10 February 2012

With Peter and his successor: A dream fulfilled

Yesterday morning the Bishops and their accompanying priests  concelebrated Mass in the Basilica of Saint Peter at the altar at the tomb of the Prince of the Apostles.  It was a profoundly moving experience and during the Mass I prayed for my friends and family, for the many people who have asked me to remember them in my prayers here in Rome, and for you, the readers of this blog.

After the Mass we returned for breakfast and the Bishops then left for their meeting with the Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization.

The priests and seminarians accompanying the Bishops met up with them after their meeting to go with them to the audience with the Successor of Saint Peter, Pope Benedict XVI to discuss the states of their Dioceses and factors common among the concerns of the Bishops (the Bishops of Wisconsin will meet with the Holy Father tomorrow).

We entered the Apostolic Palace through the Cortile San Damaso.  After exiting the elevator we found ourselves in a magnificent hallway leading towards the Pope's library:


We passed through several magnificent rooms, each one more splendid than the previous one and filled with beautiful furniture, paintings, tapestries and even books.  Each room also had a throne for the Holy Father, but each of them were in a somewhat different style.  This one is my favorite:


Before long we were instructed by the Papal Gentlemen to wait in one of the rooms until the Holy Father was ready to receive us.  This room had a red damask covering the walls:


Of particular interest to me was its ceiling:


If I ever get to build a church, I'd like to incorporate colors like this into it.

As we waited, we visited with each other and some decided to take a peek out of the windows:


The window looked out toward the Porta Santa Anna and gave an excellent view of the city.
 
After several minutes passed, we were ushered through two additional rooms where we were given a few brief pointers on how the audience and pictures with the Holy Father would proceed.

Finally, when the Holy Father was ready to receive us, we were brought into the Papal library and were introduced to Pope Benedict XVI.  After greeting the Holy Father, we posed for a picture before he gave us a rosary.

Pope Benedict XVI is a small man and his age is beginning to show.  Still, his smile - which is not always captured on film - is genuine and his interest in those he meets is sincere.

Afterwards, the priests and seminarians were escorted back to the room in which we had been waiting while the Bishops of Illinois met with His Holiness for about one hour (the Bishops of Indiana met with him after the Bishops of Illinois).  When the Bishops emerged from their meeting with the Pope, we returned for lunch.

Photos from the day can be viewed hereBishop Paprocki also wrote a few observations from the day.

It was a morning I will not soon forget.  Yesterday a great dream was fulfilled and I am deeply grateful.

3 comments:

  1. GirlCanChant5:02 PM

    Sounds like you had an awesome day! I thought I was going to Rome with my choir for the Palium Mass this summer, but our director recently announced that we are no longer going on the trip. He wants to tour Italy next year, but that seems like a long time to wait now!

    Thanks for the prayers. I can always use more of those.

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  2. How very exciting, Father. I hope you managed to offer up a prayer for me too. What a fantastic privilege, to be in the presence of the Holy Father and to offer Mass at the Tomb of St. Peter.

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  3. I'm glad you got to meet the Pope, Father. That sounds like an exciting moment.

    Still, as a Catholic, I have to admit to a good deal of ambivalence every time I see examples of how opulent the Vatican is. On the one hand, I really would like to visit some of those sites as a tourist (the ones where tourists are allowed, anyway). I do understand the attraction. On the other hand, though...I have a tough time reconciling that extravagance with the savior who chose to come into this world in a manger and who chose to die on a cross between two thieves, and who never had a pillow of his own on which to lay his head. When I see the Vatican (and similar places), I do find myself wondering: Is this at all congruent with how Christ chose to live while on this earth?

    Hope this doesn't come across as sarcastic or snarky. I am glad you've had a good visit in Rome. Safe travels for your return trip, too.

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