In World Youth Day’s ‘Garden of Forgiveness,’ pilgrims find grace

952 0
World Youth Day pilgrims pray in Forgiveness Park in Panama City Jan. 25, 2019. (CNS photo/Jaclyn Lippelmann, Catholic Standard)

PANAMA CITY (CNS) — As she welcomed World Youth Day pilgrims to the “Garden of Forgiveness,” Ileana Madrid of Panama City said she saw volunteering at the park as “an opportunity to show that God loves us a lot.”

“(Jesus) is on the cross because he loves us,” she said. “His greatest gift is he forgives our sins.”

During the “Renew Me” experience, pilgrims were guided through a journey of reflection, confession and celebration.

As pilgrims moved past the “Draw Near” section of the garden, where volunteers welcomed them Jan. 25, they had a moment to stop in the “Review” area to examine their consciences in front of a statue of Mary, as a volunteer played music on the guitar and sang in Spanish.

Once they were prepared to go to confession, volunteers guided them to a priest who spoke their language. They titled this stage of the journey “open,” because, “God walks with us to pour out mercy to the open and well-disposed heart,” the pilgrim guidebook said.

“It was really cool seeing all the people (and) how they have it for everyone so they can speak in their own language,” said Brianna Jacobson, a sophomore at St. Mary’s University in Winona, Minnesota.

Kirsten Rotz, the campus minister with the group from St. Mary’s, said the experience was “another reminder of the universal church,” because it is the same sacrament as at home.

Though she was nervous to go at first, Daisy Aviles, 20, of Houston, said afterward, “It feels like a relief being able to have confessed.”

After the pilgrims received absolution, they walked through the “Rejoice” section, past volunteers cheering “felicidades!” (congratulations). Some volunteers gave the pilgrims hugs, and others took pictures with them to celebrate.

“It is a joy to reconcile with the Lord,” said Miriam Nieto, a volunteer from Panama City. “Some of them come with a broken heart, (but) after they go to reconciliation, they become a new person. Then we give them a hug to celebrate.”

Meanwhile, near the entrance of the park, the Hindu Community of Panama City gave the World Youth Day pilgrims a different type of grace — a free cold bottle of water in the midst of the 90-degree heat.

“We want to be a part of the great event happening in Panama,” said Vipul Patel, one of the volunteers from the community, who noted that Pope Francis values harmony, peace and love, and “Hinduism has the same thinking.”

“We are giving water, because we know Panama is hot,” he said. “We want to give a small gift to the pilgrims (of World Youth Day).”

Related Post

Students attend a prayer vigil Jan. 23 at a church in Marion, Ky., after a 15-year-old boy opened fire with a handgun that day at Marshall County High School. Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, called for prayers for the victims killed and injured in a pair of school shootings in Kentucky and Italy High School in Texas Jan. 22. (CNS photo/Harrison McClary, Reuters)

USCCB president calls for prayer after pair of school shootings

Posted by - January 27, 2018 0
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston called for prayers for the victims killed and injured in a…
Father Gregory Keller, seen here around 1924, served as a parish priest while making inventions for his brother-in-law's candy company in Georgia. Father Keller, a native of Little Rock, Ark., had a hand in creating the candy cane, a treat that is especially popular at Christmastime. (CNS photo/Diocese of Little Rock Archives)

Priest’s ‘sweet secret’: He invented machine that ‘hooked’ the candy cane

Posted by - December 30, 2017 0
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (CNS) — An Arkansas priest-inventor had a hand in creating the candy canes that you know and…
Franciscan Sister Therese Carew, head of Christian Help in Kermit, W.Va., poses in the clothing store July 25. For nearly 25 years, the center has had a presence in Kermit providing free clothing as well as a food from its pantry, furniture and household items, and, when possible, financial assistance to help with utilities, rent, medication, gasoline, propane and kerosene. The nondenominational outreach center, supported by donations and grants, helps low- to no-income residents. (CNS photo/Colleen Rowan, The Catholic Spirt)

Franciscan sisters run emergency lifeline for needy in West Virginia

Posted by - August 11, 2018 0
KERMIT, W.Va. (CNS) — On a rainy July afternoon in Kermit, a local woman sifted through a table of donated…
Shirley Squires of Guilford, Vt., stands near a cabinet that holds only a fraction of her Nativity set collection Oct. 23, 2019. Squires, a parishioner of St. Michael Church in Brattleboro, has collected more than 1,500 Nativity sets. (CNS photo/Cori Fugere Urban, Vermont Catholic)

Nativity sets keep Christ in Christmas year-round for Vermont Catholic

Posted by - December 20, 2019 0
GUILFORD, Vt. (CNS) — Christmas comes early to Shirley Squires’ Guilford home. Actually, it never quiet leaves her home if…