Pope Francis, Avoiding Pomp, Asks to Be
Buried in Simple Wooden Casket
By Reuters
|
Nov.
20, 2024, at 9:14 a.m.
Reuters
Pope
Francis greets people on the day of the weekly general audience, in Saint
Peter's square at the Vatican, November 20, 2024. REUTERS/Remo Casilli
By
Joshua McElwee
VATICAN
CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis, who has shunned much of the pomp and privilege
of leading the global Catholic Church, has decided that a simple wooden casket
will suffice when the time comes for his funeral.
forego a centuries-old practice of burying the
late pope in three interlocking caskets made of cypress, lead and oak. Instead,
Francis will be buried in a single, zinc-lined wooden coffin.
The
late pope will also not be put on display atop a raised platform, or
catafalque, in St. Peter's Basilica for visitors in Rome to view, as was the
case with previous popes.
Visitors
will still be welcome to pay their respects, but Francis' body will be left
inside the casket, with the lid off.
Francis,
who turns 88 on Dec. 17, has suffered occasional bouts of ill health in recent
years, but has seemed in fine form in recent months.
He now
uses a wheelchair due to knee and back pain, but made two demanding foreign
trips in September and hosted a major, month-long summit of Catholic leaders at
the Vatican in October.
The
pope said last year he wanted to simplify the elaborate, book-long funeral
rites that have been used for his predecessors.
Francis
also announced then that he will be the first pope to be buried outside the
Vatican in more than a century.
Instead
of being interred with some 91 other late popes in St. Peter's Basilica,
Francis said he wants to be buried at Rome's Basilica of St. Mary Major, which
is dedicated to Mary, the Mother of God.
St.
Mary's is the church where Francis traditionally goes to pray before and after
each of his foreign trips.
The
last pope to be buried outside the Vatican was Leo XIII, who died in 1903 and
is buried in Rome's Basilica of St. John Lateran.
Three
caskets had traditionally been used for burying popes to create an airtight
seal around the late pontiff's body. They also allowed for objects, such as
coins or papers issued by the pope during his reign, to be buried with the body.
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