Home Christian News In Portugal, Pope Francis Will Sow Seeds of His Legacy

In Portugal, Pope Francis Will Sow Seeds of His Legacy

Pope Francis
Volunteers are lifted up by others after a Mass celebrated for volunteers from around the world in Estoril, outside Lisbon, Portugal, Wednesday, July 26, 2023. The volunteers will be working during the World Youth Day from Aug. 1 to Aug. 6, with the presence of Pope Francis. The event is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of young Catholic faithful to Lisbon. (AP Photo/Armando Franca)

VATICAN CITY (RNS) — When Pope Paul VI became the first pontiff to set foot in Portugal in 1967, the church and world were in turmoil.

Deep fractures spurred by the Second Vatican Council, the massive 1962-65 summit aimed at reconciling the church with the growing secularism of the time, commanded his attention.

When Pope Francis visits Portugal for the World Youth Day celebration Wednesday (Aug. 2-6), he will lay the groundwork for another, potentially seismic, church event.

In October, the Vatican will host a gathering of bishops and lay Catholics, the synod on synodality, to address the main challenges facing the institution — from the sexual abuse crisis to the role of women and inclusion of LGBTQ faithful.

Francis will address nearly 1 million Catholics gathered for World Youth Day, a festival initiated by Pope John Paul II in 1986 and centered around prayer and music. Considered the largest Catholic event in the world, the pontiff will have the opportunity over several days to meet and talk to young people between the ages of 16 and 35 from all over the world.

RELATED: Pope Francis ‘Outraged and Disgusted’ by Burning of Quran

“I hope to see a seed of the world of the future in Lisbon,” Pope Francis said in a video message published July 27, in which he set his prayer intentions for the youth festival. “A world where love is at the center, where we can feel like brothers and sisters.”

On Thursday (Aug. 3), Francis will meet with members of the Argentine group Scholas Occurrentes, aimed at promoting encounter and dialogue. The next day (Aug. 4), he is scheduled to conduct a Via Crucis, or stations of the cross, with young people at the festival. On Saturday (Aug. 5), the pope will lead a vigil near the Tago River in a nature reserve not far from Lisbon. In the same location, the pope will preside over the closing Mass for World Youth Day.

This will mark the first World Youth Day since 2019; the festival was halted for three years due to the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the Vatican, more than 700 bishops and 20 cardinals will attend. Some 20,000 volunteers from 200 countries are expected.

A delegation from Russia and Ukraine is also expected. When Pope Francis asked for faithful to pray for him as he embarked on this trip during his Angelus prayer on Sunday (July 30), he also mentioned the conflict taking place in Ukraine and asked the Russian “brothers” to restore the Black Sea grain trade deal.

RELATED: Doomed or Sign of Hope? Pope Francis’ Mission for Peace in Ukraine Is Underway

The Russia-Ukraine war also occupies the pontiff’s mind as he prepares to meet with Catholic youth.

“We are at war,” Francis said in his message. “We need something different. A world that is not afraid to bear witness to the gospel. A world where there is joy, because if us Christians don’t have joy then we are not credible, and no one will believe us.”

Few places are as closely associated with the message for peace than the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima, where the Virgin Mary is believed to have appeared in 1917 to three shepherd children. In the apparitions, Mary is believed to have asked the children to pray the rosary to bring World War I to an end.