Friday, October 4, 2013

Pope Francis to visit namesake's shrine at Assisi

Tourists and pilgrims take pictures of a poster announcing Pope Francis's visit outside the St Francis Basilica, in Assisi, Italy, on Thursday  
There is an air of anticipation in the central Italian town of Assisi ahead of the Pope's visit
Pope Francis will on Friday travel to the Umbrian hillside town of Assisi to pray at the shrine of the 13th Century saint whose name he adopted.
Francis will be accompanied by eight cardinals handpicked to help him shape a radical programme of reform for the Vatican.

He has said he wants today's Catholic Church to resemble Francis of Assisi's "church of the poor".
He wants to use abandoned monasteries and convents to house refugees.
And he says he wants to see a less hierarchical church which is less centred on the Vatican.
Candid
 
Two days ago Pope Francis told Italian newspaper La Repubblica his namesake had "longed for a poor Church that looked after others, accepted monetary help and used it to help others with no thought of itself".
"Eight hundred years have passed and times have changed, but the ideal of a missionary and poor Church is still more than valid," he said.

During his day-long "pilgrimage" to Assisi, the Pope is expected to meet groups of poor, sick and disabled people who are being looked after by Catholic orders or charities.
St Francis of Assisi is the patron saint of Italy.

Known in Italian as Il Poverello, or the Poor One, he was the son of a wealthy local cloth merchant who scandalised his family when he reached the age of 25 by dumping his expensive clothing and living in sackcloth, ministering to the poor for the rest of his life.

Pope Francis has become known for his candid views - unlike anything heard coming out of the Vatican during recent papacies, says the BBC's David Willey in Rome.
On Thursday, he called the deaths of scores of African migrants when a boat sank off the Italian island of Lampedusa a "disgrace".

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