Vatican City, 24 March 2015 (VIS) –
The Pontifical Council for the Family has organised an international
vigil to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the publication of
St. John Paul II's encyclical “Evangelium Vitae”. According to a
press release from the dicastery, the event is a form of thanksgiving
for the fruits of the pastoral care of life, and will also serve to
spread the benefits of prayer for life as well as to recall eternal
life, the destiny of every human being.
The vigil will be divided into three
stages: it will begin at 5 p.m. in the Roman basilica of St. Mary
Major, with an explanation of various artistic elements of the
basilica relating to the theme of life. At 6 p.m. an original rosary
will be prayed, focusing on the contemplation of the Gospel passages
linked to the theme of life, interspersed with experiences related by
the faithful. This will be followed, at 7 p.m., by a Eucharistic
celebration presided by Bishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the
Pontifical Council for the Family, who comments that “the
anniversary of the Encyclical and this vigil that commemorates it, on
the eve of the Annunciation, is particularly meaningful as it makes
manifest the intimate connection between the mystery of life and the
experience of the family, made up of affection and social
relationships. Defending life means participating in the alliance
between God, man and woman”.
The international character of the
vigil is accentuated by the participation of the shrines of Fatima,
Lourdes and Guadalupe, where rosaries will be recited, dedicated to
life, as part of the initiative “A rosary embraces the world”.
The Italian television channel Telepace
will transmit live the events of the vigil from 5.15 p.m., while
English-, French- and Italian-speaking viewers will be able to take
part in the Holy Rosaries of Lourdes, according to the following
schedule: at 2.30 p.m. (local time) the Rosary will be broadcast by
the main American Catholic television channels; at 3.30 p.m. by the
French Catholic channel KTO, and at 6 p.m. in Italy, by the
broadcaster TV2000.