After having to postpone the trip earlier this year, because of an
over-full schedule for the Jubilee of Mercy, Pope Francis will travel to
Milan on March 25, 2017, the Vatican announced Saturday.
“This visit of the Holy Father is a sign of affection and esteem for
the Ambrosian Church, the city of Milan and the whole of Lombardy,”
Milan’s Archbishop, Cardinal Angelo Scola, said in a statement about the
visit.
“We want to express to the Pope our gratitude because he will come to
confirm us in the faith. We live from now on waiting for the Pope in
prayer, in preparation for this great gift,” Cardinal Scola said.
The Vatican announced back on Dec. 10, 2015, that due to Pope
Francis’ busy schedule during the Jubilee of Mercy he had decided to
postpone his May 7, 2016 visit to the Archdiocese of Milan until the
following year.
A Dec. 10 communique from the Vatican announced that Cardinal Scola
received a note from the Secretariat of State saying that due to “the
intensification of the Jubilee commitments,” Pope Francis has decided
“to postpone his pastoral visits in Italy.”
“As a result, the visit to Milan already officially scheduled and
announced for May 7, 2016, will be postponed until the year 2017.”
In the coming days the Milan Bishops’ Council will begin
organizational work to set up and coordinate a special commission for
the Pope’s visit.
Cardinal Scola informally announced the Pope’s visit to Milan in an
Oct. 27 communique posted on the diocese’s website, after first making
it known during a meeting with Lebanese Maronite Patriarch Béchara
Boutros Raï earlier that morning.
Milan is the second largest city in Italy, and serves as the capital
of the country’s northern Lombardy region. The last Pope to visit Milan
was Benedict XVI in 2012, when he traveled to the diocese June 1-3 for
the 7th World Meeting of Families.
Pope Francis officially inaugurated the Jubilee Dec. 8 on the
Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception by opening the Holy Door in St.
Peter’s Basilica.
It will close Nov. 20, 2016, the Solemnity of Christ
the King.