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First Name:
Rev. Randall
Last Name:
Ordination Date:
February 16 1999
State:
California
Personal Beliefs:
Marriage is a commitment to life, the best that two people can find and bring out in each other. The Ventura County Wedding Minister offers opportunities for sharing and growth that no other relationship can equal. It is a physical and an emotional joining that is promised for a lifetime.

When two people pledge their love and care for each other in marriage, they create a spirit unique unto themselves which binds them closer than any spoken or written words. Marriage is a promise, a potential made in the hearts of two people who love each other and takes a lifetime to fulfil.

Finding the right person to marry you is an important decision – after all, they will have a huge influence on the tone of the ceremony. You'll want to make sure that you find someone who is willing to perform the kind of ceremony you are envisioning, or who has a style and belief system similar to your own. And of course, if you want to make it legal, you'll need to make sure that they are legally able to marry you in your state.

The first most basic thing you and your intended bride or groom must do is decide if you want a religious or secular ceremony. This highly personal decision will have great impact for who will marry you.

"Perfect Ceremonies are Created by the Best Wedding Ministers"
When it's time to buy a house, choose a car or trust someone to paint your house you want and expect nothing but the best! It is no different when choosing a Minister to officiate your Wedding! The perfect wedding minister knows a thing or two about love, weddings, and creating a memorable ceremony.

Key things to look for are a fresh and vibrant person who is a breath of fresh air!

Tired of stale, stuffy, old traditional Ministers who have everyone falling asleep at the reading of 1 Corinthians 13? The Ventura County Wedding Minister is too! Do you feel like the weddings you attend are identical to all the others but simply with a different Bride and Groom? Find someone who is recognized as a worldwide Professional Speaker or as an Author, Love Coach or Poet with several published books and consistently writes about love and relationships. This can add suggestions to create the most memorable of ceremonies.

The first and most important thing to keep in mind is that the wedding should not be treated as something which exists only for one of you — both people must be happy (or at least reasonably content) with the arrangements. You'll only get married once to each other and you can't really go back to "fix" things later, so you want to get it "right" now. If either party is upset with the arrangements, there is a good chance that resentment will fester and cause magnified problems sooner or later.

The second thing to consider is that if religion is becoming a very divisive factor in the wedding itself, matters might get much worse later. On the other hand, some people only make religion important during certain special occasions (like weddings or holidays) while ignoring it the rest of the time. If that is the case here, then the disagreement over the wedding isn't a foreshadowing of future arguments, and that's something to be happy about.

So what should the two of you do? You'll have to compromise — it isn't likely that you'll be able to have a completely religious or a completely irreligious wedding; instead, you'll have to find some happy medium where both of you feel comfortable but neither of you feels like you have been cheated.

The first thing to work on is what the two of you really want. Does the one person want a religious ceremony because they are trying to please their family but otherwise doesn't care? If so, then you will need to figure out what you have to do to make the religious family happy, but you will probably be able to have a much less religious wedding than would otherwise be necessary. Remember, the wedding is for you first and your families second. Rituals and ceremonies should be there because they have meaning for you.

Does the one person want a religious ceremony simply because they had always assumed that that is the sort of wedding one should have? It is difficult to overcome such assumptions, but this may be a good time to take a serious look at a whole host of religious beliefs which have long been assumed, but which perhaps deserve to be discarded. Once again, a much less religious ceremony may be possible in this situation.

A more difficult problem arises when one person genuinely believes that only religious weddings are proper or that certain religious rituals are necessary for a wedding to be valid in God's eyes. When a person wants a religious wedding out of religious conviction rather than habit or custom, then compromise becomes much more difficult — but no less important.

One means of avoiding arguments over trying to reach a compromise is to avoid being negative — instead of focusing on what you don't like, focus on what you can be happy with. The irreligious person should make suggestions of religious elements that would be acceptable. The religious person should suggest religious elements that can be readily dropped.

By focusing on the things which draw you closer together rather than the thing which divide you, there is a better chance not only of arriving at a solution, but doing so in a manner which is amicable and helps strengthen the bond between you. That is, after all, one of the points of a marriage ceremony in the first place.

www.venturacountyminister.com

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Birthday: (56 years old)
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Recent Activity
1 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Cynthia Requa are now friends.
5 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Dr. Julie Hollingsworth are now friends.
7 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Rev. Lara Jacobs are now friends.
7 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Rev. Kathy Walters are now friends.
7 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson posted a comment on Rev. Randall Gullickson's blog entry:
Can I get my ex back is a question heard many times. You are not the only one wondering if it is possible to reignite an old relationship. Since there are likely many factors that contributed to the breakup it’s difficult to say with any certain...
11 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Peggy Krastins are now friends.
12 day(s) ago
Rev. Randall Gullickson and Amanda Conneighton are now friends.