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  2. Civil funeral celebrant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_funeral_celebrant

    Dally Messenger III records that this first celebrant funeral was for Helen Francis (née Grieves) on 2 July 1975 at the Le Pine Funeral Parlour in Ferntree Gully, a suburb of Melbourne in the state of Victoria. Helen Francis was a young woman who had engaged Messenger as a celebrant for her wedding to Roy Francis some four weeks previously.

  3. Wedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedding

    This person may be a civil celebrant, judge, justice of the peace, or a member of the clergy. In Hindu marriages, the marriage officiant is called a pandit or Brahmin. [63] Best Man, Woman, or Person: The chief assistant to a groom at a wedding, typically a sibling, cousin, or friend of special significance in his life. Often holds the wedding ...

  4. Marriage officiant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage_officiant

    In the Catholic Church, it is the bride and groom who perform the Sacrament of Matrimony (marriage), but a marriage can only be valid if the Church has a witness at the wedding ceremony whose function is to question the couple to ensure that they have no obstacle to marriage (such as an un-annulled previous marriage or certain undisclosed facts between the couple) and that they are freely ...

  5. Celebrancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebrancy

    The wedding is the flagship ceremony of every culture. Celebrancy is a profession founded in Australia in 1973 by the then Australian attorney-general Lionel Murphy. [1] The aim of the celebrancy program was to authorise persons to officiate at secular ceremonies of substance, meaning and dignity mainly for non-church people.

  6. Celebrant (Australia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebrant_(Australia)

    Many celebrants who are currently awaiting appointment as marriage celebrants and who cannot yet perform marriage ceremonies are practising as general celebrants in the community. Authorised marriage celebrants also frequently offer general celebrant services; but since these services are extra-legal, they may also be conducted on an ad hoc ...

  7. Officiant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Officiant

    An officiant or celebrant is someone who officiates (i.e. leads) at a religious or secular service or ceremony, such as marriage (marriage officiant), burial, namegiving or baptism. [ 1 ] Religious officiants, commonly referred to as celebrants , are usually ordained by a religious denomination as members of the clergy , and charged with ...

  8. Celebrant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebrant

    Celebrant (Australia), person performing formal ceremonies of legal import in Australia; Humanist celebrant, person performing humanist celebrancy services; Celebrancy, officiation of secular ceremonies; Officiant, leader of a service or ceremony; Silverlode, fictional river in J. R. R. Tolkien's writings, see Lothlórien#Geography; Celebrants ...

  9. Humanist celebrant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_celebrant

    A humanist celebrant or humanist officiant is a person who performs humanist celebrancy services, such as non-religious weddings, funerals, child namings, coming of age ceremonies and other rituals. Some humanist celebrants are accredited by humanist organisations, such as Humanists UK , Humanist Society Scotland (HSS), The Humanist Society (US ...