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Wedding CeremonyFill-in Template~10 minClaude Opus 4.6

Love That Endures: A Covenant Bigger Than a Feeling

1 Corinthians 13:4-8Genesis 2:18-24

Covenant love, mutual commitment, the sacred bond of marriage

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[BRIDE_NAME] e.g., Sarah, Emily[GROOM_NAME] e.g., Michael, David[HOW_THEY_MET] e.g., at a church potluck, through mutual friends in college[SHARED_VALUE] e.g., their love of serving others, their commitment to family[WEDDING_VERSE] e.g., Ruth 1:16, Song of Solomon 8:7 — or leave as the template's default

It Is Not Good to Be Alone

We are standing on holy ground today. Not because the decorations are beautiful — though they are. Not because the music moved us — though it did. We are on holy ground because we are witnessing a covenant, and covenants are where heaven touches earth. In the opening chapters of Genesis, God creates everything and calls it good. Light — good. Land — good. Animals — good. But then God says something different. He looks at the man alone and says, "It is not good." The only time in all of creation that God identifies something as not good is when a human being has no partner to walk beside. God designed us for companionship. Love is not an accessory to life. It is the architecture. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], when you found each other — [HOW_THEY_MET] — something ancient was being fulfilled. Not just a romantic feeling, but a design. God looked at each of you and said what He said at the beginning: "It is not good for this one to be alone." And then He brought you together. Today we celebrate what God has been orchestrating all along.
Genesis 2:18Genesis 2:22-24

What Love Actually Is

Paul's description of love in 1 Corinthians 13 is the most requested wedding reading in history. And it should make every couple nervous. Because Paul does not describe a feeling. He describes a discipline. Love is patient. That means there will be moments when patience is required — when [GROOM_NAME] leaves the dishes in the sink again, when [BRIDE_NAME] is running late again, when one of you is going through a season that makes you hard to live with. Patience is not gritting your teeth. Patience is choosing to see the person you love behind the behavior that frustrates you. Love is kind. Not just when kindness is easy, but when you are tired, when you disagree, when you have been wounded. Kindness is the daily decision to treat each other as the most important person in the room — because after today, you are. Love does not keep a record of wrongs. This may be the most important line in the whole passage. Marriage is not a courtroom. You are not each other's prosecutors. The happiest couples are not the ones who never hurt each other. They are the ones who have learned to forgive before the wound becomes a wall. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], the love you feel today is real and beautiful. But feelings ebb and flow. What you are building today is something stronger than a feeling — it is a covenant. A covenant says: I choose you not only when I feel like it, but especially when I don't. I choose you on the ordinary Tuesdays, not just the extraordinary Saturdays. That is [SHARED_VALUE] made visible. That is love that endures.
1 Corinthians 13:4-7

The Ordinary Tuesday

A couple married sixty years was asked the secret to their longevity. The husband said, 'We never fell in love at the same time. When she was falling out, I was holding on. When I was falling out, she was holding on. We took turns.' That is what covenant love looks like — not two people who always feel the same thing at the same time, but two people who have decided that the commitment is bigger than any single feeling.

Source: Pastoral illustration

Love Never Fails

Paul ends with three words that carry the weight of eternity: "Love never fails." Not "love never hurts." Not "love never struggles." Love never fails. It is the one thing that outlasts everything else. Prophecies will cease. Knowledge will pass away. Tongues will be silenced. But love — patient, kind, stubborn, forgiving, covenant love — love remains. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], what you are doing today is not fragile. It is not tentative. You are joining your lives in the same kind of covenant that God makes with His people — the kind where He says, "I will never leave you or forsake you." You are making a promise that is meant to be the most secure place either of you will ever stand. There will be seasons of plenty and seasons of want. There will be laughter that echoes through your home and tears that fall in the quiet. There will be moments of breathtaking joy and moments of mundane routine. And in all of it — in the extraordinary and the ordinary — the covenant you make today will hold, because it is anchored not in your strength alone but in the God who brought you together and who walks with you from this day forward. So love each other fiercely. Forgive each other quickly. Pray for each other daily. And on the days when love feels like hard work, remember: the hard work is the love. It is not a sign of failure. It is the proof that you are building something that will last. Love never fails. And neither will the God who gave it to you.
1 Corinthians 13:81 Corinthians 13:13

Applications

  • 1Choose each other every day — not just on the days it's easy, but especially on the days it's hard.
  • 2Pray together. Couples who pray together build a foundation that no storm can shake.
  • 3Protect your marriage by never letting a disagreement last longer than a day. Forgive before the sun sets.
  • 4Remember the covenant: you are not two people trying to stay in love. You are two people who have decided to build a love that lasts.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, bless this marriage. Make it a refuge for both [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME] — a place of safety, laughter, honesty, and grace.
  • Give them patience for the hard days, gratitude for the good days, and the wisdom to know that both are part of the journey You have designed.
  • May their home be filled with Your presence. May their love be a testimony to everyone who witnesses it that covenant love is real and worth building.
  • We ask Your blessing on this union, knowing that what You have joined together, no trial can separate. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

When Harry Met Sally (1989)

At the end of "When Harry Met Sally," Harry races through the streets of New York on New Year's Eve to tell Sally he loves her. But the most important line in his speech is not "I love you." It's this: "I love that you get cold when it's 71 degrees out. I love that it takes you an hour and a half to order a sandwich." He is saying: I don't just love the grand version of you. I love the Tuesday-morning version. I love the quirks and the habits and the small things that make you, you. That is what wedding love grows into — not the fireworks, but the dailiness. The fireworks are easy. The dailiness is the real romance.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Marriage is the one covenant where two imperfect people choose, every single day, to reflect the perfect love of God.

Pastoral

The strongest marriages are not built on never falling — they are built on always reaching for each other when they do.

Edgy

Feelings are the spark. Covenant is the fire. Stop waiting to feel like loving and start deciding to.

More Titles

Two Become One: The Sacred Architecture of MarriageNot Good Alone: Why God Invented MarriageThe Covenant of Ordinary TuesdaysPatience, Kindness, and Leaving the Dishes in the SinkLove That Outlasts Everything
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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a wedding sermon be?

Most wedding sermons are 8-12 minutes. The ceremony itself (vows, rings, readings, music) is the main event. This template targets 10 minutes — long enough to be meaningful, short enough to keep the focus on the couple.

Can I customize this for a specific couple?

Absolutely. This template includes placeholders for the bride and groom's names, how they met, a shared value, and their chosen wedding verse. Replace the bracketed text with their specific details.

What are the best Bible verses for a wedding?

1 Corinthians 13 is the most popular. Other favorites include Genesis 2:18-24, Ruth 1:16-17, Ecclesiastes 4:9-12, Song of Solomon 8:6-7, Colossians 3:14, and Ephesians 5:25-33.

This Sermon in Your Tradition

A wedding ceremony sermon sounds different depending on your theological tradition. See all 17 versions.