An estimated 70 thousand young boys and girls are descending on St
Peter’s Square this weekend for the first in a series of ‘great events’
with the Holy Father organized for the Year of Faith by the Pontifical
Council for Promoting the New Evangelization.
On Saturday and
Sunday those young boys and girls who have been confirmed in their faith
or are about to be confirmed will gather in St Peter’s from all over
the world together with Pope Francis, while next weekend it will be the
turn of confraternities.
In
a press briefing earlier this week, Council President, Archbishop Rhino
Fisichella explained that the common denominator of the events, which
will take place in Rome with the Holy Father, will be “of highlighting
pilgrimage to the tomb of Peter. That is why, the day before, the
participants will take part in a symbolic procession from the obelisk in
St. Peter's Square to the tomb of the Apostle where they will pray the
Creed. Along the way there will be a brief catechesis to recall the
significance of the places that we find ourselves at and their historic
meaning for the faith.”
The first event will take place this
27-28 April and will be dedicated to all those who have received or who
will receive the Sacrament of Confirmation this year. “Already more than
70,000 youth, accompanied by their catechists and priests, have signed
up. This presence shows the enthusiasm with which they have joined in
the initiative and the great turn-out that we should expect.”
For
the first time, Pope Francis will confer the Sacrament of Confirmation
on 44 youth from around the world, symbolically representing the entire
Church. “They are youth,” the archbishop said, “ who show the face of
the Church there where people are living and suffering, to give all hope
and certainty for the future.” But there will not just be youth in
attendance since there is no uniformity on the age at which to receive
the Sacrament and the ages of the confirmands who are coming stretches
from 11 to 55.
The second important event, which over 50,000
persons have already signed up for, will take place from 3 to 5 May and
will be dedicated to popular piety. The Confraternities, particularly
from the countries where the tradition is strongest, will give witness
to the different local traditions that have resulted from a religiosity
that has been expressed through the centuries with initiatives and works
of art that have lasted to this day. The event's culminating moment
will be Mass celebrated by the Pope on Sunday at 10:00am in St. Peter's
Square.
It will be “a moment of faith,” the prelate concluded,
“that finds, in the simplicity of the expressions of popular piety, its
most deep-rooted core in our people who live these signs uninterruptedly
as a reminder of the faith of previous generations and as a tradition
that should be witnessed to with courage and enthusiasm.”