In Via: Understanding the Jubilee Year
In Via is back for its second season: a special mini-season dedicated to the Jubilee Year!
In Via is back for its second season: a special mini-season dedicated to the Jubilee Year!
The Eternal City is the final home to many of the Church’s most prominent saints.
Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, soon-to-be saint, is a role model for young people of faith.
Blessed Carlo Acutis will be the Church's first millennial saint, set to be canonized during the 2025 Jubilee in Rome.
Looking for a prayer to pray to prepare for the Jubilee Year?
How can we be Pilgrims of Hope - whether we're going to Rome or not?
Why does the Catholic Church make such a big deal about a city that is barely mentioned in Scripture, and when it is, often derogatorily?
There is a special indulgence given during this Jubilee Year, which Pope Francis says “allows us to discover how limitless God's mercy is.”
The last “ordinary” Jubilee was celebrated at the turn of the millennia in the year 2000. From the beginning of his pontificate, Pope John Paul II understood his mission to be leading the Church into this new millennia, beginning with this “Great Jubilee.”
One hallmark of a Jubilee Year is pilgrimage to the four Major Papal Basilicas. Since the beginning, pilgrimage to the tombs of Peter and Paul was the emphasis of the Christian faithful’s penitential pilgrimage to Rome.