Wedding gay

Destination weddings are perfect for same-sex couples. For starters, they let you leave where you can observe in peace and treasure. To heck with your hometown if it doesn’t recognize or accept gay marriage. Plus, there’s less emphasis on maintaining traditions when you take the wedding party to a new locale. Destination weddings give you greater liberty to decide what the ceremony involves and who to invite, which might be exactly what you’re looking for.

Planning a destination wedding, regardless of who the couple is, has some extra complexities compared to a hometown ceremony. Add to the list of requirements the demand for your location to also be LGBTQ-friendly, and you have even more factors to consider. That’s why we’ve compiled our best advice for how to plan a gay-friendly destination wedding. And we're sharing a few of our favorite destinations for saying “I do” and celebrating your honeymoon.

How to Plan a Same-Sex Destination Wedding

1. Go where it’s legal.

Some same-sex couples determine to host their ceremony at the destination of their dreams but act the paperwork in their hometown. Others do both at the same second in th

Host the Ultimate Celebration with These Creative Gay Wedding Ideas

You’ve made the decision to get married and now it’s hour for the joy part — planning the most fantastic gay wedding! It’s the perfect moment to honor your love for each other, celebrate marriage equality, and cast an impressive celebration for your loved ones. 

Fortunately, these homosexual wedding ideas will help jumpstart the process. Whether it’s choosing a quirky venue or creating your own wedding rituals, these ideas run the gamut from traditionally inspired to wonderfully obscure. 

14 Creative Ideas for Your Gay Wedding Celebration

Design: Ashley Ottinger

For some same-sex couples, their wedding night is an opportunity to make a big statement and celebrate all things marriage equality. For others, it’s a quiet moment of love and reflection. Whether you’re planning a bold celebration or an understated ceremony, use these wedding ideas to help you schedule the kind of event you’ve always dreamed about. 

1. Choose a Wedding Theme

Choosing a wedding theme is the first step in tying together the entire event. Whether or not you’re functional with a wedding planner, come u

Tim Cantrell

Many have been asking lately, “Should a Christian attend a gay wedding?” The biblical answer is extremely nuanced and highly complex: Never, no, not under any circumstances. In the eyes of God and according to His Synonyms, any such pseudo-wedding is an abominable, blasphemous profaning of marriage and a pagan celebration of the sodomy that destroys lives, ruins society, makes a mockery of Christ, and merits everlasting punishment (Gen 1–2; 19; Lev 18; Rom 1:18–32; 1 Cor 6:9–10; 1 Tim 1:10; Eph 5:22–33). 

None can dodge this as merely some “American fundamentalist” issue. Last Sunday in our church in Johannesburg, I asked for a show of hands from those who have been invited to attend an LGBTQ-affirming wedding or event of some kind, and easily half of our congregation raised their hands—some 100+ people. As Carl Trueman said, “You may not be interested in the sexual revolution; but the sexual revolution is very interested in you.”

As our local association of churches, Sola5, declares in Core Value #5 on Marriage and Sexuality:

God created mankind male and female, and ordained marriage as a life-long unio

Planning your special night is exciting. You’re thinking about what will make it unforgettable. Who walks down the passage is a huge choice, especially when considering LGBTQ+ wedding traditions. You can pick an entrance that shows your love and style.

Maybe you dream of a beach wedding in Florida or Georgia. Or maybe a small gathering with friends and family. Your wedding should show your love and promise . Queer wedding customs can add a unique touch to your ceremony.

Recently, gay couples have changed the traditional wedding walk. They enclose bridesmen and groomsmaids and celebrate their uniqueness. Half of LGBTQ+ couples hold one partner trek first. Another third walk together but separately.

Thinking about your loved ones is important. You might want both parents to walk you down. Or a unique entrance that shows your manner and relationship.

Key Takeaways

  • You have the release to create a non-traditional wedding processional that reflects your unique relationship and style.
  • 50% of Diverse couples choose to have one companion walk down the aisle first, while 33.3% walk down the aisle separately but at the same time.
  • 83.3% of couples involve both parents in the process