Photo: Vatican Media

Pope Francis and St. Peter’s Basilica: a reminder of what it is and working criteria

Pope Francis’ address to a delegation of technicians and workers of St. Peter’s Basilica

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(ZENIT News / Vatican City, 11.11.2024).- Some technicians and workers from St. Peter’s Basilica, accompanied by Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, archpriest of that same basilica, were received by Pope Francis in the Consistory Hall on the morning of Monday, November 11. For several months now, an update, including a digital one, of the Vatican basilica has been underway. In this context, they were not only received in audience but also received some words from the Pope, which we provide below translated into English.

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Your Eminence,
Dear brothers and sisters!

I greet you with gratitude, because your visit attests to the industriousness with which you are undertaking new projects and collaborations for the benefit of Saint Peter’s Basilica. This house of prayer for all peoples (cf. Is 56:7; Mt 21:13) was entrusted to us by those who have preceded us in faith and in the apostolic ministry. Therefore, it is a gift and a task to take care of it, both in a spiritual and material sense, also through the most recent technologies.

Such tools particularly challenge our creativity and responsibility. Indeed, the correct and constructive use of a potential that is certainly useful, but ambivalent, depends on us. At times, it happens that the tool overrides the purpose for which it should serve: it is as if the frame were to become more important than the picture. It is therefore necessary to govern technology, recalling that its products are good not only when they work, but primarily when they help us grow.

This principle applies even more to Saint Peter’s Basilica, and for the various interventions it requires, so that it may be for all visitors a living place of faith and history, a hospitable dwelling, a temple for the encounter with God and with the brothers and sisters who come to Rome from all over the world. Everyone, truly everyone, must feel welcomed in this great house: those who have faith and those in search of faith; those who come to contemplate the artistic beauty of Rome and those who want to decipher its cultural codes.

In this regard, let us recall that the original nucleus of the Basilica is the tomb of Peter, the disciple whom the Lord Jesus elected as first among the apostles, entrusting to him the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven (cf. Mt 16:18). This is evidenced by the huge Greek and Latin inscriptions that from above accompany the faithful to the altar of the Cathedra. The planned works should have the same purpose: to accompany the men and women of today; to support their journey as disciples, following the example of Simon Peter. Therefore, I would like to leave you three criteria to guide your work: the listening of prayer, the gaze of faith, the pilgrim’s touch. Let these senses, at once bodily and spiritual, intelligently order the initiatives to be taken.

First of all, listening to prayer: I encourage the commitment of the Fabric and its collaborators in the adoption of technologies that favour not only an interactive participation of people, but above all their awareness of the sacred place, which is a space for meditation.

Secondly, the outlook of faith, to use the cutting-edge tools with a missionary style, not touristic, without seeking the attraction of special effects, but rather investing in new means to narrate the faith of the Church and the culture it has shaped.

Finally, the touch of the pilgrim: throughout the centuries, sculptural, pictorial and architectural art were placed at the service of the people of God using the best technologies of the time. Our predecessors worked wonderfully! May every new project be in continuity with the same pastoral intent.

Thank you for your resourcefulness. I bless all of you and your work from my heart. And I ask you, please, to pray for me.

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