Pope Francis will consecrate the world to the Immaculate Heart of
Mary this Oct. 13 as part of the Marian Day celebration that will
involve the statue of Our Lady of the Rosary of Fatima.
“The Holy Father strongly desires that the Marian Day may have present,
as a special sign, one of the most significant Marian icons for
Christians throughout the world and, for that reason, we thought of the
beloved original Statue of Our Lady of Fatima,” wrote Archbishop Rino
Fisichella.
Archbishop Fisichella, who serves as president of the pontifical council
for the Promotion of the New Evangelization, made his remarks in a
letter to Bishop Antonio Marto of Leiria-Fatima.
According to the Portuguese shrine's website, the statue of Our Lady of
Fatima will leave for Rome on the morning of Oct. 12 and return on the
afternoon of Oct. 13.
The statue normally resides in the shrine’s Little
Chapel of Apparitions.
The archbishop said that “all ecclesial entities of Marian spirituality”
are invited to take part in the celebration.
Hundreds of movements and
institutions that emphasize Marian devotion are expected to attend, the
Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima says.
The two-day observance includes an Oct. 12 pilgrimage to the tomb of St.
Peter and moments of prayer and meditation. On Oct. 13, Pope Francis
will celebrate Mass in St. Peter’s Square.
Our Lady of Fatima appeared to three shepherd children in the village of
Fatima in Portugal in 1917.
She warned of violent trials in the
twentieth century if the world did not make reparation for sins.
She
urged prayer and devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
At the request of Pope Francis, Cardinal Jose Polycarp, the Patriarch of
Lisbon, consecrated the Pope’s pontificate to Our Lady of Fatima on May
13, her feast day.