Wedding invitations are meant to make loved ones feel special, part of the sacred “I do” moment. But one groom on Reddit learned the hard way that sometimes, trying to “spare” friends can do the opposite.
Planning a Catholic wedding with a full Mass, he assumed his atheist pals wouldn’t want to sit through an hour of scripture and ritual. His fix? Invite them straight to the reception instead.
What he saw as kindness turned into what they saw as exclusion. Cue confusion, awkward conversations, and a few blunt Reddit verdicts. Want the juicy details? Let’s step into the church aisle of this drama.
A man preparing for his Catholic wedding explained that the ceremony would be long, about 90 minutes including Mass







OP later edited the post




This story is less about religion and more about assumptions in friendships. According to Dr. Susan Heitler, a psychologist specializing in relationships, “When you make assumptions about what others want without asking, you rob them of their agency and risk undermining trust.”
Religious ceremonies can be lengthy or unfamiliar, but they also carry profound emotional meaning for the couple. Excluding friends, even out of “consideration”, signals that their presence isn’t valued in that space.
A 2021 Pew Research Center survey found that 30% of Americans identify as religiously unaffiliated, yet many still attend religious weddings and rites for cultural or relational reasons. The key is choice, not assumption.
Etiquette expert Lizzie Post (Emily Post Institute) highlights that invitations are about inclusion: “Even if you believe an event may not be to someone’s taste, it’s their right to decline, not your right to exclude.” For the groom, this means he unintentionally shifted from protecting his friends’ comfort to limiting their opportunity to share in his milestone.
Neutral advice? When planning a wedding, invite everyone you truly want there for both parts. If someone finds the religious section dull, they’ll quietly endure or politely step out. Friendships thrive when people feel trusted to make their own calls, not when decisions are made for them.
In this case, the groom’s Catholic Mass wasn’t just about faith, it was about publicly uniting with his partner. His friends didn’t want to miss that. By trying to “shield” them, he nearly pushed them away from the very heart of his celebration.
See what others had to share with OP:
These users voted OP was wrong, saying the assumption belittled friends, and urging asking them first


















However, this duo leaned no one was wrong

In the end, the groom realized his mistake and invited his friends to the full ceremony, thankfully before lasting damage was done. His story is a reminder that sometimes, trying to “save” people from discomfort can look like pushing them away. Friends show up for the vows, not just the cake and dancing.
So what do you think? Was he truly considerate but clumsy, or did he cross a line by deciding for others? Would you sit through a long religious wedding just for a friend? Share your thoughts below.








