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Wedding CeremonyBaptistFill-in Template~10 minClaude Opus 4.6

A Covenant, Not a Contract: Building a Marriage on the Word of God

1 Corinthians 13:4-8Genesis 2:18-24

Marriage as a biblical institution ordained by God, covenant love modeled on Christ and the Church, and the authority of Scripture for the home

Baptist (Distinctive)

Soul liberty, believer's baptism, and local church autonomy

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[BRIDE_NAME] e.g., Sarah, Emily[GROOM_NAME] e.g., Michael, David[HOW_THEY_MET] e.g., at a church potluck, through mutual friends[SHARED_VALUE] e.g., their love of serving others, commitment to family[WEDDING_VERSE] e.g., Ruth 1:16, Song of Solomon 8:7
Tradition vocabulary:covenantbiblical authorityChrist and the Churchone fleshordained by Godthree-strand cordsacrificial love

God's Design from the Beginning

We stand today on the foundation of Scripture. Marriage was not invented by culture. It was not created by government. Marriage was ordained by God in the Garden of Eden — the very first institution, established before the church, before the state, before any human organization. "Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh." [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], what you are entering into today is not a social arrangement. It is a divine institution. God designed marriage. He defined it. And He blesses it when it is built on the foundation of His Word. [HOW_THEY_MET] — and in that moment, God was at work, because God is sovereign over the details of our lives. The world treats marriage as a contract — a negotiation between two parties who can walk away when the terms no longer suit them. But the Bible calls marriage a covenant — a sacred, binding promise witnessed by God Himself. A contract is built on distrust. A covenant is built on faith. And the covenant you make today is anchored in the faithfulness of the God who brought you together.
Genesis 2:24Malachi 2:14Matthew 19:6

Contract vs. Covenant

A contract says: "If you fail to meet the terms, I am free to leave." A covenant says: "Even if you fall short, I have bound myself to you before God, and I will stay." Every great marriage eventually faces a moment where contract-thinking would say "I'm out" and covenant-thinking says "I'm in." The difference between marriages that last and marriages that don't is not the absence of difficulty. It is the presence of covenant.

Source: Pastoral reflection on biblical covenant

Love Like Christ Loves the Church

Paul writes to the Corinthians about the character of love — patient, kind, not self-seeking, not easily angered. But in Ephesians 5, he reveals the model behind the description: "Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her." This is the standard. Not Hollywood love. Not the world's version of romance. Christ's love — sacrificial, unconditional, covenant-keeping love. Christ did not love the Church because she was perfect. He loved her into perfection. He gave Himself up for her while she was still stained and broken. That is the love [GROOM_NAME] is called to offer. And [BRIDE_NAME] is called to respect and support the man who lays down his life in this way. [SHARED_VALUE] — this is already the evidence of Christ-like love at work in your relationship. But love like this is not something you achieve once and then maintain on autopilot. It is a daily decision. Every morning you wake up and choose: Will I serve this person? Will I put their needs alongside my own? Will I lead with humility and follow with trust? The beauty of a marriage built on Christ is that you are never building alone. The Holy Spirit who indwells every believer is the third strand in the cord. "A cord of three strands is not quickly broken." [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], invite Christ into every room of your marriage — the kitchen and the bedroom, the budget meeting and the bedtime prayer — and He will sustain what He has joined.
1 Corinthians 13:4-7Ephesians 5:25Ecclesiastes 4:12

Love That Endures

"Love never fails." Paul is not saying love will never be tested. He is saying that love — real, biblical, covenant love — will never be defeated. Feelings will fluctuate. Circumstances will shift. But the love that is grounded in the Word of God and empowered by the Spirit of God will endure. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], there will be seasons when love feels effortless and seasons when love feels like climbing a mountain. There will be laughter that fills your home and silences that need to be broken with honest conversation. The question is never whether difficulty will come. The question is: What will you stand on when it does? If you stand on feelings, the ground will shift. If you stand on the Word of God, the ground holds. Jesus said, "Everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock." Build your marriage on the Rock. Read the Bible together. Pray together. Worship together. Make your home a place where the authority of Scripture is honored and the presence of Christ is welcomed. And when the storms come — and they will — your house will stand. Because what God has joined together, let no one separate.
1 Corinthians 13:8Matthew 7:24-25Matthew 19:6

Applications

  • 1Commit to daily prayer together as a couple. Even two minutes at bedtime changes the atmosphere of a marriage.
  • 2Read the Bible together. Start with Proverbs — one chapter a day for a month. Let God's wisdom shape your decisions.
  • 3Guard your covenant by never using the word "divorce" as a weapon in arguments. Take it off the table entirely.
  • 4Find a Bible-believing church and plant yourselves there. A marriage without a church home is a fire without a fireplace.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Father, we thank You for designing marriage. What You have created, no one can improve upon. Bless this union that follows Your blueprint.
  • Lord Jesus, be the center of this marriage. May [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME] love each other the way You love the Church — sacrificially, faithfully, and without condition.
  • Holy Spirit, be the third strand in this cord. Strengthen what is weak. Protect what is precious. Fill this home with Your presence.
  • What God has joined together, let no one separate. May this covenant endure until You call them home. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Fireproof (2008)

In the film Fireproof, a firefighter's marriage is falling apart until he commits to a 40-day challenge called "The Love Dare" — daily acts of unconditional love, modeled on Christ's love for the Church. The turning point comes when he realizes he cannot love his wife sacrificially in his own strength. He needs Christ. The third strand. [BRIDE_NAME] and [GROOM_NAME], the secret to a fireproof marriage is not being perfect. It is being anchored to the One who is.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

What God has joined together, let no one separate. This is not a suggestion. It is a divine decree.

Pastoral

A contract is built on distrust. A covenant is built on faith. Today you choose covenant.

Edgy

The world calls marriage a partnership. The Bible calls it a covenant. Partnerships dissolve. Covenants endure.

More Titles

A Covenant, Not a ContractBuilding a Marriage on the Word of GodLove Like Christ Loves the ChurchThe Three-Strand CordWhat God Has Joined Together
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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes an evangelical wedding sermon different?

An evangelical wedding sermon centers on the authority of Scripture, presents marriage as a divine institution (not a human invention), and models marital love on Christ's sacrificial love for the Church. It emphasizes covenant over contract and often includes a call to build the home on the foundation of God's Word.

Should a wedding sermon include the Gospel?

Many evangelical pastors weave the Gospel naturally into the wedding message — not as a heavy-handed altar call, but by showing how Christ's love for the Church is the model for marital love. This makes the Gospel relevant to the occasion without hijacking it.

How long should a wedding sermon be?

A wedding sermon should be 8-12 minutes. The ceremony includes vows, readings, music, and prayers, so the sermon should be focused and memorable. This template targets approximately 10 minutes.