Josie and I find ourselves outside St Peter's
when we wander from the Vatican Museum and the Sistine Chapel.
As if we haven't seen enough marvels for one day,
we move into this huge basilica..
Basilica
Papale di an Pietro in Vatican.
There is the Holy Door
and straight away my catholic upbringing is before me.
I know this door from my childhood!
My mother had an old 78 record with the Opening Ritual of The Holy Door.
How she came by it I have no idea.
This door is bricked over on the inside, and during a Jubilee Year
the Holy Father knocks on the door, three times..and in my childish belief,
the bricks come tumbling down.
I stand there looking at it and feel such a connection with this place.
This church is enormous.
I think of that 18 year old girl who became a nun,
and think how she would have responded to this place.
At 68 I am a bit like St Peter's itself.
The years have added layer upon layer of architectural style to this church,
and I have layer upon layer of learning and understanding
that my belief is quite different from that 18 year old...
(my own physical 'architectural style' has not endured as magnificently I might add!)
but however I express my belief..
my Catholic self is always there.
To grasp the size of this place I notice the people in the distance are so small.
Note the size of the person standing far away to the left below the statue
compared to those standing near.
Bernini's
baldochino (canopy) over the altar is thirty metres tall
and yet looks dwarfed by the church.
Michelangelo's Pieta is another familiar icon from my past.
Had I visited at 18 I would surely have kissed the Christ's foot,
worn smooth by the k
isses of
Pilgrims.
It is behind glass now, since it was attacked and damaged by some mad person.
Bernini's
baldochino, that stands over the altar, is like a processional
canopy
with a beautiful fabric fringe around the top, but all in bronze.
There are vines and bees on the twisting pillars
and I wonder at their symbolism.
I've read later, they are the symbols of the Pope of the time.
I prefer my own interpretation.
Above the canopy is the enormous dome.
Again, the size is hard to take in
and it's beauty is astonishing.
I can only marvel at its creation.
Behind the altar is the Chair of Peter, and the stunning
sculpture that represents the heart of this place.
To me it always looked like
a monstrance that holds the simplest thing..
bread
...Jesus held up the bread and said.. This is my body..
and the beautiful symbol of
The Holy Spirit..
Beneath the altar lies the Tomb of St Peter.
Tradition has it that Peter was
martyred during the reign of Nero
and buried on this site.
The statue of St Peter also has a foot worn smooth from
the kisses of pilgrims.
I join the queue for the 18 year old me,
and reverently kiss Peter's foot.
I am more astonished to come across another tomb.
Here lies the body of Pope John XXIII.
Bodies on show seems to me an Italian thing.
It was to me a complete surprise.
I feel quite overcome.
This is the pope we all loved.
The pope who said we must 'throw open the windows
and let in some fresh air ..'
into the ancient church,
to bring it into the 20
Th century.
He called the Vatican Council in 1962,
the year that 18 year old entered the Sisters of Mercy.
It was a time of huge change.
The 18 year old changed too.
The thirteen years I lived at the heart of the church
in religious life,
were wonderful, growing, learning years.
Today I do not find the church as open to change as I expected it to be.
I look at the young student priests and wonder
at their response to this place today.
To
visit St Peter's
has been an extraordinary experience.
I am so grateful for the amazing heritage that enriches my life.
This is a homecoming indeed,
like visiting one's birthplace
and realizing how
attached and unattached one can be at the same time.
Outside we are enchanted by the Swiss Guards
and think back to the Sad Lion monument in
Lucerne.
St Peter's.
You will always be a part of me,
no matter what I believe,
or how I express my belief.
That 18 year old
is still me.