A fourteenth-century wooden crucifix, the oldest in St. Peter’s
Basilica, has been restored. Moved from a place of prominence to make
room for Michelangelo’s Pietà, the crucifix was later placed behind an
elevator shaft during the reign of Pope Pius XI (1922-39).
“Darkened and confined in a neglected spot and nearly unreachable, it
was forgotten by many and was in some way taken away from the devotion
of the faithful,” Bishop Vittorio Lanzani, secretary of the Fabric of
St. Peter, said recently.
Following the recitation of the Angelus on November 13, Pope Francis
told pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square that “this week the oldest wooden
crucifix of St. Peter’s basilica has been reinstated for the devotion of
the faithful; it dates from the fourteenth century.
After a laborious
work of restoration, it has been returned to its former splendor and
will be hung in the chapel of the Blessed Sacrament, to recall the
Jubilee of Mercy.”