness is only possible if God is at the heart of a marriage.
Everlasting, infinite happiness can only be found in God. We will be
greatly disappointed if we expect this happiness through another human
being alone, even if they are a Prince Charming or a
Sleeping Beauty! True marital bliss comes from inviting God into one’s
marriage, just as the bride and groom in In and through Christ, marriage became a sacrament, a floodgate of heavenly grace. Together, hand in hand, the couple is called to grow in their love of the Lord through their love for each other. The husband is to be Christ for his wife, a source of heavenly grace for his wife, that she may draw nearer to the Lord through him. Likewise, the wife is to be Christ for her husband, a source of heavenly grace for him, so that he may become more like Christ through her. This is the true purpose of Christian marriage—to help each another become saints. So, you married
couples, is Jesus Christ the Lord of your marriage? Is he its purpose
and focus? Husbands, is your top priority to help your wife and
children to become saints? Your job and income and retirement are but
secondary worries, compared to this great responsibility. Likewise,
wives, is raising a holy family your number one priority? And you who
hope to be married one day: are you preparing yourself for that
vocation by chaste living and by becoming a saint yourself, so that one
day you may lead your family to Christ? ---------------------------
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