24 min listen
Francis walks deserted streets of Rome
ratings:
Length:
22 minutes
Released:
Mar 18, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
With more countries shutting down nonessential businesses because of the coronavirus, church leaders have faced tough decisions about whether to keep churches open to the faithful or to close them to mitigate the spread of infections. This week, Pope Francis weighed in after a Vatican cardinal announced that all of Rome’s churches would close.
The pope prayed for pastors at his daily Mass the day after the announcement, saying, “Drastic measures are not always good. Therefore, we pray that the Holy Spirit might grant pastoral discernment to pastors so that they might perceive measures that might not leave the holy, faithful people of God alone.” Within a few hours, the decision was overturned, and instead, each pastor would decide whether to open his church.
This week on “Inside the Vatican,” producer Colleen Dulle and Vatican correspondent Gerard O’Connell, both recording from home due to the pandemic, unpack the ways Pope Francis and other Vatican leaders have been navigating the balance between public health and pastoral closeness. The hosts discuss Pope Francis’ Mass intentions responding to current events like the migrant crisis and Italian prison riots, as well as the pope’s pilgrimage through the empty streets of Rome, where he visited the icon and crucifix at the center of two famous plague-ending miracles.
“This was a dramatic expression of faith in the midst of crisis,” Gerry said.
Links from the show:
Coronavirus: News, Reflections, Analysis. What you need to know.
In Italy, church and state join together to fight coronavirus
Pope prays for pastors to find ways to minister amid pandemic
Vatican says public will not be admitted to papal Holy Week liturgies
Pope Francis prays in Rome churches asking God to rid the world of the coronavirus
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The pope prayed for pastors at his daily Mass the day after the announcement, saying, “Drastic measures are not always good. Therefore, we pray that the Holy Spirit might grant pastoral discernment to pastors so that they might perceive measures that might not leave the holy, faithful people of God alone.” Within a few hours, the decision was overturned, and instead, each pastor would decide whether to open his church.
This week on “Inside the Vatican,” producer Colleen Dulle and Vatican correspondent Gerard O’Connell, both recording from home due to the pandemic, unpack the ways Pope Francis and other Vatican leaders have been navigating the balance between public health and pastoral closeness. The hosts discuss Pope Francis’ Mass intentions responding to current events like the migrant crisis and Italian prison riots, as well as the pope’s pilgrimage through the empty streets of Rome, where he visited the icon and crucifix at the center of two famous plague-ending miracles.
“This was a dramatic expression of faith in the midst of crisis,” Gerry said.
Links from the show:
Coronavirus: News, Reflections, Analysis. What you need to know.
In Italy, church and state join together to fight coronavirus
Pope prays for pastors to find ways to minister amid pandemic
Vatican says public will not be admitted to papal Holy Week liturgies
Pope Francis prays in Rome churches asking God to rid the world of the coronavirus
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Released:
Mar 18, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
The Synod on Young People is not over: This week on “,” America’s new Vatican news explainer podcast, producer Colleen Dulle and Vatican correspondent Gerard O’Connell unpack the . The main takeaway from the , Gerry says, is the method of listening, discussing and discerning that... by Inside The Vatican