Cathedral celebrates rare wedding as rebuilder says ‘I do’ beneath restored vaults
In a moment that echoed eight centuries of Western civilization, Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris opened its great doors for its first wedding in three decades — and this time, it was for a carpenter, as New York Post reports.
On Oct. 25, 2025, Martin Lorentz, a 29-year-old artisan who spent years helping resurrect the fire-ravaged cathedral, married his fiancée, Jade, beneath the freshly restored Gothic vaults — a ceremony symbolizing both craftsmanship and continuity.
The wedding marked not just a union of love, but the quiet triumph of tradition over disaster, of sacred spaces reborn after a staggering cultural loss in 2019.
Carpenter Ties Knot in Monument He Helped Save
Notre-Dame, an 860-year-old jewel of Christendom, suffered a searing blow on April 15, 2019, when flames tore through its spire and roof. The fire left the cathedral gutted but not defeated; its bones withstood the blaze, and its mission endured.
Among the legion tasked with its rebirth was Lorentz, who poured three years of his life into rebuilding the medieval timber structure using 13th century-style tools and meticulous technique. Working by candlelight, oak and chisel, Lorentz helped restore something bigger than bricks and beams — he helped restore faith in what isn’t disposable.
Only once fully reopened in late 2024 did Notre-Dame rise again — not as a tourist trap or museum set piece, but as a living house of worship. And it was no accident that its first wedding was a salute to blue-collar devotion and quiet mastery.
A Rare Sacrament, Reserved for the Worthy
The cathedral, while iconic and open to millions, isn’t a parish church. Weddings there are unicorns — symbolic exceptions that require the blessing of the archbishop himself, and only a handful have been granted across centuries of history.
But Archbishop Laurent Ulrich made an exception for Lorentz, honoring not celebrity or politics, but sacrifice. This wasn’t a showcase wedding for elites — it was for the workers who laid the beams and raised the spire, brick by brick and prayer by prayer.
The ceremony was conducted by Monsignor Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, rector of the cathedral, who greeted the couple with warmth: “Martin, you know it well — you know it well, you know it from above.” That’s sentiment you can’t forge in any diversity training seminar.
Celebration Honors Legacy, Not Ideology
The wedding was witnessed by 500 guests, most of whom were artisans, engineers and tradesmen who helped restore the landmark. It was a living handshake between generations of skilled labor that still remember what it is to build, not just brand.
After the vows, dozens of loyal carpenters lined up to form an honor guard, raising their axes in salute — not trendy, feel-good symbols from social media, but the actual tools of the trade that saved a cathedral from ruin. When the couple emerged, tourists applauded in spontaneous celebration.
“It’s the happiest day of my life,” Lorentz told the press, as he and Jade stood on the sacred ground he’d helped return to glory. “I want to share my love — our love — with the whole world, with everyone who needs it.”
Rebuilding Through Grit and Tradition
The backdrop to this rare event was a rebuilding effort President Emmanuel Macron called “an immense source of pride for the entire nation.” To his point, it proved that France, amid its political drifting, still knows how to turn to its roots in times of trial.
Macron got his applause at the reopening, but it was people like Lorentz who earned the standing ovation — working nights cutting oak just “as they had been 800 years ago,” he recalled. No TikTok. No ribbon-cutting fluff. Just craftsmanship and fidelity to the real thing.
This ceremony wasn’t woke, curated, or corporatized. It was blessed authenticity — a reinstated sacrament, honored for merit, with no hashtag required.
A Marriage That Honors More Than a Couple
What unfolded inside the vaults rebuilt by sweat and sawdust was more than a private ceremony. It restored an almost forgotten order — that sacred places endure when people still believe they’re worth saving.
Lorentz and Jade didn’t stage a spectacle for cameras. They stepped into tradition, and by doing so, offered a quiet rebuke to the age of superficiality and disposable meaning. It was a gentle reminder: reverence doesn’t go out of style — we just stop teaching it.
Only a few weddings have ever been approved in Notre-Dame’s centuries of history. That this one happened at all speaks more loudly than social trends ever could.





