Thousands attend Atlantic City Wedding of the Sea celebration

Written by Peter Sánchez 
The off-and-on raindrops earlier this week for the Wedding of the Sea celebrations throughout South Jersey, celebrating the Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary, brought momentary uncertainty, but Bishop Dennis Sullivan reminded the faithful just where true constancy lies.

A light rain falls as Bishop Sullivan and others walk on the Atlantic City beach before the bishop prepares for annual Wedding of the Sea ceremony Aug. 15. (Photo by Jim McBride)

“Mary’s (bodily) Assumption reminds us that heaven is our destiny,” he stressed to all gathered here at Boardwalk Hall on Aug. 15 for the morning Mass and subsequent blessing of the sea.
In Atlantic City on Tuesday and in Wildwood the night before, Bishop Sullivan entered a boat and set off into the Atlantic Ocean’s surf to throw a wreath into its waters, keeping alive a tradition that began in the 15th century when an Italian archbishop calmed stormy seas with a toss of his pastoral ring.
Asking for God’s help in keeping strong the bond between the city and the sea, the bishop quoted Pope Francis’ encyclical, Laudato Si’, which calls for the care of all of God’s creation.
“All that exists is a caress of God,” Bishop Sullivan said, adding that “the sea is a gift from God.”
Bishop Dennis Sullivan and Father Michael Romano ride out the surf where the bishop tossed a wreath in the water in Wildwood Aug. 14. (Photo by Mike Walsh)

The Camden prelate celebrated a vigil Mass for the Assumption at Wildwood’s Notre Dame de la Mer Parish, in addition to the Atlantic City liturgy.
The Boardwalk Hall Mass and procession to the ocean were the middle portions of a daylong Wedding of the Sea celebration in Atlantic City, which began with a blessing of the new convent for the Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal and ended with a festival in the Saint Michael Church parking lot that included music, local food vendors, and a tour of the new convent.
 

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