|  The Traditional Scientology(pages 70-79)
Attend!Wedding Ceremony
Uncover and be still
 You present here
 In this
 A holy place.
 For we today
 Shall marry here
 This groom and bride
 And wish them well.
Rejoice!
 You line of struggling life
 From eons gone to now
 For here again
 your track is sped
 And winged into
 A future fate
 By this
 A union of a man
 and bride
 Whose child shall pace
 A further span
 Of Destiny
 And Life.
Forbear!
 For here shall be
 No calumny
 Or whispered word against
 You, man
 Or woman thou
 For this the union
 you contract
 Does wipe away
 All sorrow
 Of the past.
 Speak out then now
 If any man
 Or girl would speak
 And say here a
 Reason why
 These two should not
 Be wed.
And silence heard
 Does speak out plain
 There's none.
So now
 My (bride's name),
 Stand steady here
 And say
 Do you today intend
 For him beside you there
 To be to him a wife?
(Answer)
And do you ken
 That (groom's name) here
 Shall have you
 For his own?
 Do you?
(Answer)
And do you understand
 as well
 That by the customs
 of our race
 You pledge to him
 and only him
 Your kiss and your caress?
 Do you?
(Answer)
Well then
 Know that Life is stark
 And often somewhat grim
 And tiredness
 And fret and pain
 And sickness do beget
 A state of mind where
 spring romance
 Is far away and dead
 And yet for valor
 and for strength
 You must abide and
 Create still
 His health, his purpose
 and repose.
 Do you?
(Answer)
And do you take
 His fortune
 At its prime and ebb
 And seek
 With him best fortune
 For us all?
 Do you?
(Answer)
Good then, (bride's name),
 I'm sure you will
 And surer yet you'll fare
 Full well and staunchly
 As a wife.
Now, (groom's name),
 listen well.
The tides of fortune
 and of life
 Are sometimes fair
 or grim
 And in this life
 the young man seeks
 For victory afar
 And often scants
 the fireside
 And turns away from
 home's sweet face
 And thinks
 His loved ones cannot fare
 At all
 Beside his side.
 And thinking thus they go.
 You know this.
Then be cautioned so
 And take thy own
 Even though they sleep
 Beneath foul straw
 And eat
 Thin bread
 And walk on pavement
 less than kind
 And keep thy wife
 and they who come
 Beside thy side.
 Keep them, (groom's name),
 by your side
 In rain or sleet
 Or summer sun
 And comfort them
 And give them care
 And share with them
 thy life.
For times are changed
 And woman's place
 Is not a hearth or home
 But striding out to victory
 Beside her husband's side.
This (groom's name),
 is a modern world
 And man
 Has changed.
But, (groom's name),
 let's think on it well
 For if stands aught in you
 Of doubt
 That you can take and keep
 And love her well this wife
 Then stay your hand
 And we shall say
 No more,
 For fatal and of
 full tight bind
 Are these the words
 I next will speak.
Shall I go on?
(Answer)
And you, (bride's name),
 listen well
 And you, (groom's name),
 answer swift.
 Prepared?
(Answer)
(Groom's name),
 do you pledge to take
 This woman for your lawful wife?
(Answer)
Do you, (groom's name),
 Make promise here
 Before us all
 To keep her well
 or ill?
 Do you?
(Answer)
And when she's older
 Do you then
 Keep her still?  Do you?
(Answer)
Now, (groom's name),
 girls need clothes
 And food and
 Tender happiness and frills
 A pan, a comb,
 perhaps a cat
 All caprice if you will
 But still
 They need them.
 Do you then
 Provide?
 Do you?
(Answer)
Hear well, sweet
 (bride's name),
 For promise binds
 Young men are free
 and may forget
 Remind him then
 That you may have
 Necessities and follies, too.
Now, (groom's name)!
 Attend!
Do you, best man,
 possess a ring?
(Groom's name),
 take it please
And, (bride's name),
Your hand will he enclasp.
We have it now.
 Repeat!
"I, (bride's name),"
(Answer)
"Do hereby take"
(Answer)
"You, (groom's name),"
(Answer)
"For my husband."
(Answer)
And, (groom's name),
 Do now repeat
 "I, (groom's name),"
(Answer)
"Do hereby take"
(Answer)
"You, (bride's name),"
(Answer)
"For my lawful wedded
 wife."
(Answer)
Put on the ring!
 Rejoice all here
 For we have wed
 Our (groom's name)
 and our (bride's name)
 And wish them well.
All here repeat!
 Are they by witness
 Man and wife?
(Answer)
Rejoice and go your many ways
 Now, (groom's name), kiss
 your bride
 And hug her well
 And all of you
 Come toast and drink
 Their health
 That it may last
 Until that day when death
 Itself,
 The severer of all ties
 Shall end
 The thing which
 we have done
 Today.
Dismiss
 |  The Double Ring(pages 88-99)
Friends:Wedding Ceremony
We are gathered here
 in the presence
 of these witnesses
 for the purpose of legally
 joining in marriage this man
 and this woman,
 (names of bride and groom).
If there be any among you
 who know of any reason
 why this should not
 be done,
 let them now speak,
 or forever remain silent.
(Pause)
All being in accord, we
 shall proceed.
(Groom's name),
 is your reality
 of the love you have
 for (bride's name) such
 as you will be
 constantly creating
 through health and sickness;
 through adversity
 as well as good fortune?
Can you confront
 and grant forgiveness
 for shortcomings
 as readily as you give praise
 for all her many
 admirable qualities?
(Answer)
And have you communicated
 your love to (bride's name)?
(Answer)
(Bride's name),
 have you acknowledged
 (groom's) love?
(Answer)
(Bride's name), is your
 reality of the love you have
 for (groom's name) such as
 you will be constantly
 creating
 through health and
 sickness;
 through adversity
 as well as good fortune?
Can you confront
 and grant forgiveness
 for shortcomings
 as readily as you give praise
 for all his many sterling
 qualities?
(Answer)
And have you
 communicated
 your love to
 (groom's name)?
(Answer)
(Groom's name),
 have you acknowledged
 (bride's) love?
(Answer)
Then may I say to you both
 that through your love
 together
 with your agreement
 upon its reality,
 and by your communication
 of these two beautiful
 truths,
 you have completed the
 ARC triangle,
 and thereby consummated
 the only true marriage,
 which is beyond the power
 of any individual
 or group of individuals
 to add to or detract from
 in the slightest manner.
However,
 the law and custom
 of our society
 requires that this union
 shall be made a matter
 of public acclaim
 and record.
 It is my honor
 to have been selected by you
 to perform the ceremony.
The acceptance of an honor
 carries with it
 an obligation
 of comparable magnitude,
 and I would be remiss
 in that responsibility
 if I failed to attempt
 a contribution,
 not to have you have
 already created,
 which no one can do,
 but to the permanency
 of its continued creation
 on your future time track.
Man has ever
 employed symbols
 to impress upon the mind,
 wise and important truths,
 that these symbols
 might prove
 an ever-present reminder
 of the necessity
 of ceaseless creation
 of our desires.
And I am certain
 that your one joint desire
 in present time
 is that the love
 you have created
 shall remain a reality
 throughout your
 future years.
Best man, have you a ring?
 (Answer)
May I have it please?
 (Receives the ring.)
Thank you.
 
     (Holding up a ring between the thumb andThese rings consistforefinger of each hand:)
 of circles,
 and the circle
 has been an emblem
 of permanency to man
 since time immemorial.
 In fact, it represents
 time and space--
 which are without ending.
I want you to look upon
 these two emblems
 and mock up
 the ARC triangle
 in the center of each.
Have you done it?
 (Answer)
Thank you.
As long as these emblems
 remain with you,
 I want you to see
 that triangle in their center
 as a reminder
 that the reality
 of their symbolism of
 permanency
 will hold true only so long
 as that triangle remains
 unbroken.
I should like to see you
 make a pact between you
 that you will never
 close your eyes in sleep
 on a broken triangle.
 Heal any breach
 with the reality of your love
 through communication.
 If you will do this,
 these emblems
 of your greatest desire
 in present time
 will remain a reality
 throughout your
 future time track.
Let us proceed.
(Groom's name)
 will you take this ring
 and with these words,
 place it upon
 (bride's name)'s finger.
"With this symbol
 of my love"
(Answer)
"I take thee,
 (bride's name),"
(Answer)
"As my true and lawful
 wedded wife"
(Answer)
"I pledge thee to keep
 this love"
(Answer)
"Ever living, ever real."
(Answer)
(Bride's name),
 will you take this ring
 and with these words,
 place it upon
 (groom's name)'s finger.
"With this symbol of my love"
(Answer)
"I take thee,
 (groom's name),"
(Answer)
"As my true and lawful
 wedded husband"
(Answer)
"I pledge thee to keep
 this love"
(Answer)
"Ever living, ever real."
(Answer)
And now,
 in the name of the
 Church of Scientology
 and by virtue of the powers
 vested in me by the state,
 I declare you
 (groom's name),
 and you, (bride's name),
 to be truly and legally,
 husband and wife.
I will ask that you seal this
 ceremony with your lips.
     (Wait for the kiss)
And I will ask these
 witnesses present
 to join me in blessing
 this ceremony
 with the postulate
 that the trust and love of
 the present
 shall become ever stronger
 with each passing year.
     (Pause)
Did you do it?
(Answer)
Thank you.
     (Be the first to congratulate
 them both, and the first to address
 the bride as Mrs.)
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