Pope Francis kicks off Holy Year at Vatican with over 32 million visitors expected
TheJubilee, also known as the Holy Year, has begun with visitors flocking to Rome, the Vatican City and across Italy.
Pope Francis kicked off the event while opening the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican on Tuesday.
The sacred event for the Catholic Church is typically held every 25 years for patrons to ask forgiveness for their sins.
The Vatican anticipates over 32 million pilgrims to travel during the Jubilee year, according to the U.S. Embassy in Italy.
In a letter, Pope Francis wrote, “It is my hope that the coming Jubilee Year will be celebrated and experienced.”
“The spiritual dimension of the Jubilee, which calls for conversion, should also embrace these fundamental aspects of our life in society as part of a coherent whole. In the realization that all of us are pilgrims on this earth, which the Lord has charged us to till and keep (cf. Gen 2:15),” he said.
Mountain Butorac, founder of The Catholic Traveler, an agency that leads small groups of Catholic pilgrimages throughout Europe and the Holy Land, told Fox News Digital there may be as many as 39 million people traveling because of the Jubilee, according to some estimates.
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“Rounding down and pretending those people will be distributed evenly throughout the year, that’s around 700,000 extra people each week,” said Butorac.
He added, “To put that into perspective, the biggest event of the year with the Pope is Easter Sunday Mass, which usually draws 60,000 people.”
“The people traveling to Rome will be here to go through the four Holy Doors, one each at Saint Peter, Saint Paul Outside the Walls, Saint Mary Major, and Saint John Lateran,” Butorac said.
During the Holy Year, there will also be specific Jubilee events pertaining to youth, families, musicians and more.
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The Rev. Patrick Briscoe, a Catholic priest based in Washington, D.C., told Fox News Digital this year’s Jubilee will focus on hope.
“In a time of great unrest, with wars raging in Ukraine and the Middle East, the Holy Father declared, ‘Christian hope does not deceive or disappoint because it is grounded in the certainty that nothing and no one may ever separate us from God’s love.’”
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He added, “It’s a message every Christian needs to remember. Hope in Christ will not be disappointed because He never lets us down.”
Briscoe said he is especially looking forward to the canonizations of Blessed Carlo Acutis and Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati.
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The two Italian men will be formally declared saints during solemn ceremonies taking place during the Holy Year in April and August.
Acutis will become the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint; he taught himself programming and created spiritually focused websites.
Frassati was a third order Dominican known for his charitable outreach.
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Said Butorac, “I will personally be leading a few jubilee pilgrimages around Rome, but as I already focus on the Catholic side of Rome, not much changes for me, other than having to navigate the crowds.”