Some Christian congregations have rules about marriage. If the marriage is done according to the rules of the religion, it is sacramental. All other marriages are non-sacramental.
church is religeous
well the difference is that a marriage is something simple and you don't have a big ''ol'' party and wedding is a bug white dress a big party. That's the difference between wedding and marriage.
"Arranged" marriages don't allow freedom of choice on who to marry, but a love marriage does.
The ideal age difference should be between 4 and 7.
You either have free choice on choosing your spouse or you don't.
Dissolving is the same as divorcing. Annulling indicates the marriage was not consummated.
Not much. Mixed marriage usually means people from different cultures hispanic and oriental for example.
All marriages between non-Catholics are recognized as valid by the Catholic Church. In case of non-Catholic baptized persons, all marriages (also civil marriages!) are recognized as sacramental marriages. In case of non-baptized people, they are recognized as valid, but not sacramental marriages. For baptized Catholics, there is a requirement of form in order to have a valid sacramental marriage. If you have married without observing these requirements or without getting a dispensation from the Church authorities, then your marriage is considered invalid. It can be recognized retroactively by the Church though, in a short ceremony which is called "sanatio in radice" (healing at the root). Ask your local Catholic pastor about it!
It's just the marriage ceremonies that are different.
Homogenous marriage are of the same tribal group while hetergeneous marrage is of difference cultural back ground.
A committed relationship could simply be an agreement between two people. Marriage is a legally binding arrangement, licensed by the state.
It's just the marriage ceremonies that are different.