A special Mass was also celebrated in St. Peter’s Square on Sunday by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, until recently the Vatican’s secretary of state. Parolin is considered a possible contender to be the next pope because of his prominence in the Catholic hierarchy.
“The shepherd whom the Lord gave to his people, Pope Francis, has ended his earthly life and has left us,” Parolin said in his homily, delivered on the first Sunday after Easter. “The grief at his departure, the sense of sadness that assails us, the turmoil we feel in our hearts, the sense of bewilderment: We are experiencing all of this, like the apostles grieving over the death of Jesus.”
The Mass was attended by a crowd estimated at 200,000, among them many young people who originally came to Rome for what was supposed to be the canonization of the first millennial saint, Carlo Acutis, during special holy days devoted to teenagers. Many groups of youths, some in scouting uniforms, attended Francis’ funeral Saturday and again filled St. Peter’s Square on Sunday.
No date has yet been set for the conclave, but it’s expected to start between May 5 and May 10. Cardinals who traveled to Rome for Francis’ funeral will be meeting regularly this week ahead of the conclave as they start to chart a way forward for the 1.4 billion-strong Catholic Church.
Francis chose his place of burial in St. Mary Major Basilica, near an icon of the Madonna that he revered, because it reflects his “humble, simple and essential” life, the archbishop who administers the basilica said Friday.
“Being able to see the pope and his tombstone today, it was really beautiful,” said Amaya Morris, a tourist from Los Angeles. “I thought it was amazing that he wanted to be buried here in this basilica. Out of all of the ones, he chose this one.”