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Wedding CeremonyWesleyanFill-in Template~10 minClaude Opus 4.6

Two Hearts, One Journey: Marriage as a Means of Grace

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

Marriage as a means of grace, transforming love that sanctifies, and the Wesleyan vision of two hearts growing in holiness together

Arminian / Wesleyan

Grace, holiness, and personal transformation

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[SHARED_VALUE] e.g., their love of serving others, commitment to family[WEDDING_VERSE] e.g., Ruth 1:16, Song of Solomon 8:7
Tradition vocabulary:prevenient gracesanctifying gracemeans of graceperfect lovesocial holinessheart strangely warmedclass meeting

The Grace That Led You Here

John Wesley spoke of prevenient grace — the grace that goes before. Before you chose God, God was already choosing you. And before [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME] chose each other, God was already at work, drawing two lives toward the same destination. [HOW_THEY_MET] — and in that moment, whether you knew it or not, prevenient grace was operating. The same God who pursues every soul with relentless love was orchestrating the meeting of two souls who would build a life together. Genesis says, "It is not good for the man to be alone." And so God created partnership — not as a luxury but as a necessity, not as a convenience but as a gift of grace. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], your marriage is a grace. Receive it as such. Steward it as such. And let gratitude — not obligation — be the foundation of everything you build.
Genesis 2:18Titus 2:11-12

Wesley's Marriage Advice

John Wesley wrote extensively about love and relationships. His most enduring counsel was this: "It is not enough to love. You must love wisely." Wesley understood that love is both a gift and a discipline — a warmth in the heart that must be stewarded with the mind. The "heart strangely warmed" must also be a heart wisely committed. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], love each other warmly. And love each other wisely.

Source: John Wesley, Letters

Marriage as Sanctification

Paul's description of love in 1 Corinthians 13 reads like a sanctification checklist. Patience — the fruit of a soul being transformed. Kindness — the overflow of a heart filled with grace. Not self-seeking — the death of the ego that sanctification demands. In the Wesleyan tradition, we believe that God's grace is always working to make us more like Christ. Justifying grace saves us. Sanctifying grace transforms us. And marriage is one of the most powerful arenas of sanctification available to a human being. Nothing will reveal your selfishness faster than sharing a bathroom. Nothing will expose your pride more quickly than a spouse who knows your weaknesses. And nothing will grow your capacity for love more deeply than choosing — every single day — to put another person's well-being alongside your own. [SHARED_VALUE] — this is already sanctifying grace at work. But the journey has only begun. Wesley taught that God's goal for every believer is "perfect love" — not sinless perfection, but a heart so full of love for God and neighbor that every other impulse finds its proper place. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], your marriage is the workshop where perfect love is forged. It is holy work. It is hard work. And it is the most beautiful work you will ever do.
1 Corinthians 13:4-71 Thessalonians 5:23-24

No Solitary Marriage

Wesley said there is "no holiness but social holiness." Your marriage is not a private affair. It is a community event. It is witnessed by this congregation, supported by this church family, and accountable to this body of believers. "Love never fails" — and one of the reasons it doesn't fail is because love is practiced in community. You will need people around you. You will need the couple who has been married thirty years to tell you, "This season passes." You will need the small group that prays for you when you cannot pray for yourselves. You will need the pastor who reminds you of your vows when you have forgotten why you made them. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], don't build a private marriage. Build a connected marriage. Let the means of grace sustain you — worship, prayer, Scripture, the sacraments, Christian community. And let your marriage, in turn, become a means of grace to others. The best marriages are not just good for the couple. They are good for the world. The grace that led you here will carry you forward. Trust it. Lean into it. And let your two hearts grow, together, in the holiness that is the hallmark of a love that endures.
1 Corinthians 13:8Hebrews 10:24-25Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

Applications

  • 1View your marriage as a means of grace. God will use your spouse to sanctify you — welcome the process.
  • 2Stay connected to your church community. A marriage without community is a flame without a fireplace.
  • 3Practice forgiveness as a spiritual discipline. In the Wesleyan tradition, grace is active — let it flow between you daily.
  • 4Pursue "perfect love" together — not perfection, but a growing fullness of love that shapes every area of your life.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Gracious God, Your prevenient grace brought [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME] to this moment. Your justifying grace made them new. Now let Your sanctifying grace transform their marriage into a place of holiness and joy.
  • May their hearts be strangely warmed by each other and by You — not just today, but on the ordinary Tuesdays, the difficult Fridays, the weary Sundays.
  • Root this marriage in community. Give them friends who pray, mentors who guide, and a church that holds them accountable.
  • And may their love grow — from grace to grace, from glory to glory — until it becomes a reflection of Your perfect love. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Notebook (2004)

In The Notebook, Noah reads to Allie every day in the nursing home — even when she doesn't remember who he is. He doesn't read because it works. He reads because love is patient. He reads because the covenant doesn't expire when the memory fades. That is sanctifying love — love that persists through every season, growing deeper even when everything else diminishes.

3 Voices

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

Classic

Marriage is a means of grace — the workshop where two hearts are sanctified by the daily practice of choosing each other.

Pastoral

The grace that brought you together is the grace that will carry you through. Trust it. Lean into it.

Edgy

Nothing will expose your selfishness faster than sharing a bathroom. That's not a bug — it's the sanctification feature.

More Titles

Two Hearts, One JourneyMarriage as a Means of GraceThe Sanctifying Power of LovePerfect Love in an Imperfect MarriageHearts Strangely Warmed
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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a Wesleyan wedding sermon different?

A Wesleyan wedding sermon emphasizes marriage as a means of grace and a context for sanctification. It draws on Wesley's vision of prevenient, justifying, and sanctifying grace, and frames married love as a journey toward "perfect love" — two hearts growing in holiness together.

What does "marriage as a means of grace" mean?

In Wesleyan theology, the means of grace are the channels through which God transforms us — prayer, Scripture, communion, community. Marriage functions similarly: it is a daily context where patience, forgiveness, and sacrificial love form us into the image of Christ.

Why is community important in a Wesleyan marriage?

Wesley taught "no holiness but social holiness." A Wesleyan marriage is not a private project — it is embedded in the life of the church. Small groups, accountability partners, and the worshipping community all sustain the marriage and hold the couple to their covenant.