Catholic Digest | The magazine for Catholic living
This Sunday's Scripture
Election 08 Home|Election Exclusives|Commentary & Context|Issues|Catholic Digest Election Guide|Discussions
Subscribe Now!
Renew Subscription
Give CD as a Gift
Store
Customer Service
 
Free ENewsletter
>>   Learn More
Quick Links
Bendict Visits America
>> In this issue
>> Election 08!
>> Web exclusives
>> September extras
>> Love your neighbor
>> Readers' Forum
  >>   E-mail a letter to the editor
  >>   Support our troops!
  >>   Help U.S. prisons
  >>   Free downloads, games & more
  >>   Parish finder
  >>   Quick Catholic facts
  >>   Good links
About Us
  >>   About Catholic Digest
  >>   Meet the staff
  >>   In the press
  >>   Writers' guidelines
  >>   To advertise
  >>   Bayard, Inc.
News & Interviews
Article Options:   Printer Friendly  |   Send to a Friend  |   Single Page  |   Readers' Forum  |   Comment
The 10-by-4-foot altar, positioned on the outfield, was draped in white and gold with a 6-foot gold fiberglass crucifix suspended above the papal chair. As the sun caught the colors, an otherworldly aura enveloped the altar. Four choirs, including a children’s choir, filled the stadium with song while the Capitol dome hung suspended in the distance, just over left field.

Participating in today’s Mass with the pope were 14 cardinals, 250 bishops, 1,300 priests, and approximately 45,000 lay people.

Ten minutes before 10 a.m., the Pope approached the altar to a thunderous Alleluia choir and an enrapt, silent crowd. Smiling broadly, he blessed the faithful on both sides of the aisle before mounting a ramp and taking his place at the altar. Taking up a censor, he blessed the altar and crowd with incense. And the Mass began, “In the name of the father, and of the son, and of the Holy Spirit...”

After initial words of encouragement and hope, Pope Benedict directly addressed during his homily the sex abuse scandal of the Catholic Church in the United States.

“It is in the context of this hope, born of God’s love and fidelity, that I acknowledge the pain which the Church in America has experienced as a result of the sexual abuse of minors,” the Pope said. “No words of mine could describe the pain and harm inflicted by such abuse. It is important that those who have suffered be given loving pastoral attention.”

 Young people attend the papal Mass at Nationals Park
April 17 in Washington. (CNS photo/Karen Callaway)
 
The pope went on to emphasize the need for prayers stemming from such pain, prayers stemming from a need for forgiveness, and prayers stemming from our hopes for redemption.

The crowd burst into applause as the Pope finished his homily by encouraging those present to go forth and be initiators of evangelical hope. Applause exploded again as Benedict XVI launched into Spanish with “some words for our brothers and sisters in the Spanish language.” The emphasis was on hope and addressed the way in which our faith speaks to us of this hope.

While the Pope received the gifts of consecration, a multicultural choir performed “Bienaventurados,” a lively offertory song replete with African drums and pipes.

As the consecration concluded, and with the greeting of peace and Our Father over, 300 Eucharistic ministers — deacons and priests robed in white — swept into the stands and began distributing the Eucharist to the multitude. The extensive operation took place without a hitch, the crowd moving like a wave from the top tiers of the stadium downward toward the field. Accomplished in just over 20 minutes, the operation exceeded its time allotment only slightly.

As the final communicants received, Placido Domingo launched into a rousing “Panis Angelicus.” As the tenor, who serves as general director of the Washington National Opera concluded and approached the pontiff at the altar, he fell to his knees before the Pope to receive Benedict’s blessing.

The crowd enthusiastically received Benedict’s closing blessing and cheered at the words: “The Mass is ended, go in peace.”

Cheering continued as the pope left the altar and proceeded through the crowd, blessing Mass-goers as he walked. Resounding applause filled the stadium as the pope took his final exit. A few in attendance rushed toward the exiting pontiff, but two priests held out their arms in a plea with them to keep a distance, which they then did.

Children began to sing as they made their way to the exits.

By five minutes after noon, the stadium had emptied — in steady and orderly fashion — two-thirds of its crowd. But things were not over for Benedict, who was scheduled to speak with heads of Catholic colleges and universities at 5 p.m. and ecumenical leaders at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, and then travel to New York on Friday for more parades, an address at the United Nations, and Masses at St. Patrick's Cathedral and Yankee Stadium.

Then, of course, the pontiff will traveled to New York on Friday for more parades, an address at the United Nations, and Masses at St. Patrick Cathedral and Yankee Stadium.

Outside Nationals Park, meanwhile, a colorful swarm filled the street as the papal audience took leave. Like specks, they filled the street as far as the eye could see. Ten minutes later, people still filled the street, and they were still moving. CD

Kathleen Stauffer is President and Publisher of Catholic Digest.
Page:
   1   2  

Share the Gift of Hope - St. Jude Children's Research Hospital