Perhaps we can deduce the day of our wedding...SOS indicates a SPRING wedding so it has to be after the spring equinoxJohn 2 indicates a 3rd day wedding which seems to have two meanings "A Tuesday and at the end of the Church Age i.e. the third day"John 2 also indicates it's not many days before the Passover. . .Allot of Jewish weddings are usually on Tuesday's (the third day) the wedding in Cana was on a Tuesday not many days before the Passover or so John makes it seem (the wedding of cana I believe is a type and shadow of the wedding of Christ), I found this at the following link http://www.faqs.org/faqs/judaism/FAQ/04-Observance/section-64.htmlSelecting the Date and Place of a Jewish wedding
Before the wedding, the couple selects a rabbi and meets with
the rabbi to set a date and place. The rabbi instructs and
counsels the couple as they prepare for the day.
Jewish marriages do not take place on Shabbat, festivals or the
High Holy Days. This is because "one does not mix one occasion
of rejoicing with another." This keeps the celebration of the
holyday separate from the celebration of the wedding (such
separation is important: consider the dilemma of Christian
children who are born on Christmas: Whose birthday is being
celebrated?) However, weddings may be held on Chanukah and
Purim. Wedding are not traditionally held on days of public
mourning as the mood of such days would diminish the joy of the
wedding. This includes Tisha B'Av, the fast of Gedaliah, the
tenth of Tevet, the fast of Esther, the seventeenth of
Tammuz, neither the period between Pesach and Shavuot, and the three
weeks from the seventeenth of Tammuz until Tisha B'Av. The one
exception Lag B'Omer, the thirty-third day in the Counting of
the Omer, which is a popular wedding date in Israel. This is an
especially popular time to get married in Israel.Tuesday is considered a "good day" to have a wedding, because in the account
of Creation (Genesis, chapter 1), we read ki tov ("it is good")
twice on the third day.The Jewish WeddingWhen the wedding chamber was ready the bridegroom could collect his bride. He could do this at any time so the bride would make special arrangements. It was the custom for a bride to keep a lamp, her veil and her other things beside her bed. Her bridesmaids were also waiting and had to have oil ready for their lamps.
When the groom and his friends got close to the bride's house they would give a shout and blow a shofar to let her know to be ready.
When the wedding party arrived at father's house the newly weds went into the wedding chamber for a seven day honeymoon and the groom's best friend stood outside waiting for the groom to tell him that the marriage had been consummated. The proof of this was the bed-sheet bearing the blood shed by the bride as a result of her first sexual intercourse. This is notable for two reasons. It speaks of purity before marriage, but it also shows a blood covenant (the most solemn and binding kind) such as God's covenant with his people.
Then all the friends really started celebrating for the seven days that the couple were honeymooning. When the couple emerged there would be much congratulation and the Marriage Supper could begin.
This year, a good day for a early spring Jewish wedding not many days before Passover is:Nisan 8, 5767, March 27, 2007 a Tuesday 7 days before Erev Pesach (the marriage supper?, the Lord's supper)