The pilgrim popes of Lourdes
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On 8th December 1854, Pope Pius IX proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, declaring that the Virgin Mary, by a special grace of God, was preserved from original sin from the moment of her conception. This mystery of faith, long venerated in the Church, thus became an official truth of the Catholic faith.
Four years later, in 1858, in Lourdes, a poor, illiterate 14-year-old girl named Bernadette Soubirous saw a ‘beautiful Lady’ in the grotto of Massabielle. On 25th March, the feast of the Annunciation, the Lady finally revealed her name to her: ‘Que soy era Immaculada Councepciou’ (‘I am the Immaculate Conception’).
Despite Bernadette’s inability to comprehend these words, she faithfully repeated them to the Lourdes priest. He saw it as a shocking affirmation: this young girl, incapable of inventing such a theological statement, had unwittingly confirmed the doctrine declared a few years before.
The Church saw an important sign from this revelation: the Virgin herself was confirming what the Church had defined by faith. Lourdes thus became a living echo of the dogma, and a place where Mary showed her maternal presence in a way that was both pure and intimate with humanity’s wounds.
The popes’ perspectives on Lourdes
Popes have always shown great interest in Lourdes, seeing it as a providential sign and a source of spiritual renewal for the Church.
Papal visits to Lourdes
Six cardinals who became popes from 1914 onwards visited Lourdes on pilgrimage before their election.
As early as the 1890s, this was the case for the future Benedict XV (1914-1922) and Pius XI (1922-1939).
It was Pius XI who beatified the visionary of Lourdes on 14th June 1925 and canonised her on 8thDecember 1933. The future Pius XII (1939-1958) came to Lourdes in 1935. He dedicated an encyclical letter to Lourdes, entitled ‘The Lourdes Pilgrimage’, published on 2nd July 1957. The future Paul VI (1963-1978) came to Lourdes twice, in 1958 and 1962, while the future John Paul I (August-September 1978) came on pilgrimage in 1975.
Lourdes has welcomed three popes on official visits:
These visits have had a profound effect on the history of the Sanctuary, strengthening its links with the Holy See and enhancing its worldwide influence. Each visit by a pope to Lourdes is experienced as a moment of grace for the faithful and an encouragement for all those who carry a cross in their lives.
Leo XIV at the Grotto of Lourdes
On 31st May, on the eve of the Pentecost weekend, to close the month of Mary, Pope Leo XIV went for the first time to the reproduction of the Grotto of Lourdes in the Vatican gardens to sing the Ave Maria.
Expressing his joy, he described the procession as “a gesture of faith by which, in a simple and devout way, we gather under the maternal mantle of Mary”.