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Religious Wedding Wording for Colleague

When you're writing a religious wedding card to colleague, the tone has to do two jobs at once — fit the moment and fit the relationship. Here are 6 wording ideas that thread that needle.

Wedding card wording should celebrate the couple as a unit — their shared joy, their future, the people they are becoming together. Whether the marriage is a quiet courthouse vow or a 300-guest celebration, the words you choose become part of their first scrapbook.

6 Religious Messages for Colleague

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Praying that the Lord blesses your marriage and keeps it strong (Ecclesiastes 4:12). Congratulations.
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May God bless your marriage with love that bears, believes, hopes, and endures all things (1 Corinthians 13).
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Congratulations — praying that Christ is at the center of your home and your years together.
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May your marriage reflect God's faithful, patient love. Congratulations to you both.
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Wishing you a marriage rooted in faith, grown in grace, and rich with God's peace.
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"Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate." Congratulations on this beautiful day.

Personalizing this further

Address both partners by name when you can — it signals you see them as a couple, not as one person bringing a plus-one. Reference how you know each of them, or the moment you knew they were a match. If you're attending the wedding, mention that you'll be there to see it; if you're not, acknowledge it warmly without apology. End with a wish for the marriage, not just the day.

A religious card to colleague rarely fails when you anchor it to one specific moment between you. Skip the universal lines; reach for the one only you could write.

What to avoid

Skip jokes about the ball-and-chain, the end of freedom, or how marriage is hard work. Don't reference past relationships, don't make the card about you, and don't use the wedding card to deliver advice. If the marriage is one you have private doubts about, keep them private — the card is not the place.

Switch the tone

Switch the recipient