Don't lose hope, Pope says as he opens Holy Door at Rome prison

December 26, 2024 at 7:42 a.m.
Pope Francis crosses the threshold of the Holy Door of the Church of Our Father at Rome's Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024, before presiding over a Mass with inmates, prison staff and Italian government officials Dec. 26, 2024. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
Pope Francis crosses the threshold of the Holy Door of the Church of Our Father at Rome's Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024, before presiding over a Mass with inmates, prison staff and Italian government officials Dec. 26, 2024. (CNS photo/Vatican Media) (Vatican Media)


ROME – Wearing red vestments for the feast of St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr,Pope Francis knocked on the door of the Church in Rome's Rebibbia prison complex and walked over its threshold.

After reciting a formal prayer before opening the prison's Holy Door Dec. 26, the Pope took the microphone back to explain that he had inaugurated the Holy Year 2025 by opening the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica.

"I wanted the second Holy Door to be the one here, at a prison," he said. "I wanted all of us, inside or out, to have an opportunity to throw open the doors of our hearts and understand that hope does not disappoint."

Members of the penitentiary police band played the official hymn of the Holy Year 2025 when the Pope arrived, while about 300 people waited inside the Church; they included just over 100 women and men serving time at Rebibbia, some of their family members, volunteers, prison staff, Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri and officials of the Italian justice department.

The door of the prison's Church of Our Father was decorated with a pine garland with white roses and silver-tinted pinecones. Inside the Church, a manger with the baby Jesus sat in front of the altar. The inmates, with the help of volunteers, provided the music while a prisoner and a female guard did the readings.

The prayers of the faithful included a petition for governments to focus on rehabilitating and assisting all people, especially those who have made mistakes.

Seated in his wheelchair in front of the Church door,Pope Francis had prayed: "In the joy of Christmas, let us welcome the call of the Lord Jesus to follow him. He is the door of life, the hope that does not disappoint, the good news that saves."


Pope Francis crosses the threshold of the Holy Door of the Church of Our Father at Rome's Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024, before presiding over a Mass with inmates, prison staff and Italian government officials Dec. 26, 2024. CNS photo/Vatican Media

 "May the opening of this Holy Door be for all of us a call to look to the future with hope," he said. "Let us open our hearts to the mercy of God so as to celebrate with the whole Church his unending love."


The Vatican press office had distributed the text of the homily the Pope prepared for the Mass, but the Pope did not use it.

Instead, Pope Francis spoke directly to the inmates. He told them that all Christians need to remind themselves that "hope does not disappoint, it never disappoints. I need to think about this, too, because in life's difficult moments one thinks that everything is over, that nothing can be resolved. But hope never disappoints."

"I like to think of hope being like an anchor on the shore, and we, holding the rope, are there, safe because our hope is like an anchor" hooked into the earth. "This is the message I want to give all of us, including myself: Don't lose hope."

At the end of Mass, before greeting and shaking hands with each of the 300 people present inside the Church,Pope Francis repeated his message. He told inmates, "Now, don't forget the two things we need to do with our hands: First, hang on to the rope of hope, hang on to the anchor by its rope, never let go; second, throw open your hearts, have an open heart. "Low- and middle-income countries owed a record debt of $8.8 trillion at the end of 2023 – an 8% increase over 2020 – according to data from the World Bank, and developing countries spent a record $1.4 trillion to service their foreign debt in that year.

"Each of us is called to forgive those who have trespassed against us, because the Son of God, born in the cold and darkness of the night, has forgiven our own," the Pope said in his Christmas message.

Pope Francis prayed for communities affected by a measles outbreak in Congo, and for those suffering from the humanitarian crises in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Mozambique "caused mainly by armed conflicts and the scourge of terrorism" and "aggravated by the devastating effects of climate change."

Pope Francis speaks with a man as he greets inmates, guards and government officials after Mass in the Church of Our Father at Rome’s Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024. CNS photo/Vatican Media

 In the Americas, he asked that Jesus would inspire political authorities and all people "to find as soon as possible effective solutions, in justice and truth, to promote social harmony, particularly in Haiti, Venezuela, Colombia and Nicaragua."

"On this festive day, let us not fail to express our gratitude to those who spend themselves, quietly and faithfully, in doing good and in serving others," he added, commending parents, educators, teachers, health care workers, charity workers and missionaries for their contribution to society.

Jesus, Pope Francis said in his message, "is the wide-open door that we are invited to enter, in order to rediscover the meaning of our existence and the sacredness of all life, and to recover the foundational values of the human family."

He prayed that society's most vulnerable members – children, the elderly, refugees, the unemployed, prisoners and persecuted people – may meet God at the threshold of that door.

"As pilgrims of hope, let us go out to meet him," he said. "Let us open to him the doors of our hearts, as he has opened to us the door of his heart."



Related Stories

ROME – Wearing red vestments for the feast of St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr,Pope Francis knocked on the door of the Church in Rome's Rebibbia prison complex and walked over its threshold.

After reciting a formal prayer before opening the prison's Holy Door Dec. 26, the Pope took the microphone back to explain that he had inaugurated the Holy Year 2025 by opening the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica.

"I wanted the second Holy Door to be the one here, at a prison," he said. "I wanted all of us, inside or out, to have an opportunity to throw open the doors of our hearts and understand that hope does not disappoint."

Members of the penitentiary police band played the official hymn of the Holy Year 2025 when the Pope arrived, while about 300 people waited inside the Church; they included just over 100 women and men serving time at Rebibbia, some of their family members, volunteers, prison staff, Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri and officials of the Italian justice department.

The door of the prison's Church of Our Father was decorated with a pine garland with white roses and silver-tinted pinecones. Inside the Church, a manger with the baby Jesus sat in front of the altar. The inmates, with the help of volunteers, provided the music while a prisoner and a female guard did the readings.

The prayers of the faithful included a petition for governments to focus on rehabilitating and assisting all people, especially those who have made mistakes.

Seated in his wheelchair in front of the Church door,Pope Francis had prayed: "In the joy of Christmas, let us welcome the call of the Lord Jesus to follow him. He is the door of life, the hope that does not disappoint, the good news that saves."


Pope Francis crosses the threshold of the Holy Door of the Church of Our Father at Rome's Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024, before presiding over a Mass with inmates, prison staff and Italian government officials Dec. 26, 2024. CNS photo/Vatican Media

 "May the opening of this Holy Door be for all of us a call to look to the future with hope," he said. "Let us open our hearts to the mercy of God so as to celebrate with the whole Church his unending love."


The Vatican press office had distributed the text of the homily the Pope prepared for the Mass, but the Pope did not use it.

Instead, Pope Francis spoke directly to the inmates. He told them that all Christians need to remind themselves that "hope does not disappoint, it never disappoints. I need to think about this, too, because in life's difficult moments one thinks that everything is over, that nothing can be resolved. But hope never disappoints."

"I like to think of hope being like an anchor on the shore, and we, holding the rope, are there, safe because our hope is like an anchor" hooked into the earth. "This is the message I want to give all of us, including myself: Don't lose hope."

At the end of Mass, before greeting and shaking hands with each of the 300 people present inside the Church,Pope Francis repeated his message. He told inmates, "Now, don't forget the two things we need to do with our hands: First, hang on to the rope of hope, hang on to the anchor by its rope, never let go; second, throw open your hearts, have an open heart. "Low- and middle-income countries owed a record debt of $8.8 trillion at the end of 2023 – an 8% increase over 2020 – according to data from the World Bank, and developing countries spent a record $1.4 trillion to service their foreign debt in that year.

"Each of us is called to forgive those who have trespassed against us, because the Son of God, born in the cold and darkness of the night, has forgiven our own," the Pope said in his Christmas message.

Pope Francis prayed for communities affected by a measles outbreak in Congo, and for those suffering from the humanitarian crises in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and Mozambique "caused mainly by armed conflicts and the scourge of terrorism" and "aggravated by the devastating effects of climate change."

Pope Francis speaks with a man as he greets inmates, guards and government officials after Mass in the Church of Our Father at Rome’s Rebibbia prison Dec. 26, 2024. CNS photo/Vatican Media

 In the Americas, he asked that Jesus would inspire political authorities and all people "to find as soon as possible effective solutions, in justice and truth, to promote social harmony, particularly in Haiti, Venezuela, Colombia and Nicaragua."

"On this festive day, let us not fail to express our gratitude to those who spend themselves, quietly and faithfully, in doing good and in serving others," he added, commending parents, educators, teachers, health care workers, charity workers and missionaries for their contribution to society.

Jesus, Pope Francis said in his message, "is the wide-open door that we are invited to enter, in order to rediscover the meaning of our existence and the sacredness of all life, and to recover the foundational values of the human family."

He prayed that society's most vulnerable members – children, the elderly, refugees, the unemployed, prisoners and persecuted people – may meet God at the threshold of that door.

"As pilgrims of hope, let us go out to meet him," he said. "Let us open to him the doors of our hearts, as he has opened to us the door of his heart."


Have a news tip? Email [email protected] or Call/Text 360-922-3092

e-Edition


e-edition

Sign up


for our email newsletters

Weekly Top Stories

Sign up to get our top stories delivered to your inbox every Sunday

Daily Updates & Breaking News Alerts

Sign up to get our daily updates and breaking news alerts delivered to your inbox daily

Latest Stories


Lakewood parish hosts hall-filling Nativity scene display
The tradition of creating houses of gingerbread and confections for decoration ...

Christmas story is worth repeating, Bishop tells Hightstown parishioners
"Christmas never gets old," ...

Don't lose hope, Pope says as he opens Holy Door at Rome prison
Wearing red vestments for the feast of St. Stephen, ...

Pope urges war-torn world to walk through door of peace on Christmas
As millions of pilgrims prepare to cross through ...

Hamilton parish welcomes Bishop O'Connell on Christmas Eve
It's always a special occasion when Bishop David M. O'Connell, C.M., ...


The Evangelist, 40 North Main Ave., Albany, NY, 12203-1422 | PHONE: 518-453-6688| FAX: 518-453-8448
© 2024 Trenton Monitor, All Rights Reserved.