StarBulletin.com

California surf session is blessed experience


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POSTED: Monday, October 06, 2008

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. » He might not be able to walk on water, but when the mood strikes, Father Matthew Munoz can ride one gnarly wave all the way into the beach.

So yesterday at dawn, on the white sands of the town where the U.S. Surfing Championships were born nearly a half-century ago, Munoz and some two dozen fellow wave riders paused to thank God for all the joy the oceans have provided them.

Then, after the surfer's ceremonial blowing of a conch shell for good luck, the pastor of Orange County's St. Irenaeus Catholic Church shouted out a hearty, “;Let's surf!”;

Clutching a board with an image of the Virgin of Guadeloupe inlaid into both sides, he led his flock and others in a race toward the water.

The occasion was the Blessing of the Waves, a spiritual—but decidedly lighthearted—event organized by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange.

One of the event's organizers, Father Christian Mondor, helped kick off the proceedings by thanking God (or “;the Big Kahuna,”; as he also addressed him) for righteous waves and a killer ride for all the surfer babes and dudes assembled before him.

“;May they hang 10 on thy oceanic bounty and, if it be in accordance with thy gnarly plan, may they not wipe out,”; he concluded, reading from a tongue-in-cheek poem written by Los Angeles Times reporter Dana Parsons.

Meanwhile, the audience broke out laughing when Munoz began his blessing by announcing, “;I'm not Jesus. I need a surfboard to walk on water.”;

But there were also moments of seriousness, as when Mondor, the 83-year-old vicar emeritus of St. Simon and Jude Parish, added his own prayer: “;Praise be you, creator God, for the gift of sea and sand and endless surf that brings us joy of body and soul. Help us always care for this great ocean so that we and generations to come may enjoy its beauty and power and majesty.”;

He timed the amen to that prayer perfectly, allowing rock band the Wedge to segue seamlessly into a power-chord opening of the surf classic “;Wipeout.”;

Then it was off to the water.

“;I got one! A great wave! Rode it all the way to the beach!”; 54-year-old surfer Gary Sahagen shouted as he emerged from the ocean dripping wet and looking delighted.

The blessing, Sahagen said, reminded him of the old days around Huntington Beach, when legendary surfer Duke Kahanamoku kicked off the U.S. Surfing Championships with a prayer.

Kahanamoku is almost a saint himself in these parts, credited with bringing surfing in the 1920s to a beachfront town that now calls itself Surf City.

His annual prayers, meanwhile, have come to be carried out informally over the years by riders who hit the waves before heading off to church on Sunday. Mondor said that is what helped inspire yesterday's church-sponsored blessing.

“;I've talked to a lot of surfers who have said, 'Yeah, that's my best prayer time,'”; the longboard rider said of Sunday morning prayer circles on the beach.

As a result, the church decided to open up the blessing to everybody, and representatives of the Jewish, Islamic and Mormon faiths were also on hand to offer prayers. It is planned to be an annual event.

“;The ocean is such an important part of our lives. We're all one planet, one world, we're one people, so I think this is a wonderful idea,”; said Fawad Yacoob, of the Islamic Society of Orange County.