Today's photo:
The scene from a previous year's meeting between Pope  Benedict XVI and the clergy of Rome.
Papal resignation and conclave - 2
The person at the center of this unprecedented historical event is, of course, Pope Benedict XVI. In these few days before his resignation goes  into effect, on Thursday, February 28,  at 8:00 p.m., he is continuing to follow the schedule of events which were  planned long before his decision to resign. Here are some of them, just to give  you an idea of what his days are like.
On Ash  Wednesday (Mercoledì delle Ceneri),  he officiated at the ceremony of the ashes, not in the basilica of Santa Sabina  on the Aventine hill as is the custom, but in St. Peter's Basilica. Also on  Wednesday the pope held his regularly scheduled Wednesday audience.
Yesterday, Thursday, he received the Italian bishops  from Liguria (Genoa area), led by Cardinal  Bagnasco, on their Ad Limina  visit. Another Ad Limina visit will  happen on Saturday, Feb. 16, when  the bishops of Lombardia (Milan area) come calling, led by Cardinal Scola, probably the most papabile of the Italian cardinals. (You can read about the Ad Limina visits in a previous post on  this blog).
On Saturday,  Feb. 16, Benedict will meet in a private audience with Mario Monti, president of the Council of Ministers (more or less  Prime Minister). This little visit is causing some controversy because we are just one week away from national political elections in Italy  and Monti is a candidate. Vatican officials, however, insist that politics is  not on the agenda. However, for Italian politicians a visit with the pope is  always a big plus.
The pope will find time before leaving office to honor  long-scheduled meetings with the presidents of Guatemala and Rumania.  On Saturday, February 23, there will be a hastily-called private meeting between Benedict and the president of Italy, Giorgio Napolitano. The two men are  contemporaries, and a strong friendship has blossomed between them; now they  are both about to leave office.
There are still two "Angelus" appearances remaining on his schedule: Sunday, Feb. 17  and the following Sunday, Feb. 24. The last General Audience will take place on Wednesday, Feb. 27, the day before he leaves office. What an  unexpected honor for all those people who reserved tickets for this audience  weeks and even months ago, not knowing it would be his last. The ticket owners,  however, will have to share the honor with thousands of other people because the  audience will be held outdoors in St.  Peter's Square to accommodate the large crowds expected to show up to bid  the pope farewell. "Gate crashers", so to speak . . . including yours truly!
 
Then comes the "big day": Thursday, Feb. 28. At 11:00 a.m. the pope will have a final meeting with the cardinals who are in Rome, most of them appointed by him. At 5:00 p.m. he will leave by helicopter  from the Vatican heliport for the summer papal residence in Castel Gandolfo, just south of Rome.  Then at precisely 8:00 p.m. his  resignation takes effect and he will no longer be pope. This we will talk about  later. At Castel Gandolfo, it is believed that Benedict will not stay in the papal apartment, but in one of the  other apartments which are usually reserved for cardinals. The pope will remain  at Castel Gandolfo until after a new  pope has been elected.
I purposely left until last another event on the  pope's schedule which took place yesterday, Thursday, Feb. 14. This, too, was a scheduled papal audience which  takes place once a year, but which is always very special both to the pope and  to the participants. It is the annual meeting  of the bishop of Rome with the parish priests of his diocese. Present in  the audience hall with the pope were: his vicar, Cardinal Villani who was seated next to him, Villani's five auxiliary bishops (including my  former pastor, Bishop Matteo Zuppi),  a few other bishops and the pastors. This audience was televised live by the  Vatican's television network so I was able to witness the historic and somewhat  emotional meeting. Usually for this  occasion the pope has a prepared speech  which he reads to the group, but he came to this audience with no pre-written  script, explaining that he wanted to "chat" with his priests and reminisce  about his participation in the Second  Vatican Council as a young German theologian.  This he did in 45 minutes of ad lib, tracing the history of Vatican II from its  preparatory work through the sessions and the implementation of the decrees,  along with many of his own personal insights. It was truly a spellbinding  performance. This was further proof to me that there is nothing wrong with this man's mind. After the audience was  over, the bishops and a few select pastors were able to come up to the pope and  greet him one at a time. Of course my former  pastor, Bishop Zuppi, was among the bishops, but my current pastor, don Marco Gnavi, was among the priests who were  given this honor. This was exciting for me to see, even though it was only on my  television screen.
For the next couple of posts we will continue to focus  primarily on the outgoing pope, but soon, and certainly after February 28, our focus will shift to the conclave. Who will be the next pope??????

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