At Christian weddings, the groom "magically" appears on the stage with no escort, and the bride is given away on the arm of her father, and their mothers and surviving grandparents sit in the audience.
At Jewish weddings, BOTH parents escort BOTH bride and groom to the marriage canopy and their surviving grandparents can stand or sit in chairs on the stage.
At Orthodox Jewish weddings, the groom is escorted by their fathers and the bride is escorted by their mothers. Orthodox Jews don't kiss at the end of the ceremony, and men and women sit and dance separately.
Hes Jewish, on the Biography channel, he had a Jewish wedding
They're just different.
In a Christian wedding the groom usually waits up front and the bride walks down the aisle. In Jewish weddings the whole wedding party including the Rabbi walks down the aisle at some point during the procession. Christian vowsare recited by the bride and groom, in Jewish weddings the vows are recorded elsehwere and then read by a guest or membe of the Clergy. There are fery few differences in the reception.
Yes, but it's best done in a joint wedding ceremony.
I wouldn't call it preferences. It would depend on the individual wedding situation itself. Some people write their own wedding vows.
There are no "signs" in a Jewish wedding.
A groom on a Jewish wedding day wears what you wear in a English wedding
The perform the wedding ceremony.
Hawaii, like Alaska, has synagogues and Jewish wedding planners.
29% of batist couples divorce last year21% of catholics17% of athiest 26% of methodist20% of Jewish
Synagogues do not have bells and there is no tradition of having bells at a Jewish wedding.
There are no comparisons - they're just different.