When a couple in Mississippi recently set their wedding date, they thought they were looking at dates in July of 2012. But some members of their church looked at the calendar and thought it said 1965.
Charles and Te’Andrea Wilson had been attending the First Baptist Church of Crystal Springs together and had planned to join the congregation after they were married. They reserved the church for their wedding weeks in advance and invitations were sent. Then the couple got news that no one in 2012 would have expected.
The Rev. Stan Weatherford told them that some people in the congregation objected to a black couple being married there. They were told that no black couple had ever been married by the church since its founding in 1883. The pastor said certain powerful people in the church had let him know he would be fired if he went ahead with the wedding.
The couple were married on the day they had chosen and Weatherford still married them, but the ceremony was moved down the street to another church — one with a black congregation.

Love & Hope — Episode 11:
Politicians have no right dictating the menu of your kid’s Happy Meal
With bumbling federal response, terrorist attack achieved objectives
Do we really need so much ‘stuff’? Do we own it? Or does it own us?
76-year-old George is a showman who loves making audience smile
Actions more important than words when judging what someone wants
We find meaning in responsibility, not in pursuit of empty pleasures