AITA for taking a THC gummy at a Christian wedding?
A guest at a small Christian wedding caused outrage by discreetly using 5mg THC gum during the reception, but a judgmental couple escalated the incident into a moral tug-of-war. What started as a lighthearted way to relax in the open bar escalated into whispers, sarcastic comments, and threats of eviction.
The groom’s college friends, already intoxicated by alcohol, focused on the “unapproved drug” in a child-friendly setting, ignoring their own drinks. The bride shrugged it off but agreed that the snack contradicted the guests’ view of marijuana as a more potent stimulant. The controversy exposed persistent stereotypes where legal marijuana is still demonized at religious events.

‘AITA for taking a THC gummy at a Christian wedding?’
The plus-one planned a discreet low-dose edible for the reception, knowing the small Christian crowd.







![which became clear when they stated that “this was a Christian wedding & [I] should be more respectful in not bringing ‘addictive drugs’ around a celebration with kids present”. My...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762395646594-5.webp)


Ongoing gossip drove him to the car, where the bride later weighed in.



Families with children often fall apart when stepfathers quietly rewrite the rules, claiming a parental title that their grieving children have never been granted. The stepmother’s private dream of being an “extra mother” collides with the children’s lifelong loyalty to their late mother, turning a supportive role into an ultimatum to end the marriage. What complicates the story is that years of compliance mask a deeper resentment, only revealed when a graduation speech refuses to honor her as the family’s mother.
Some may argue that her desire for closeness is instinctual after giving birth to half-siblings and spending a decade together, but forcing emotional replacement ignores the trauma of early loss. The father’s consistent enforcement of protective boundaries for his children proves that love means accepting limits rather than creating bonds.
Socially, this exposes a common stepparent trap: embracing Hollywood ideals while denying the permanence of grief. “Successful stepparents build trust through consistency and respect for existing family relationships, not by competing with ghosts,” explains Patricia Papernow, Ph.D., author of Surviving and Thriving in Family Relationships. Divorce is not caused by sibling honesty, but by stepmothers’ refusal to honor a genuine relationship, not a mother-daughter relationship.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
Many users backed the judgment that offering edibles to strangers crossed a line at someone else’s event.








Some offered balanced takes, faulting both the indiscretion and the guests’ overblown hypocrisy.

![[Reddit User] − ESH. It’s ok you took 5mg thc. No worse than being drunk or buzzed. But you failed to gauge your audience and randomly offering other people gummies....](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762395786605-2.webp)

A couple lightened the mood with practical advice on reading the room without piling on.
![[Reddit User] − YTA for not being discreet about it.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762395790540-4.webp)



The plus-one’s casual gummy pop and offer ignited a firestorm of judgment at a faith-focused celebration, underscoring how weed remains taboo despite legality and alcohol’s free flow. While his low-key intent backfired due to poor discretion, the guests’ drunken sanctimony amplified the awkwardness.
Have you ever clashed over substances at a wedding—weed, booze, or otherwise? When does “reading the room” trump personal habits at someone else’s big day?
