25 May 2018, The Tablet

Nichols celebrates the holiness of marriage



Nichols celebrates the holiness of marriage

Everyday love and holiness is God’s wish for wives and husbands in their marriages, Cardinal Vincent Nichols told more than 600 married couples gathered for the annual Mass for Matrimony, at which they are invited to renew their wedding vows.

At the beginning of his homily at the Mass, at Westminster Cathedral, the cardinal asked the couples present to think about the advice they would give a pair of newlyweds – be they the Duke and Duchess of Sussex or any other couple who had recently made their vows.

He went on to talk about Pope Francis’ call to everyday holiness, detailing how the Pope “likes to contemplate the holiness present in the patience of God’s people”, and how everyday holiness is “found in …those who, living in our midst, remind us of God’s presence”.

Cardinal Nichols emphasised that this patience and holiness should be the foundation of an individual’s relationship with others. Any advice the couples at the service would want to give the royal newlyweds Meghan and Harry would, he said, be very similar to what God wanted for them in their marriages: the gift of everyday love and holiness.

He suggested that the 640 or so couples – all celebrating milestone anniversaries, and more than half of those marriages of forty years or more – should pray for God to “renew within them that initial dedication” and be joyful that “these promises of marriage endure and give shape to our lives”. As well as renewing their marriage vows, the couples received a special blessing from the cardinal, which the children of many of the couples present witnessed.

The fact that the event coincided with the royal wedding gave the event an extra poignancy, especially given the prominent role at the Windsor nuptials of the US Episcopalian bishop Michael Curry, who gave a dramatic thirteen-minute sermon that included quotes from the French Jesuit writer Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whom he called “one of the great minds, great spirits of the twentieth century”. He said the Catholic priest, who had been “a true mystic”, had called the discovery and harnessing of fire one of the great technological discoveries of human history. Fire, he said, made cooking possible, made heating possible, made migration into colder climates possible. 

Bishop Curry also quoted Martin Luther King, who had spoken of “the power of love, the redemptive power of love”. That power should not be underestimated, or over-sentimentalised. Being loved and cared for, he said, felt right: and the reason it felt right was to do with the source – which was God himself.


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