Father Perry Cherubini, pastor of St. Joseph Church, hopes to make the Wedding of the Sea an annual community tradition.
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Deacon Joseph Murphy of St. Joseph Catholic Church strolled across the beach Monday evening wearing a flowing, white robe and carrying a wreath of colorful flowers.
Barefooted, Murphy then hopped into a Sea Isle City Beach Patrol boat and was rowed out beyond the breakers by lifeguards Patrick Scannapieco and Danny Rogers for a ceremony that dates back to about 1000 AD during the Middle Ages.
Murphy then tossed the flowers into the ocean as part of the Wedding of the Sea, an ancient tradition rooted in the Italian city of Venice.
The ceremony on the beach was celebrated by hundreds of St. Joseph’s parishioners in honor of the Feast of the Assumption, which commemorates the belief that Mary, the Blessed Mother of Christ, was “assumed” into heaven to be reunited with her soul after her death
“I’m very close to the Blessed Mother,” Murphy said afterward of having the honor of setting the wreath adrift to symbolically bless the sea.
Father Perry Cherubini, pastor of St. Joseph Church, hopes to make the Wedding of the Sea an annual community tradition.
Father Perry Cherubini, pastor of St. Joseph Church, conducted a special Mass that also commemorated the Feast of the Assumption. The church sanctuary was filled with about 1,000 parishioners.
After Mass, a grand procession of hundreds of churchgoers walked through the streets from St. Joseph’s to the beach at 44th Street for the blessing of the ocean.
Two of the parishioners, Kathleen Logan and Patricia Lesniak, said they both planned to dip their feet into the ocean to commemorate the uplifting ceremony.
“It’s just wonderful. It makes your day,” said Logan, who lives in West Chester, Pa., and has a summer vacation home in Sea Isle.
“It makes more than your day. It makes your life,” added Lesniak, a Sea Isle resident.

Hundreds of onlookers take photos and video as the Wedding of the Sea unfolds off the 44th Street beach.
Deacon Joseph Murphy carries the bouquet of flowers across the beach.
Parishioners fill the sanctuary at St. Joseph's Church for the special Mass.