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Westminster: Cardinal celebrates Mass for Matrimony


Image: CCN

Image: CCN

Source: Archbishops House

On Saturday 15 May, Cardinal Vincent Nichols celebrated the annual Mass in Thanksgiving for Matrimony at Westminster Cathedral. As well as being an occasion for thanksgiving, the Mass was also an opportunity for married couples to renew before God their commitment to live their marriage in holiness.

This year, more than 100 married couples in the Diocese of Westminster registered through their parishes to attend the Mass for Matrimony. 23 couples attended the Mass at Westminster Cathedral in-person, while the majority of the couples opted to join the celebration via live-stream. Those couples who celebrated in the cathedral came from 14 different parishes in the diocese, including Bayswater, Berkhamsted, Bishop's Stortford, Brook Green, Camden, Chelsea Cadogan Street, East Finchley, Hanwell, Ruislip South, Southall, Stevenage, Twickenham, Whetstone and Willesden Green.

The youngest attendee in the cathedral was just four months old. His parents shared that they had been married for ten years before being blessed with their 'miracle child'. The anniversary dates being celebrated by couples in the cathedral party ranged from five to 50. The couple marking their 5th anniversary were expecting their first child. Five of the couples were marking their 50th (golden) wedding anniversary, including one couple who were former chorister parents from the late 1980s. A recurring reflection from the couples in attendance was that renewing their vows before the Cardinal and in the company of fellow married couples was 'so powerful'.

In his homily, Cardinal Vincent spoke about how the celebration was taking place in the days between the solemnities of the Ascension and Pentecost:

'The Ascension marks the ending of the physical presence of Christ among us. Yet, it also reveals his bodily glory. It reminds us that, yes, our bodies are made of the dust of the earth, but they are destined for glory. Pentecost reminds us of the flow of the Holy Spirit who will revive and strengthen us, launching, if you like, our life in the spirit.'

'Now in our lives, as we live them, we live in body and spirit, all the time. Body and spirit are intertwined, they cannot be separated, not in our life in Christ, as I shall explain, nor in life within a marriage. They cannot be separated in our life in Christ, as I shall explain, nor in life within a marriage. A marriage is a sharing of body and spirit. A relationship of body alone is not enough. A relationship of spirit alone is not enough. Rather, marriage is that all-encompassing sharing of body and spirit, the total gift of one human being to another...'

At the end of the homily, the Cardinal invited the couples in the cathedral, as well as those couples joining the celebration from home, to renew their promises of marriage by joining hands and saying the following words:

'Blessed are you, Lord, for by your goodness I took N. as my wife/husband. Blessed are you, Lord, for in the good and the bad times of our life you have stood lovingly by our side. Help us, we pray, to remain faithful in our love for one another, so that we may be true witnesses to the covenant you have made with mankind.'

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