Pope baptizes 20 babies in Sistine Chapel

Pope baptizes 20 babies in Sistine Chapel 2016-09-30T17:01:00-04:00

Details: 

The frescoed walls of the Sistine Chapel are ringing with the wails and coos of newborns as Pope Benedict XVI presides over his annual Mass to baptize 20 babies.

Other babies slept through the Mass during which Benedict told the godparents their job is to teach the faith by example, even if it’s unfashionable, and show that Christianity isn’t a limit to personal freedom as it is sometimes portrayed.

He says: “It’s not always easy to openly and uncompromisingly show your beliefs, especially in the context in which we live, in a society that often considers unfashionable those who live out their faith in Jesus.”

You can read his homily for today’s Feast of the Baptism of the Lord here.  Meantime, some background, from CNS, on when and how the pope celebrates different sacraments: 

Along with his daily celebrations of the Eucharist, the pope’s 2013 agenda opened with the ordination of new bishops Jan. 6. Just a week later, he was scheduled to mark the Jan. 13 feast of the Baptism of the Lord by baptizing 22 infants in the Sistine Chapel.

For most Catholics, receiving any sacrament from the pope would be a special event, yet such opportunities are necessarily rare. On what occasions does the pope personally administer the sacraments and to whom?

Baptism: The babies whom the pope baptizes in the annual January rite usually are the children of Vatican employees, as was to be the case this year. The pope also traditionally administers the sacraments of Christian initiation — baptism, confirmation and first Communion — to a group of adult converts in St. Peter’s Basilica on Holy Saturday every year. This event became the focus of controversy in 2008 after one of the baptized, Egyptian-born journalist Magdi Allam, publicly and emphatically repudiated his former Islamic faith. Pope Benedict has not continued Blessed John Paul II’s practice of baptizing adults during foreign trips, occasions that the late pope used to initiate hundreds into the church.

Communion: Who receives Communion from Pope Benedict at papal Masses in Rome and elsewhere is up to the pope’s master of liturgical ceremonies, Msgr. Guido Marini. During papal trips, prominent or highly active members of the local churches are usually among those chosen. Though parents around the world have asked, Pope Benedict has never celebrated a Mass specifically for a group of children receiving their first Communion, but a few children have received their first Communion from him at Mass during papal trips. The pope gives Communion at the Mass he celebrates every morning in his private chapel. During the pontificate of Blessed John Paul, those Masses were often attended by dozens of outside guests, but Pope Benedict has typically limited attendance to members of the papal household.

Confession: Pope Benedict heard the individual confessions of young people in St. Peter’s during Lent in 2007 and 2008, then again at World Youth Day in Madrid in August 2011. He has not continued Blessed John Paul’s practice of administering the sacrament in St. Peter’s every year on Good Friday morning.

Confirmation: Pope Benedict confirmed a group of young people attending World Youth Day in Sydney in 2008 and will confirm another group in Rome on April 28 of this year, one of the events organized for the 2012-13 Year of Faith.

Read the full list.  

Photo: CNS/L’Osservatore Romano via Reuters


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