Pope gives Mary a rose,
stops in at coffee shop
Photo by Simone
Risoluti / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP
Kathleen N. Hattrup - I.Media - published
on 09/26/24
During his day in Luxembourg, the Holy
Father called on this country of such historical importance to continue to
build peace, and urged the local Catholic community to fraternity.
On a one-day trip to Luxembourg, Pope
Francis called for peacemakers, saying his host country "has a history of
being a builder of peace."
Arriving in Luxembourg on September 26,
2024, Pope Francis called for an end to the tragedy of war, condemning the
“irresponsible return to the same mistakes of the past.”
On the first day of his apostolic
journey, which will also take him to Belgium, the Pope devoted his morning to
the leaders of the Grand Duchy.
He first met Grand Duke Henri, who
introduced him to his family, including many children, and then had a brief
private meeting with him. The Grand Duke then showed the Pontiff the
golden rose given in 1956 by Pope Pius XII to his grandmother, Grand Duchess
Charlotte, and presented him with a painted engraving of the Virgin
and Child from the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Luxembourg dating from the 18th
century.
Later, addressing some 300 politicians,
diplomats, members of civil society, and religious representatives, the Pope
emphasized that "war is always a defeat."
He lamented that "we are seeing
the re-emergence, even on the European continent, of rifts and enmities that,
instead of being resolved on the basis of mutual goodwill, negotiation and
diplomatic efforts, are resulting in open hostilities, leading to destruction
and death. It seems that the human heart does not always remember the past and
periodically goes astray and returns to the tragic path of war. How forgetful
we are of this."
After lunch, Pope Francis stopped at a coffee shop near the Archbishop's residence, where he had coffee with some staff. Along the way he met and blessed a pregnant woman. He then returned to the residence.
Catholic community
Pope Francis was welcomed
in the afternoon at Notre-Dame Cathedral of Luxembourg with a
song sung in English by an assembly where many nationalities were represented.
A dance titled "Laudato si,'"
inspired by the Pope's encyclical and the life of St. Francis of Assisi was
performed.
“Our faith is like this: It is joyful, ‘dancing,’ because it tells us that we are children of a God who is the friend of man, who wants us happy and united, and who cannot be more joyful than by our salvation,” he said, referring to the famous dancing procession of Echternach, a Catholic festival in Luxembourg that is part of UNESCO’s world heritage list.
The pontiff recalled the words spoken
by John Paul II in 1985 before the youth of Luxembourg, calling for a Europe
not only of goods but of values. At the heart of these Christian roots, the
Argentine Pope insisted on the defense of welcoming one's neighbor, considering
it more "a duty of justice than of charity."
Earlier in the day he had noted his own
particular emphases on two elements of the Church’s social doctrine: "care
for creation and fraternity."
Indeed, for development to be authentic
and integral, we must not plunder or degrade our common home. Likewise, we must
not abandon peoples or social groups on the margins, for we are all brothers
and sisters.
A golden rose for Our Lady, Consoler of the
Afflicted
Before leaving, the Pope prayed before
a representation of the Virgin Mary, Consoler of the Afflicted, who became the
country's patron saint in 1666.
One of Luxembourg's most important
religious festivals, the Octave, is directly linked to the veneration of this
Madonna, and was launched in 1624 by a Jesuit priest, Father Jacques Brocquart.
The pontiff solemnly opened the Marian
Jubilee celebrating 400 years of this event with a prayer, and then placed a
golden rose at the foot of the statue. The golden rose is an ornament with
which the popes originally honored Catholic sovereigns - Archduchess Charlotte
of Luxembourg being the last recipient in 1956 - and since then it has mainly
been bestowed on Marian shrines or places of veneration.
At the end of the audience, Cardinal
Hollerich announced that following a collection in the diocese, the faithful
had raised 176,000 euros to donate to Pope Francis' charity. Pope Francis in
turn decided to give this sum to the local Caritas, which recently fell victim
to a financial scam and lost a large part of its resources.
A spiritual landmark in Luxembourg
The Cathedral of Notre-Dame du
Luxembourg, located in the heart of the city, was originally a baroque church
built by the Jesuits in 1613, consecrated and dedicated to the Immaculate
Conception in 1621. [The cathedral is seen in the top picture of this article.]
In 1794, the building became the home
of the miraculous statue of Our Lady, Consoler of the Afflicted.
The church was elevated to cathedral
status in 1870 by Pope Pius IX, and restored in the 1930s and 1960s in late
Gothic style before being rededicated in 1963. The crypt of this building is
the resting place of the Grand Dukes of Luxembourg.
Pope Francis went on to Brussels this
evening, the second and main leg of his trip.
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