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The Blessing of the Bees

Jun 19th, 2012 | Category: Bee Science

The Rev. Mark S. Sisk, the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, blessed 15,000 honeybees at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine on Tuesday morning.Emily S. Rueb/The New York TimesThe Rev. Mark S. Sisk, the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, blessed about 15,000 bees on Tuesday morning.

On Tuesday morning, witnesses to a ceremony at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine were encouraged to wear long sleeves, long pants and socks. The subjects of this holy event were about 15,000 honeybees that live on the church’s campus in Morningside Heights.

This year’s unusually busy swarm season in New York City has attracted some unwanted attention to the hardworking insect, but Tuesday’s event provided it with some good publicity.

Moments before the Rev. Mark S. Sisk, the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, began the brief ceremony, puffs of pine smoke wafted through the air to sedate the bees.

The bishop opened his red leather Bible and recited a prayer he had written for the occasion:

As we gather to bless these bees, your own well-blest creatures, may the intensity of their self-offering lives awaken in us a reminder of the fruitfulness that such self-offering promises to yield in our own human community. May their vulnerability remind us both of our duty to them and of the vulnerability that touches all things. May the sweetness of their honey remind us of the sweetness of your love for them, for us, for all people, and of the bending infinity of Creation itself.

And with a wave of some freshly picked leaves dipped in holy water and a sign of the cross, Bishop Sisk blessed the hive that took up residence on the grounds last month.

The queen is marked with a yellow dot.  From this day forth, they shall go forward and multiply.Emily S. Rueb/The New York TimesThe queen is marked with a yellow dot.  From this day forth, they shall go forward and pollinate.

Holding forward a tray of the bees during the ritual was a beekeeper named Nicole Toutounji, who, with the assistance of the group NYCBeekeeping.org, will tend to the bees she hopes will pollinate the plants and trees in Morningside Park and the biblical garden.

“It’s the perfect exchange of the bees and the divine,” Ms. Toutounji said.