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Month: August 2022

Twenty-First Sunday: Entering By the Narrow Gate to Find True Freedom

Strive to enter to through the narrow door; for many, I tell you, will try to enter and will not be able (Lk. 13: 24). ⧾ The lessons of the Mass today speak to us of the Mystery of Salvation. In symbolic terms the Prophet Isaiah speaks of the universality of salvation; that God offers[…]

The post Twenty-First Sunday: Entering By the Narrow Gate to Find True Freedom appeared first on Catholic Insight.

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Saint Celestine V and the Catholic Church’s first jubilee


Pope Celestine V was canonized in 1313 and since 1327 has been buried in the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio in L’Aquila. / Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

Rome Newsroom, Aug 21, 2022 / 03:38 am (CNA).

Peter of Morrone was an unusual choice for pope.

He was not a cardinal, for one, but a Benedictine monk and hermit living in a remote mountainous cave. He was also around 80 years of age.

But the Church’s 11 living cardinals had spent more than two years in a stalemate over the new pope’s election. So when the saintly Peter delivered to the cardinals the message that God would punish them for any further delays — his name was put forward, and soon after, on Jul. 5, 1294, a consensus was reached.

Bishops carried to Peter’s mountain hermitage the news of his election to the papacy. He reportedly was reluctant to accept, even trying to flee. Still, on Aug. 29, 1294, he was crowned Pope Celestine V in the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio in the city of L’Aquila.

Peter of Morrone is depicted inside the basilica of L'Aquila. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
Peter of Morrone is depicted inside the basilica of L’Aquila. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

According to historical sources, besides kings, nobles, and cardinals, more than 200,000 people attended the ceremony, a grand moment of celebration.

One month later, one of Celestine’s first actions as pope was to declare the possibility for anyone to receive a plenary indulgence who, having confessed his or her sins and sincerely repented of them, devotedly visited the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio between sunset on Aug. 28 and sunset on Aug. 29, the feast of the martyrdom of St. John the Baptist.

Women are praying in the basilica in L'Aquila in August 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
Women are praying in the basilica in L’Aquila in August 2022. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

A plenary indulgence is a grace granted by the Catholic Church through the merits of Jesus Christ, Mary, and all the saints to remove the temporal punishment due to sin.

Celestine’s indulgence was exceptional at the time, given it was available to anyone, regardless of status or wealth, and cost nothing except personal repentance at a time when indulgences were often tied to almsgiving. For this reason, some consider the Celestinian Forgiveness, as it came to be called, history’s first jubilee.

Unfortunately, Pope Celestine V did not reign long enough to see the legacy of his indulgence. As pope in 1294, he was also the ruler of the Papal States, but he soon proved to be an ineffectual political leader.

On Dec. 13, five months after his election, he resigned from the papacy.

Pope Boniface VIII, Celestine’s successor, imprisoned the former pope out of fear that opponents to the resignation might try to install Celestine as an antipope. Celestine V died a prisoner ten months later. 

Peter of Morrone was canonized in 1313 and since 1327 has been buried in the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio in L’Aquila.

The Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio in L'Aquila. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA
The Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio in L’Aquila. Daniel Ibáñez / CNA

According to Johannes Grohe, a professor of Medieval History, the Celestinian Forgiveness was the precursor to the Holy Years, or Jubilees, which the Church typically celebrates every 25 years. 

In 1300, Pope Boniface VIII issued a bull of indulgence proclaiming that Christians who confessed their sins, received the Eucharist and made a pilgrimage to Rome could receive a plenary indulgence.

Boniface VIII “was inspired” by Celestine V’s own “Jubilee” in L’Aquila, which started in 1294 and continued after his papal abdication and death, Grohe told EWTN News in an interview last month. “This indulgence of Pope Celestine V was the precursor, one could say, to the first great Jubilee.”

Both traditions continue to this day. In L’Aquila, the Celestinian Forgiveness, or Perdonanza Celestiniana as it is called in Italian, will celebrate its 728th year with a visit from Pope Francis on Aug. 28 to open the Holy Door.

Now a week-long festival, the Forgiveness has come to be an essential cultural, as well as spiritual, event.

Jubilee years in the Church, also called Holy Years, have continued throughout the centuries. A critical aspect of a Holy Year is the indulgence attached to walking through the Holy Door of one of Rome’s four major basilicas, including St. Peter’s.

Preparations are already underway in Rome and the Vatican for the next ordinary jubilee in 2025.

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Twenty-first Sunday in Ordinary Time

Reading 1 Is 66:18-21

Thus says the LORD:I know their works and their thoughts,and I come to gather nations of every language;they shall come and see my glory. I will set a sign among them;from them I will send fugitives to the nati…

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Queenship of the Blessed Virgin – August 22

Last week was the Feast of the Assumption of Mary and today, August 22 is the Queenship of Mary. The other day a man called to say my argument for the Assumption of Mary from the Old Testament was wrong. I had quoted 1 Kings 2:19 where Solomon had raised his mother to Queen of […]

The post Queenship of the Blessed Virgin – August 22 appeared first on Defenders of the Catholic Faith.

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Pope Francis at the Angelus: God’s door is open to everyone

“Brothers and sisters, which side do we want to be on? Do we prefer the easy way of thinking only about ourselves, or do we choose the narrow door of the Gospel that puts our selfishness into crisis, but which makes us able to welcome the true life that comes from God and makes us happy?”, said the Pope.

The post Pope Francis at the Angelus: God’s door is open to everyone appeared first on ZENIT – English.

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Reflections on the Rosary

When I was a child, I knew nothing of the glorious cathedrals dedicated to Our Blessed Mother. I never heard…

The post Reflections on the Rosary appeared first on The Catholic Thing.

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Aug. 21 Twenty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time, Sunday

Gospel Verse, Year C, John 14:6:I am the way, the truth and the life, says the Lord; no one comes to the Father, except through me.Communion Antiphon, Cf. Ps 104(103):13-15:The earth is replete with the fruits of your work, O Lord; you bring forth brea…

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