What liturgy will be used at the Royal Wedding?

What liturgy will be used at the Royal Wedding?

It is a delight that the sacraments of the Church, such as baptism, marriage, and burial, are the same for everyone, princes and paupers alike. The liturgy, or pattern of the service, in the Church of England and in the Episcopal Church, and in churches throughout the worldwide Anglican Communion is consistent with what has been used for centuries.

So if you’re curious about the marriage ceremony, or inspired by the beauty and meaning of the prayers and promises in it, we can help.

What will Harry and Meghan’s marriage ceremony be like?

The Communications Secretary to Prince Harry indicated in an update on the royal family’s website, “We will publish the full Order of Service on the royal wedding website on Saturday morning so members of the public can follow the service at home.”  This may help you make deeper spiritual connections to what you see and hear, what is said and sung.

Here is the Order of Service PDF (20 pages). If you wish to view it on a mobile phone, CNN has the order of service in text on this web page.


It’s likely that the wedding liturgy will be from the Church of England’s 1966 Series One text Solemnization of Holy Matrimony.

The Rev. Dr. Andrew Wright, a liturgist and associate rector at Trinity Episcopal Church in Fort Worth, offers some background on this text and its relationship to the marriage liturgies used in The Episcopal Church.

photo of Andrew Wright
The Rev. Dr. Andrew Wright

How is the English Liturgy related to Episcopal church liturgy?

Since The Episcopal Church was originally part of the Church of England, becoming a distinct branch after the Revolutionary War, the patterns of worship are related as well. This can be seen in the various versions of the Book of Common Prayer that each church uses.

“The English Book of Common Prayer and our Book of Common Prayer experienced a largely parallel development,” Wright explains.

“The Episcopal Church’s 1928 book and that of the Church of England have some similar features. Both the Church of England and The Episcopal Church were part of the liturgical renewal movement, beginning in late 1800s and flourishing in the mid-20th century.”

cover of 1928 BCP
The 1928 Book of Common Prayer

How has the service changed?

“The official liturgy of the Church of England is still the 1662 Book of Common Prayer,” Wright noted. This text is often called ‘the BCP’ for short. The 1662 BCP, Wright said, retained the vow for the wife to obey the groom, and this is one of the main differences compared to later versions of the service.

“There was an attempted revision of the English BCP in 1928, which failed because Parliament refused to authorize it. The vow to obey was dropped in that text (just as it was dropped out in our own 1928 BCP, but had been in prior editions). That English 1928 text resurfaced in the 1966 Series One text Solemnization of Holy Matrimony, excluding the vow to obey. That text seems to be very commonly in use. It was subsequently picked up by the more official Alternative Services Book of 1980 and in the even more recent Common Worship (though CW has an option to put it back in if you want it).”

“In the 1928 English BCP – and in 1966 Series One – the vow to obey remained as an option but not required, as it is in Common Worship. The 1928 BCP and 1979 BCP of The Episcopal Church dropped the ‘obey’ completely.”

Recent Royal Weddings

1981 – Charles and Diana didn’t use the vow to obey and appear to have used the 1966 text
2011 – William and Kate used the 1966 text, omitting the vow to obey
2018 – It is anticipated that Harry and Meghan will follow suit