Jumping the Broom: Love That Overcomes
1 Corinthians 13:4-8 • Genesis 2:18-24
The sacred bond of marriage in the Black Church tradition — covenant love, community witness, and the God who joins what the world tried to tear apart
Black Church Tradition
Liberation, prophetic worship, and communal faith
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A Love the World Could Not Destroy
The Character of Love
A Community Wedding
Applications
- 1Stand in the legacy of Black love. Your ancestors fought for the right to marry. Honor that legacy with a covenant that lasts.
- 2Let your community hold you. Don't isolate when things get hard. Call your village. They are waiting.
- 3Pray together. Worship together. The couple that worships together is a force the enemy cannot stop.
- 4Remember Song of Solomon: "Many waters cannot quench love." Whatever comes, love will survive in your home.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord God, You are the God who joins what the world tries to tear apart. You have been doing it for our people for four hundred years. Do it again today.
- Bless [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME] with the resilient, overcoming, unstoppable love that has been the hallmark of the Black Church since its birth.
- Surround this marriage with a village of prayer warriors, truth tellers, and burden bearers. Let this couple never walk alone.
- And let this marriage be a beacon — a sign to every young person watching that covenant love is real, Black love is beautiful, and God is faithful. In Jesus' name. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Jumping the Broom (2011)
The film explores how two families — with different backgrounds and values — come together for a wedding. But the broom itself tells the deeper story: enslaved Africans jumped the broom because the law denied them the dignity of legal marriage. They married anyway — on faith, on love, on defiance. Every Black wedding since is an act of inheritance, carrying the broom forward. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], you jump today on the shoulders of ancestors who believed love was worth fighting for. Prove them right.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
Many waters cannot quench love, and rivers cannot sweep it away. The waters came for our people. Love survived. It will survive in your home too.
This marriage is not a private affair. It is a community investment. Your village is here — and they are not leaving.
Our ancestors married when it was illegal to marry. They jumped the broom on faith alone. If they could build love in chains, you can build love in freedom.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the significance of "jumping the broom"?
During slavery, enslaved Africans were denied legal marriage. They married by jumping over a broom — a community-witnessed act of commitment made on faith alone. Today, many Black weddings include a broom-jumping ceremony to honor this legacy of resilient, defiant love.
Why is community so central to a Black Church wedding?
In the Black Church, marriage has always been communal because the community has a stake in the family's strength. The congregation serves as witnesses, accountability partners, prayer warriors, and support network — the "village" that sustains the couple through every season.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the wedding ceremony sermon.