| OP, it is fine. |
| I don’t know what church you are talking about, but you can’t get married at city hall and then use a Catholic priest To re-marry you at a later event. Priests won’t go along with this even in a pandemic. |
Your presumption is incorrect. You are equating "attendance" with "excitement". Not everyone attending OP's do-over wedding will be 'excited' and not all of those missing it will be 'un-excited'. In reality, there's nothing exciting about a do-over ceremony. In fact, it's textbook, anti-climatic. Have a big celebration/reception if you like but having another ceremony is cringe inducing. Why even have the 1st wedding? |
Why are you thinking an elopement has to be in a courthouse? I know plenty of people in my family (Catholic) who have had a church wedding with only parents and a sibling or two. They can still be truly beautiful. My cousin that just did this still had the dress and fantastic photos. Best part is that they’re married. I don’t understand delaying a party for years. |
This! |
| We never said we were going to the court house. We’ve decided to just do the wedding ceremony and reception all on the same day in 2022. Case closed. Thank you for everyone’s ideas. Good luck to any other engaged couples! |
This! |
| OP bottom line is that this is your experience. Make the choices that work for you as a couple and ignore the rest. You can’t control what others opinions are and people can control to accept or decline an invitation. Congratulations to you both however you celebrate you life together! |
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OP, there are a lot of nasty posters on here.
Your plan sounds fine in times of Covid. |
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OP, no judgement here. Your plan seems perfectly rational. I would just caution you that it's very likely that a year after the actual wedding, invitees won't view it with the same excitement as they would a regular wedding. This will likely impact the number of people who attend, so think about if your plan is likely to materialize the way you expect.
Also, after already living as a married couple for a year, the event may not be as emotionally satisfying to you as you anticipate, either. Humans are forward-looking, and you may find that your head is just in a different place two years from now. You and your husband may be looking forward to starting a family or buying a house or changing jobs. Any of those things might be what supplies the excitement and anticipation in your life in October 2022, and a wedding may not seem like as big a deal. Good luck whatever you do. |
You need to get a grip - it’s a party. |
Catholic oriests are not a monolith. Lots of priests do lots of different things. I had a sibling who married at courthouse because his wife was waiting for an annulment—they married in church on their one year anniversary with their baby in arms. It was fine. |
NP. I’d be really irked if someone made me sit through a 30 minute ceremony if they were already married. (Frankly, long ceremonies suck even if they aren’t already married!). The party I don’t mind. |
But no one is making you do anything? You can easily decline an invite. |
Exactly - it's not a wedding. The expectations of a party are different than the expectations for a wedding. OP wants a wedding and is dismayed that people (including her father and brother) aren't excited about her party as she is. |