Vatican declares two popes saints

Vatican declares two popes saints

Huge crowds gathered in Vatican City to see a historic ceremony where two popes – John Paul II and John XXIII – were declared saints.

A Mass co-celebrated by Pope Francis and his predecessor Benedict was watched by roughly one million pilgrims and a vast TV and radio audience. Nearly 100 foreign delegations are attending, including royal dignitaries and heads of state and government. It is the first time two popes have been canonised at the same time. Correspondents say the move is being seen as an attempt to unite conservative and reformist camps within the Roman Catholic Church.

In his sermon, Pope Francis paid tribute to the two new saints as “men of courage”.

“They were priests, bishops and popes of the 20th Century,” he said. “They lived through the tragic events of that century, but they were not overwhelmed by them. For them, God was more powerful.” Special bus, train and boat services ferried many thousands of pilgrims to Rome for the two-hour ceremony, which started at 10:00 local time (08:00 GMT). Some had bagged places to sleep overnight as close as possible to St Peter’s Square, hoping to be among the first in when it opened to the public.

Tapestry portraits of John Paul II (L) and Pope John XXIII and are seen in St Peter's Square at the Vatican April 27
Giant portraits of the two popes flanked Francis as he celebrated Mass
Faithful fill St Peter's Square during a solemn ceremony led by Pope Francis, at the Vatican, April 27
Many thousands crowded into Vatican City
Floribeth Mora arrives with her husband Edwin Arce for the canonisation of Popes John XXIII and John Paul II at St Peter's at the Vatican on April 27
Notable guests include Floribeth Mora, who claims John Paul II cured her of a serious brain condition

Giant screens were set up in nearby streets and elsewhere in the city for those unable to get into the square.

“We’ve been counting down the days. This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience,” said one pilgrim from Poland, John Paul II’s home country.

“We’re already hoarse from singing,” he told AFP. The Vatican confirmed on Saturday that 87-year-old Benedict XVI – now officially titled Pope Emeritus – would make a rare public appearance alongside his successor. Benedict XVI became the first pope to resign for 600 years when he quit for health reasons a year ago.

Papal politics The process of saint-making is usually long and very costly.

Watch Pope Francis declare John Paul II and John XXIII as new saints

Cormac Murphy-O’Connor talks about Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul II

But John Paul II, whose 26-year reign ended in 2005, has been fast-tracked to sainthood in just nine years. Many among the huge crowds that gathered as he lay dying cried out “santo subito”, which means “sainthood now”. By contrast Italian-born John XXIII, known as the Good Pope after his 1958-63 papacy, had his promotion to full sainthood decided suddenly and very recently by Pope Francis. The BBC’s David Willey in Rome says there was a political dimension to this. By canonising both John XXIII – the pope who set off the reform movement – and John Paul II – the pope who applied the brakes – Francis has skilfully deflected any possible criticism that he could be taking sides.

Courtesy: BBC News

About The Author

Leave a reply

hotel deals in kathmandu

Kathmandu Directory

Kathmandu Real Estate

Kathmandu Jobs

Instagram #kathmandu

Flickr #kathmandu