May 8, 2024
Pope Francis won’t be at Way of the Cross procession in Rome but will watch from his Vatican home | CBC News

Pope Francis won’t be at Way of the Cross procession in Rome but will watch from his Vatican home | CBC News

Pope Francis, who was recently hospitalized for bronchitis, won’t go to the Colosseum for the traditional Good Friday Way of the Cross procession, but will watch it from his home at the Vatican due to unseasonably cold nighttime temperatures in Rome, the Holy See said.

Francis went ahead with an early evening prayer service at St. Peter’s Basilica to mark Good Friday, which recalls the death of Jesus by crucifixion. Wearing crimson-coloured vestments, Francis, who has a chronic knee problem, used a wheelchair to reach the central area of the basilica, where he presided over the service. 

The 86-year-old Pope was discharged from a Rome hospital on April 1 after spending three days there receiving antibiotic treatment for bronchitis. The Vatican said at the time that he would carry out the complete Holy Week schedule, including the Way of the Cross procession and mass in St. Peter’s Square on Easter Sunday.

On Holy Thursday, he presided over a nearly two-hour mass at St. Peter’s Basilica and later went to a Rome juvenile prison, where he washed and dried the feet of a dozen residents in a ritual symbolizing humility and recalling Jesus performing the same gesture for his 12 apostles.

The Pope washes a person's foot
Pope Francis washes the feet of the inmates of Rome’s penitentiary of Casal del Marmo on Thursday. The Holy Thursday ritual symbolizes humility. (Vatican Media handout via AP)

While Rome has lately experienced spring-like weather during the day to Rome, temperatures have dipped to about 4 C after dark. 

“Due to the intense cold of these days, Pope Francis will follow the Way of the Cross this evening from [the] Santa Marta hotel, uniting in prayer with those who will gather with the Diocese of Rome at the Colosseum,” the Vatican said in a brief statement.

The procession usually draws tens of thousands of pilgrims, tourists and Rome residents. They take turns carrying a lightweight cross as meditations and prayers are recited. The pontiff usually watches the procession from a rise overlooking the Colosseum, and ends the event with remarks and a blessing.

Francis is also scheduled to preside at an Easter vigil mass on Saturday night in the basilica. On Sunday, he is due to be in St. Peter’s Square for a mid-morning mass. He is expected to deliver a long speech that reviews wars and other conflicts in the world, known by its Latin name, Urbi et Orbi.

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