What is the proper statement when the father gives the bride away in marriage ceremony
The cast of Giving the Bride Away - 1919 includes: Mildred Davis Gaylord Lloyd Ernest Morrison
No, "giving the bride away" is a pagan custom, I believe it was adopted in protestant ceremonies, but it has no place in a Catholic wedding ceremony.The concept of "giving the bride away" is a throwback to the mediaeval idea that an unmarried woman is the property of her father and that the a married woman is the property of her husband. A bride may well be accompanied into the wedding service by her father, but after that, he plays no further part in the ceremony.In the ceremony in the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, the question is asked "Who gives this woman to be married to this man?" and the bride's father or another man answers "I do". This has not formed part of the Catholic ceremony since the Council of Trent in the 16th century.
If you're referring to him acting as her escort, then no he does no have to be a Catholic, but if you are talking about the 'giving away of the bride' then no need to worry because Catholics don't do this in their weddings because the Bride should be freely giving herself to the Groom.
The biological father should give the bride away. If the bride is not close to her biological father for reasons between them then she could choose her stepfather to give her away.
only if your father is dead and you dont have a step father or your parents were divorced and you dont communicate with your father anymore.
* The bride's name goes on the wedding invitations first because her father is giving her away to his future son-in-law and it's an old tradition dating back centuries when a dowry (gifts from the bride's father) would be given to the groom. The parents of the bride also pay for most of the wedding.
Please identify who is the 'he' you are referring to. Traditionally the bride's father 'gives away' the bride. Sometimes if the bride's father is unavailable, another male family member/friend of the family will fulfill this role. A new trend is for both parents to 'give away' the bride.
well, the only way to really give it away is to tell the person your giving it to your psn id and password
Try your hardest to fight it. And stay away from the person who is giving you the peer pressure.
the dad
If it is valued at under $11,000 then you dont have to. If it is more than that - either say it is valued under $11,000 or you will have to pay tax - but it is not the person that receives it that pays the tax it is the person giving it away.
The groom has a best man, but only the bride is given away.