The sinking Cathedral
(Vatican Radio) On Saturday
morning Pope Francis met the bishops of Mexico in the Cathedral
of the Assumption.
Vatican Radio's Veronica
Scarisbrick is in Mexico with the Pope and sent us this report:
Mexico's Metropolitan
Cathedral of the Assumption is a grandiose baroque building. It stands proud in
the heart of the city.
It’s here in the austerity of
this baroque cathedal that Pope Francis chose to speak to the nation’s
bishops on the morning of Saturday 13th of February. It lends itself itself to
a rather solemn speech like this.
It's also huge so the
bishops, all ninety of them had plenty of elbow room. In fact some of the half
empty pews lent to the occasion a sense of grandeur.
Pope Francis stepped into
this sacred space greeted not just by the bishops but by the sound of the notes
of the ‘Christus Vincit’.
And he stopped briefly to
pray in front of the Blessed Sacrament at the ‘Altar del Perdòn”,
dedicated to pardon. A fitting place to begin his Apostolic journey to
Mexico during this Jubilee Year of Mercy
That's before taking his
place at the centre of the Cathedral with as backdrop the grandiose
elaborately carved and gilded altar the ‘Altar de los Reyes’.
But the most noticable thing
about the Cathedral in my opinion, are its tilting floors. They make you
feel dizzy. I wonder how Pope Francis felt as he stepped in.
This sinking feeling is
characteristic of Mexico City. And its Cathedral is built over the
spongey subsoil of what was once an ancient Aztec precint, a temple to be
precise, so a place symbolically spiritual for many centuries.
Earlier Pope Francis
had crossed the City’s main square, the elegant ‘Plaza de la
Constitucion’ or the ‘Zocalo’ as it’s popularly called by pope mobile.
And the crowds went wild with excitement. The square is the second
largest in the world and can hold up to 80.000 people.
Needless to say it was
filled to the brim. 'Papa ancho', young people called out, 'be sure to
come back and see us '.
The sun shone and it was warm
but the people who had spent the night there had suffered the cold.
Mexico City lies at over 2000 feet above sea level and temperatures drop
dramatically at night. So the local authorities thoughtfully moved in
distributing blankets and food.
But they were happy just the
same even if they'd only caught a fleeting glimpse of their Latin American
Pope going by.
And as they do here, they
cried out for a blessing. But one lone voice cried out. A woman's
voice who shouted: 'I have something to give you Papa Francisco,
something tha cannot be bought. It's my faith Papa Francisco'.
With the Pope in Mexico City, I’m Veronica Scarisbrick
With the Pope in Mexico City, I’m Veronica Scarisbrick

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