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pope francis visit to new york

Pope Francis Visits NYC: Where He Will Be, and Where You Should Go Instead

Pope Francis will arrive in New York City on Thursday evening, marking the beginning of one of the biggest logistical SNAFU's the city has faced in decades. Never mind the United Nations General Assembly, which is convening this week on the East Side of Manhattan; it's the Pontiff's first United States visit that will reroute thousands of New Yorkers, as entire blocks are closed to traffic and some of the city's most visited landmarks are shut off to the general public. So where, exactly, should you avoid if you're looking to skirt the mass of humanity His Holiness will draw to New York City? Good question. We've mapped the street closures that will be in effect throughout the two-day Papal extravaganza , as well as attractions to visit in lieu of the destinations the Holy Father will himself be gracing.

His New York schedule (copied from here ) is below, along with maps of each of the main locations. Click on the maps and streets for more details.

Thursday, September 24

5:00 p.m.: Arrive at JFK Airport. Fun fact: journalists subsidize the Pope's travels , and he's flying American Airlines within the States (yes, he's flying between D.C., NYC, and Philly).

6:30 p.m. Evening Prayer (Vespers) at St. Patrick's Cathedral

Friday, September 25

8:30 a.m.: Visit to the United Nations and Address to the United Nations General Assembly

11:30 a.m.: Multi-religious service at 9/11 Memorial and Museum, World Trade Center

4:00 p.m.: Visit to Our Lady Queen of Angels School, East Harlem

5 p.m.(ish): Pope Francis Central Park Procession. Ticketed guests will be allowed to enter starting at 11 a.m. All guests must be at their assigned gate no later than 3:30 p.m.

6:00 p.m. Mass at Madison Square Garden

Saturday, September 26

8:40 a.m. Departure JFK Airport

· The Papal Visit Is Causing a Security Nightmare on the UES [Curbed] · Curbed Maps archives [Curbed]

Brooklyn Museum

Many of Manhattan's most famous museums, including MoMA and the Met, will be all but impossible to get to while Pope Francis is in town. But the Brooklyn Museum won't be, and its current roster of exhibits—including one on sneaker culture, a Kara Walker installation, and a retrospective of the innovative Brooklyn artists FAILE—is well worth the trip.

  • Open in Google Maps

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pope francis visit to new york

New York City’s best museum gift shops

Flushing Meadows-Corona Park

Thanks to the Papal procession on Friday (and the security leading up to it), Central Park will be a no-go this week. Instead, head to Queens and visit Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, which is even larger than Central Park, and has just as many cool things to do: check out the iconic Unisphere, wander around the dilapidated New York State Pavilion, or check out institutions like the New York Hall of Science and the Queens Botanical Garden.

A picnic area. There is a barbecue grill in the foreground with food that is cooking. In the distance are colorful umbrellas and people eating alongside a river. There is a sunset.

The best New York parks for barbecues and picnics

Outdoors and Online: 20 of New York City's Free Wi-Fi Spots

Queens Museum

While you're at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, be sure to take a detour to the Queens Museum. It's located in the former New York City Building, originally constructed for the 1939 World's Fair. At one point, the building was the headquarters of the United Nations (whose current complex will be a no-fly-zone because of the Pope); now, it hosts innovative, borough-focused exhibits. It's also home to The Panorama of the City of New York , a scale model of the five boroughs that's one of the most fascinating exhibits in the city. [Photo by Max Touhey]

pope francis visit to new york

26 best things to do in NYC right now

Interior of a vintage subway car, with brown wicker seats and old advertisements on the walls.

The 29 best things to do in New York City with kids

Prospect Park

Or you could visit Prospect Park, which has the added bonus of being another New York City park designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, the architects of Central Park. Head to the Vale of Cashmere, one of the quietest spots within the park , if you need a place for peaceful reflection. [Photo by Monica Berger]

pope francis visit to new york

Prospect Park: secrets of Brooklyn’s beloved park

The Green-Wood Cemetery

It's no surprise that the recently-restored St. Patrick's Cathedral will be overtaken by Papal activity—and other popular houses of worship, like Trinity Church and St. Paul's Chapel, are also in Pope Francis's sphere of closures. If you're looking for a peaceful spot with religious (and historical) significance, go to Green-Wood: There are plenty of spots to explore, including the beautiful 1911 chapel; the grounds are serene; and there are more historical sites than you can count on both hands.

Governors Island

This is the final weekend that Governors Island will be open to the public, so make the most of it. On Thursday, there's a hard hat tour of the new hills being built, which will tower 70 feet over the island. Pro tip: Leave from the ferry landing at Pier 6 in Brooklyn Bridge Park—thanks to the Pope's visit to the World Trade Center, downtown is going to be a mess.

See Where New York City Parks Are Being Beautified & Built

Rockaway Beach

Want to get as far away from the congestion of the Pope's visit as possible? Head to the Rockaways; swimming may be off-limits at this point, but there are still plenty of activities—tacos, shopping, people-watching—to keep you occupied. There's also a small park that pays tribute to Rockaways residents lost on 9/11, located near the Beach 116th Street subway stop. [Photo by Scott Lynch]

New York Botanical Garden

The leaves may not be turning just yet at the New York Botanical Garden, but that doesn't mean it won't be a beautiful place to visit this time of year. Plus, there are only a few weeks left to check out its blockbuster Frida Kahlo exhibition, which is a good alternative if you can't get to the Museum of Modern Art this week. [Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen]

Mapping the Most Exciting New Developments Transforming The Bronx

Kings Theatre

Both Madison Square Garden and Radio City Music Hall are within the area that will basically be off-limits during the Pope's visit—and thousands of spectators will pack MSG on Friday for a papal mass. But the historic Kings Theatre in Brooklyn, which reopened this February, is well outside of the Pope's purview and is just as historic as either of those Manhattan venues. If you're an Of Monsters and Men or Jackson Browne fan, you're in luck: they're playing on Thursday and Friday, respectively.

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Pope Francis Itinerary & Schedule in DC, New York, and Philadelphia

Washington, dc     sept. 22–24.

Arrival from Cuba

His arrival at Andrews Air Force Base marks the first time the pope will set foot on U.S. soil. He will be greeted by President Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and his wife Jill.

Welcoming ceremony

Pope Francis will appear at an official welcoming ceremony on the White House South Lawn. He will meet with President Obama following the South Lawn appearance.

Vatican Pool/Getty Images

Papal parade

After leaving the White House, Pope Francis will travel in the "popemobile" along 15th Street, Constitution Avenue and 17th Street, NW. The parade will be free and open to the public on a first-come, first-served basis. Gates will be opening for the Ellipse and the National Mall at 4:00 a.m.

Meeting with U.S. bishops

His Holiness will lead a midday prayer from the Liturgy of Hours, alongside Bishops from the United States at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle.

Holy Mass and canonization of Junipero Serra

Approximately 25,000 people are expected to attend this mass and it will serve as a canonization for Franciscan missionary Junipero Serra, a Spanish-born Franciscan Friar known for starting nine Spanish missions in California in the 1700s.

George Rose/Getty Images

U.S. Capitol

Pope Francis will address a joint meeting of Congress, making him the first pope in history to do so. Video screens will be set up on the West Front of the Capitol toward the National Mall so thousands can watch the speech from outside.

Visit to the Charitable Center of St. Patrick Parish and meeting with the homeless

The pontiff will make a brief visit to the oldest Catholic church in the nation’s capital. Following the visit to St. Patrick's Parish, Pope Francis will give a blessing to clients of the St. Maria Meals program of the Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese of Washington. The pope is expected to enjoy a meal of chicken, green beans, carrots and pasta salad with the charity’s homeless clients.

Departure for New York

Pope Francis heads to the Empire State from the same base where he landed on Tuesday.

New York     Sept. 24–26

Arrival in New York

An hour later, Pope Francis arrives at JFK airport in New York City. The Diocese of Brooklyn picked five Catholic school students who will greet Pope Francis when he touches down.

Evening prayer (Vespers)

The pope will lead the evening prayer at a Vespers service held in the St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The event is only open to clergy of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, but a live stream will be available. Pope Francis will be the fourth pontiff to have visited the renowned cathedral. The young students will give the pontiff a bouquet filled with a list of prayers and good works from Catholic school students from Brooklyn and Queens.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Address to the United Nations

The United Nations is used to having high-profile attendees but Pope Francis will be breaking the mold on Friday. He is expected to address the General Assembly on strategies to combat poverty and protect the environment. His visit coincides with the UN's 70th anniversary.

Multi-religious service at 9/11 Memorial

The pontiff will visit the 9/11 Memorial site in lower Manhattan. He will then meet with local representatives of the world religions inside the museum's Foundation Hall, as part of a multi-religious meeting for peace.

Justin Lane-Pool/Getty Images

Visit to Our Lady Queen of Angels School

Pope Francis will then visit a third grade class at Our Lady Queen of Angels, an elementary school in East Harlem.

Papal procession

A trip to “The Big Apple” wouldn’t be complete without a stroll through Central Park, so Pope Francis will motorcade between 72nd and 60th streets. More than 93,000 people entered a lottery for a free pair of tickets to the processional, and 80,000 tickets were given out.

The pope will hold Mass in the same famous arena that houses playoff games and sold-out concerts. Madison Square Garden can hold up to 20,000 people.

Departure for Philadelphia

Pope will travel by closed car to a downtown heliport, to catch a helicopter to JFK.

Philadelphia     Sept. 26–27

Arrival in Philadelphia

Philadelphia’s Archbishop Charles Chaput, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf and the mayor of Philly Michael Nutter will roll out the red carpet for the Catholic leader. Pope Francis will be the second pope to visit the city.

This Mass is closed to the public and tickets have been limited to 1,600 people. The cathedral is the mother church of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the largest Catholic church in the state.

John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Visit to Independence Mall

Standing in front of America’s birthplace, the pope will give a speech about immigration and religious freedom. Following his speech, Francis plans on touring Independence Hall, which is expected to include a stop at the Liberty Bell.

Festival of families

The Festival of Families is the closing ceremony for the World Meetings of Families conference. Actor Mark Wahlberg will be hosting the outdoor ceremony and performers include Aretha Franklin, Andrea Bocelli, and the Fray. The pope will watch the celebration, hear from six families from different continents and give a speech.

St. Charles is where Pope Francis will sleep while he’s in Philly. The seminary prepares men for the priesthood and the diaconate.

Visit to Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility

Pope Francis will visit the city’s largest jail, where most of the inmates are serving a maximum of two years or awaiting trial. The pope will give a speech in the gymnasium and after he’ll individually greet some of the 100 prisoners.

Holy Mass concluding the World Meeting of Families

Before the pope gives the Holy Mass, he’ll ride down the mile-long street in his “popemobile.” This open-air Mass is the main event and is expected to attract over a million people.

Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Visit with organizers, volunteers and benefactors of the World Meeting of Families

Approximately 500 people will bid Pope Francis farewell as he heads back to the Vatican. Vice President Biden and his family will lead the ceremony before His Holiness boards his return flight.

Departure for Rome

Arrivederci Pope Francis! The pope will hold an on-board press conference before taking off. His plane is slated to touch down on Monday.

pope francis visit to new york

General Secretariat

Papal visit 2015, pope francis' 2015 visit to the u.s..

Love Is Our Mission Logo - 2015 Papal Visit

Here on this page, you will find photos, videos, resources, the text of speeches, and other special moments from Pope Francis' 2015 visit to the United States.

Virtual Pilgrimage (PDF)

Pope Francis visits America

Pope Francis visits America

Complete Catholic News Service video coverage of the historic visit to the United States by Pope Francis in September 2015.

9 Ways People Participated in Pope Francis's 2015 US Visit

Hundreds of Thousands saw Pope Francis when he visited the US in September, 2015. Here are the some of the ways those who did not get to see him in person "virtually" participated in the events.

  • Took part in a "Virtual Pilgrimage" with  these prayers  as the Holy Father made his way to more than a dozen different locations in Washington, DC, New York City, and Philadelphia.
  • Learned about the places Pope Francis visited by following his journey on this  interactive map .
  • Become "Pope Francis literate" by reading his two encyclical letters:  Lumen Fidei  and  Laudato Si
  • Stayed up-to-date and read insightful commentary by connecting with the only news source founded and supported by the US Bishops,  Catholic News Service . See the latest in the CNS feed below.
  • Held a Papal Visit Watch Party using the USCCB live stream in English with audio commentary here or watched  video on demand .
  • Received the latest est papal visit news and more by downloading the  Catholic Church app. Responded to Pope Francis's call to enounter by reaching out to those in need, supporting parish or community charitable efforts, acting to promote life, human dignity, families and religious freedom, and by caring for creation.
  • Invited a non-Catholic or non-practicing Catholic friend to Mass following the pope's visit.
  • Engaged in the USCCB's award-winning social media effort with the hash tags #PopeinUS and #PapaEnUSA. 
  • Supported the many people who worked to make Pope Francis' historic US visit a success by praying for them to the Blessed Virgin under her title   Mary, Undoer of Knots  (a favorite of Pope Francis).

Liturgical Texts for Masses and Prayer Services

Media guide, resources, speeches, and homilies, papal-visit-2015-pocket-media-guide.

Love is Our Mission - Papal Visit 2015 Logo

Papal-Visit2015-Media-Resources

Wednesday-9-23-mass-canonization-serra, wednesday-9-23-midday-prayer-st-matthew, thursday-9-24-vespers-st-patrick, friday-9-25-multi-religious-ground-zero, friday-9-25-mass-madison-square-garden, world-meeting-families-2015-congress-liturgies, papal-mass-program-sunday-9-27-15, papal-mass-program-saturday-9-26-15, papal visit speeches and homilies, wednesday, september 23, 2015.

  • White House Welcome Ceremony, speech
  • St. Matthew's Cathedral, Midday Prayer with US Bishops,homily
  • Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Square, Holy Mass of Canonization, homily

Thursday, September 24, 2015

  • United States Capitol, Visit to US Congress, speech
  • St. Patrick's Parish (Washington, DC), Encounter with the Poor, speech
  • St. Patrick's Cathedral (New York, NY), Vespers, homily 

Friday, September 25, 2015

  • United Nations, Meeting with UN Staff, speech
  • United Nations, UN General Assembly, speech 
  • Ground Zero Memorial, Interreligious meeting, speech
  • Harlem School, Meeting with Immigrant Families and Children, speech 
  • Madison Square Garden, Holy Mass, homily 

Saturday, September 26, 2015

  • Cathedral of St. Peter & Paul, Holy Mass, homily
  • Independence National Park, Religious Liberty Meeting, speech
  • Benjamin Franklin Pkwy., Festival of Families, speech 

Sunday, September 27, 2015

  • Meeting with Victims of Sexual Abuse
  • St. Martin of Tours Chapel, Meeting with WMOF Bishops, speech
  • Curran-Fromhold Penitentiary, Meeting with prisoners, speech 
  • Benjamin Franklin Pkwy., Holy Mass (WMOF Closing Mass), homily
  • Atlantic Aviation (PHL Airport), Greeting of WMOF Organizers, speech 

Catechetical Resources

  • Pope Francis for Children  ( Español )
  • Pope Francis for Adults  ( Español )
  • Blessed Junípero Serra  ( Español )

Children’s Activities

  • Please Pray for Me – Coloring Sheet
  • Blessed Junípero Serra – Facebook Page  ( Español )
  • Coat of Arms Project  ( Español )

Prayer Resources

  • Prayer of Anticipation  ( Español )

Info Sheets

  • Saints Among Us in the Archdiocese of Washington  ( Español )

Lesson Plans

  • Who Was Peter? ( Español )
  • Who is Pope Francis? ( Español )
  • What is the Mission of the Pope? ( Español )
  • Why is this Visit Important? ( Español )

Grades 9-12

Adults catechesis on pope francis.

  • 3 Lessons ( Español )

Papal Visits to the United States

Pope Francis  was the fourth pope to visit the theUnited States. His apostolic journey to the United States took place from September 22-27, 2015, and he visited Washington, New York and Philadelphia. Pope Francis' visit was the tenth time a pope made an apostolic journey to the United States.

Other pastoral visits from previous popes are:

Pope Benedict XVI visited the United States in 2008. His apostolic visit, April 15-20, took him to Washington and New York.

Pope John Paul II visited the United States seven times:

  • 1979 (10/1 – 10/7) Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Washington and Des Moines, Iowa.
  • 1981 (2/27) Anchorage, Alaska – stopover/several hours 
  • 1984 (5/2) Fairbanks, Alaska – stopover/several hours
  • 1987 (9/10 – 9/19) Miami, Columbia, SC, New Orleans, San Antonio, Phoenix, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Detroit 
  • 1993 (8/12 – 8/15) Denver (World Youth Day)
  • 1995 (10/4 – 10/8) Newark, NJ, New York (including Brooklyn), Baltimore
  • 1999 (1/26 – 1/27) St. Louis

In October 1965, Paul VI became the first pope to visit the United States. His trip included a first time papal visit to the United Nations.

Pope Francis was the fourth pope to meet with a U.S. president during a visit to the United States. Other popes who have met with a U.S. president during a U.S. visit are:

Pope Benedict XVI:

  • April 16, 2008, on the occasion of Pope Benedict XVI's 81st birthday, President George W. Bush welcomed Pope Benedict to the White House. This was the second time in history that a pope visited the White House.

Pope John Paul II met with a U.S. president during each of the following visits to the United States:

  • 1979 – President Jimmy Carter (The White House, Washington)
  • 1984 – President Ronald Reagan (Fairbanks, Alaska: first time a U.S. president and pope met outside of the White House or Vatican)
  • 1987 – President Ronald Reagan (Los Angeles)
  • 1993 – President Bill Clinton(Denver)
  • 1995 – President Bill Clinton (Newark, NJ)
  • 1999 – President Bill Clinton (St. Louis)

Pope Paul VI:

  • 1965 -- President Lyndon Johnson (New York City)

Pope Francis' visit to the United Nations was the fourth time a pope addresses the United Nations while visiting the United States.

Pope Francis

  • United Nations Headquarters (New York),September 25, 2015

Benedict XVI

  • United Nations Headquarters (New York), April 18, 2008

John Paul II

  • United Nations Headquarters (New York), October 2, 1979
  • United Nations Headquarters (New York), October 5, 1995

Pope Paul VI

  • United Nations Headquarters (New York), October 4, 1965

*Sources: www.usccb.org , Vatican.va

The New York Times

Live coverage | highlights of pope francis’ visit to the united states, highlights of pope francis’ visit to the united states.

By The New York Times September 23, 2015 September 23, 2015

A Whirlwind Papal Journey Concludes

  • The crowded agenda of the Pope’s first visit to the United States ended in Philadelphia, where he met with victims of sexual abuse, spoke to inmates and celebrated a Mass in the heart of the city.
  • Sunday culminated a six-day, three-city tour , where, in his public appearances, he continued to call for unity and underscore the importance of family.
  • While hundreds of thousands of people were moved by the opportunity to pray with the pope, he left America with a blessing and his signature request: “Pray for me.”

So Long, America

Pope Francis waves goodbye as he boards a flight back to the Vatican.

One More Embrace: ‘God Bless America’

I embrace all of you in the Lord and I entrust you to the maternal care of Mary Immaculate, Patroness of the United States. I will pray for you and your families, and I ask you, please, to pray for me. May God bless you all. God bless America!

– Pope Francis, in final remarks before returning home

This Land is Blessed

This land has been blessed with tremendous gifts and opportunities. I pray that you may all be good and generous stewards of the human and material resources entrusted to you.

– Pope Francis, in final remarks before returning home.

A Final Ode to Family

I pray that our days of prayer and reflection on the importance of the family for a healthy society will inspire families to continue to strive for holiness and to see the Church as their constant companion, whatever the challenges they may face.

– Pope Francis, in final remarks before heading home

Mass Concluded, Pope Francis Makes Way to Airport

Crowds watched Pope Francis on the large screens at his final mass in the United States.

Pope Francis headed to the airport, having concluded the final and largest Mass of his trip.

He continued to touch on themes of unity and family in his last homily and thanked the crowd of thousands who gathered to pray with him in Philadelphia.

“Thank you very much for your participation and for your love of family,” Francis said. “And I ask you pray for me. Don’t forget.”

The pope has one more public appearance to make before his plane takes off. He will be greeted by Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. as well as organizers and volunteers of the World Meeting of Families event at the airport.

A Baby Is Blessed, and a Mother Is Overcome

Narcisa Chuquirima only wanted to see Pope Francis. That would have been more than enough.

She had traveled to Philadelphia from Newark with her husband, her daughter and two of her four sons, including four-month-old Noah Gabriel. They were part of a group from St. Aloysius Parish that had come to participate in the weekend’s events.

“To see him is a blessing,” she said.

At about midday on Sunday, the group – numbering about 230 and wearing matching dark blue T-shirts – made their way through the streets of downtown Philadelphia, passed through the security perimeter and, despite the tens of thousands who had already poured into the area, somehow found a large patch of empty grass along the police barricades lining Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

“It was ready for us,” said Ms. Chuquirima, 37, a daycare worker and an Ecuadorean immigrant like her husband Amable Chuquirima, 44. They laid out cardboard and plastic sheeting and got comfortable, hoping that they had correctly guessed the pope’s route to the Mass.

As they waited, Ms. Chuquirima, came up with a plan: Should the pope drive by, she told her group, everyone should yell the pope’s name in unison in the hope he might turn to them.

At about 3:30 p.m. they heard the distant roar of the crowd, and that sound swept closer like an approaching storm, tracking the movement of the pope’s convoy – a thunderous wave of adulation.

It was headed toward their spot of grass. Ms. Chuquirima lifted Noah Gabriel, in his baptism clothes of a white singlet and white beanie, into her arms.

The popemobile came into view, and the group saw a member of the pope’s security detail carrying a baby to the pope for a blessing.

Ms. Chuquirima allowed herself a thought: Maybe they would also pick Noah Gabriel.

“But I didn’t think he would stop,” she recalled. She kept yelling and whistling all the same. “Papa! Papa!” she hollered, using the Spanish word for pope.

Francis was looking in the other direction as he drew abreast of the group but one of his security guards spotted Noah Gabriel and headed toward him.

“As he got close, my legs started shaking,” Ms. Chuquirima recalled. “Even as I tell the story now, my legs are shaking.”

The baby was lifted from her arms and, overwhelmed with emotion, she clutched the guardrail to prevent herself from collapsing. “I was yelling and crying, saying, ‘God loves me. God loves me.’ I feel like God touched me, he gave me his hand.”

She was so overcome with emotion, she was unable to see what happened next: The security guard carried Noah Gabriel to the pope, who touched and kissed his head. The group from San Aloysius Church was ecstatic.

Moments later, the baby was back in his mother’s arms.

“I felt like my son was an angel,” Ms. Chuquirima said. Still overwhelmed by the memory an hour and a half after the event, she started crying once again. “It’s a blessing for our family, for our parish. I feel like God chose this baby, to be a martyr, to be something special.”

“We feel like he’s going to save us from the waters, from the high tides,” said Ms. Chuquirima’s daughter, Jeannie, 14.

“We’re a very humble family,” Mr. Chuquirima, a carpenter, added. “We work day in and day out to support the family. It was a real blessing.”

Pope Francis Seen as Inspiring Outreach to the Vulnerable

Pope Francis was the first pope to visit an American prison.

Bishop Edward J. Burns of Juneau, Alaska, said of Francis’ visit, “It was not only a home run. It was a grand slam.”

He said in an interview that it was inspiring to see the pope reach across barricades to embrace people in need and people who are suffering.

“He stops and reaches out to those who suffer, and it’s an example and a model for us as bishops as well,” he said.

Praying with the Pope

David Alexander Cantu prays during the Mass celebrated by Pope Francis along Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia.

On Overcoming Evil

Pope Francis celebrated his final Mass of his visit to the United States on Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia.

Anyone who wants to bring into this world a family which teaches children to be excited by every gesture aimed at overcoming evil – a family which shows that the Spirit is alive and at work – will encounter our gratitude and our appreciation.

– Pope Francis, in the homily at his final Mass in Philadelphia

Love Is the Little Things

Love is shown by little things, by attention to small daily signs which make us feel at home. Faith grows when it is lived and shaped by love. That is why our families, our homes, are true domestic churches.

– Pope Francis, in his homily at a final Mass in Philadelphia

An Openness to Faith

A large crowd listened as Pope Francis delivered the final mass.

Jesus encountered hostility from people who did not accept what he said and did. For them, his openness to the honest and sincere faith of many men and women who were not part of God’s chosen people seemed intolerable.

Pope Francis, in his homily at a final Mass in Philadelphia

Live Video of the Mass on Benjamin Franklin Parkway

pope francis visit to new york

Pilgrims Pack Streets as Pope Rides to Mass

Crowds wait to go through security checkpoints before entering the Benjamin Franklin Parkway for Pope Francis' Mass.

Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims packed the long boulevard leading to the makeshift sanctuary where Pope Francis is celebrating the concluding Mass of the World Meeting of Families on Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

Waving Mexican, Argentine, Vatican and other flags from around the world, the throng cheered as the pope, standing in his popemobile, took a spin around the boulevard, blessed babies and, as the choir struck up with “hallelujah,” climbed out to meet the people pressed against the gates.

Victims Suggest Church Is Shifting Debate on Abuse

The five victims of child sexual abuse who met with Pope Francis on Sunday morning included some who had been abused by relatives or educators, not Roman Catholic clergy — a deliberate decision made to show that the church is taking a “larger perspective” on the problem of sexual abuse, said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman.

Victims of clergy sex abuse and their advocates saw something less benign at work: a subtle but unmistakable effort by the Vatican to shift the terms of the debate, to show “that it’s not always the church’s fault,” as Marci A. Hamilton, a law professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University who has represented hundreds of victims of clerical sexual abuse, put it.

Church officials have argued that sexual abuse of children is not confined to the Catholic Church, pointing out that it infects other institutions and other religions as well. The pope may not have explicitly said the same, the advocates said, but the meeting’s inclusion of people abused by teachers and relatives as well as priests spoke volumes.

“He almost seems to be trying to deflect attention somewhere else,” said Barbara Blaine, the president of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, the country’s most prominent support and advocacy group for victims of clergy sexual abuse. “Of course those who are sexually violated suffer horribly, regardless of who the perpetrator is. But the problem that we see is that we think Pope Francis has both the authority and the responsibility to stop the sexual violence in the church, and he’s failing to do that.”

The Italian Feast That Could’ve Been

While “thrilled” that the pope stopped at St. Joseph’s University, the Rev. Philip Florio was disappointed that Francis did not add a visit to Old St. Joseph’s Church to his itinerary.

“I’m admittedly disappointed that he didn’t stop here,” Father Florio said, noting that his parish is the oldest Catholic church in Philadelphia.

“Besides, as an Italian-American I would’ve had ravioli, meatballs and Italian sausage waiting for him,” he said. “It’s a Sunday after all, and he’s of Italian heritage. We usually have a big Sunday meal!”

Smile for the Smartphones

Pope Francis on his way to deliver mass Mass at the World Meeting of Families.

Sydney Archbishop Reflects on Call to Strengthen Family Ties

Pope Francis’ call on Sunday morning for bishops to strengthen their familial ties did not go unnoticed.

Anthony Fisher, the archbishop of Sydney, Australia, who was in town for the events, said the speech gave him plenty to reflect upon.

“I think it’s interesting that he was insisting that we had to rebuild or renew our covenant with families, suggesting that we maybe weren’t as close to families as we should be as bishops, and there is an important challenge in that for us to reflect on,” he said. “Is it the case that we are too far removed from our families and their lives?”

He also addressed he pope’s message about the challenges of living within modern society.

“I think it has been a message of his on several occasions, including when he addressed the U.S. bishops, about not always being in contest, not approaching family life always with a critique of what’s wrong with the world, the way families are in the world today,” he said.

When asked if he had heard much of a critique from the pope about social issues including same-sex marriage, the archbishop said, “No. Well, he’s touched on them but very gently and I think that’s — he’s probably modeling what he is calling the bishops to when he is saying to not be permanently in a posture of contest with our surrounding culture. That seems to be what he is proposing to us.”

The archbishop said the pope seemed to be asking “whether he thinks something more friendly and dialogical relationship rather than what people have called the culture wars is more likely to win hearts and minds.”

On Sale This Fall: The Pope’s Greatest Hits

You’ve seen the tour, now you can buy the album.

As The Times has reported, the pope is scheduled to release an album called “Wake Up!” on Nov. 27, after his whirlwind United States trip, during which he has been greeted by hundreds of thousands of well-wishers. The album features the pope’s speeches set to rock, pop and Gregorian chants, and will raise money for a support fund for refugees.

Next Up From Pope Francis? An Album, of Course

Next Up From Pope Francis? An Album, of Course

By ANDREW R. CHOW

After his whirlwind United States tour, Pope Francis will release a Vatican-approved album, which features his speeches set to rock and sacred music.

Cheers From Students at St. Joseph’s University

Cheers erupted from a crowd of several hundred people, mostly students, when the pope’s Fiat arrived on the campus of St. Joseph’s University, a Jesuit university in Philadelphia.

The stop, announced publicly only shortly before he arrived, allowed for the most famous member of the Jesuit religious order to honor fellow Jesuits who were hoping for such acknowledgment. On other trips abroad, Francis has visited his Jesuit brothers.

On the edge of a campus lawn, the pope greeted the well-wishers, many of whom carried cellphones to record the event.

In a nod to his frequent outreach to those practicing other faiths, a highlight of his stop at the university was to view a newly installed statue that commemorates the tie between Catholic and Jewish faiths.

The statue, “Synagoga and Ecclesia in Our Time,” was created by Joshua Koffman, a local artist, and dedicated last week. According to the University, the statue was erected to commemorate “the 50th anniversary of Nostra Aetate, the Vatican II document that transformed the relationship between the Catholic and Jewish faiths.”

As he blessed the statue, he was joined by an old friend and fellow Argentine, Rabbi Abraham Skorka.

The trip lasted less than 10 minutes, and ended with the pope waving good-bye from the back of his car.

. @Pontifex is on our campus? Is this real life? pic.twitter.com/tr7cuhTIuE — Saint Joseph's (@saintjosephs) September 27, 2015

Awaiting Final Mass, Pope’s Message Resonates

Susan McNeil, the director of Marriage and Family Life at the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, was carrying a folding chair towards the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, where Francis would give his final mass in America later in the day. She said that she took Francis’ advice in his speech to bishops earlier in the morning to heart.

“He told them embrace families,” said Ms. McNeil, an attendee of the World Meeting of Families here. “It’s a reminder and we all need a reminder now and then. When you are a bishop you have a lot of meetings and governance, I know our bishop is very busy. It’s a reminder not to forget why I’m there.”

Her friend, Grace Urbanski, the director of Apostleship of Prayer, a children’s ministry in Milwaukee, called Francis the “pastor of the U.S. parish.” And said that her own priest often dined in the homes of his parish’s families to stay grounded in the real challenges they faced. She said “bishops don’t get that chance. They are invited to a lot of fancy dinners” and had last chance to get “messy.”

Asked about the pope’s reemphasis on “appreciation” over “complaints” of the family, on a pastoral approach instead of reiterating doctrine, Ms. McNeil said “it a both, and situation.” She said “none of us meet the ideal” and the mission is to “continue to draw them closer to us and not push them away.”

“It’s come as you are, but don’t stay there,” said Ms. Urbanski.

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Pope Francis in New York gets on US Marines helicopter at JFK airport. Thursday September 24, 2015 Debbie Egan-Chin/New York Daily News POPE FRANCIS

New York City Mayor Bill de blasio stands with New...

New York City Mayor Bill de blasio stands with New York Senator Charles Schumer (R) ahead of the arrival of Pope Francis at St. Patrick's Cathedral for evening prayers in New York City on Sept. 24, 2015.

President Barack Obama walk out of the White House in...

President Barack Obama walk out of the White House in Washington on Sept. 23, 2015, to greet Pope Francis for a state arrival ceremony on the South Lawn.

Pope Francis waves during a parade to an open-air mass...

AFP PHOTO/JEWEL SAMADJEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images

Pope Francis waves during a parade to an open-air mass at the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sept. 27, 2015.

Pope Francis waves to the enthusiastic crowd as he arrives...

Pope Francis waves to the enthusiastic crowd as he arrives at the Festival of Families rally along Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015.

Pope Francis addresses a joint session of Congress on Sept....

JIM WATSON/Getty Images

Pope Francis, accompanied by Cardinal Timothy Dolan prays with a...

Pope Francis, accompanied by Cardinal Timothy Dolan prays with a group of students as he visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem in New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

Immigration reform activists hold a banner in front of the...

Immigration reform activists hold a banner in front of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Sept. 24, 2015 before Pope Francis addresses a Joint Session of Congress on the third day of his six-day visit to the US.

Pope Francis arrives at the 9/11 Memorial to lead a...

Pope Francis arrives at the 9/11 Memorial to lead a multi-faith service on Sept. 25, 2015.

Sisters with Handmade at the Heart of Jesus, out of...

AP Photo/David Goldman

Sisters with Handmade at the Heart of Jesus, out of New Ulm, Minn., cheer as Pope Francis drives by during a parade along Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Sept. 26, 2015, in Philadelphia.

Pope Francis, lower center, celebrates his final mass in Philadelphia...

Matt Rourke/AP Photo

Pope Francis, lower center, celebrates his final mass in Philadelphia during his six-day visit to the United States on Sept. 27, 2015.

Pope Francis smiles as he addresses inmates during his visit...

Pope Francis smiles as he addresses inmates during his visit to Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility in Philadelphia on Sept. 27, 2015.

People wait for the arrival of Pope Francis at the...

People wait for the arrival of Pope Francis at the White House on Sept. 23, 2015 in Washington, DC. President Barack Obama will host Pope Francis at the White House for the first time Wednesday, warmly embracing the Catholic pontiff seen as both a moral authority and potent political ally.

Jennifer Hudson sings "Hallelujah" prior to a mass led by...

Jennifer Hudson sings "Hallelujah" prior to a mass led by Pope Francis at Madison Square Garden on Sept. 25, 2015 in New York City.

Pope Francis looks out the window of his plane before...

Pope Francis looks out the window of his plane before departing Philadelphia on September 27, 2015 at the end of his six-day visit to the US.

Pope Francis traveled to the United States for the first...

John Minchillo/AP Photo

Pope Francis traveled to the United States for the first time on Sept. 22, 2015 for a five-day tour of Washington, D.C., New York City and Philadelphia. During his visit, the Pope met with President Obama and addressed Congress for the first time, particularly urging the country to open its arms to refugees and advocating for the abolition of the death penalty. In New York City he visited the 9/11 memorial, held mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral and spoke at the U.N. General Assembly, speaking mainly about climate change. His visit to each city brought thousands of excited spectators and increased security.

Pope Francis rides through Central Park in the popemobile on...

Pope Francis rides through Central Park in the popemobile on Sept. 25, 2015 in New York City. The Pope is in New York on a two-day visit, speaking earlier at the United Nations General-Assembly and celebrating Mass in Madison Square Garden.

Pope Francis, center left, blesses cancer-survivor Sandra Lee, partner of...

Pope Francis, center left, blesses cancer-survivor Sandra Lee, partner of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, at the South Pool of the 9/11 Memorial in downtown Manhattan on Sept. 25, 2015, in New York.

Pope Francis engages well wishes including Gerard Gubatan of Brooklyn...

Pope Francis engages well wishes including Gerard Gubatan of Brooklyn after arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Sept. 24, 2015, in New York.

Pope Francis arrived in Pope mobile to St. Patrick's Cathedral...

Todd Maisel/New York Daily News

Pope Francis arrived in Pope mobile to St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan. HERE, the Pope leaves in a Fiat. 9-24-15 (Todd Maisel/New York Daily News)

Pope Francis makes his way down 5th Avenue in New...

AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool

The Rev. Jesse Jackson arrives at the Festival of Families on Sept. 26, 2015, ahead of Pope Francis' arrival in Philadelphia.

Pope Francis arrives by helicopter to the Wall Street Heliport...

Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News

Pope Francis arrives by helicopter to the Wall Street Heliport in Manhattan, New York City on Thursday, September 24 2015. (Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News)

School children wait for Pope Francis to depart the Apostolic...

School children wait for Pope Francis to depart the Apostolic Nunciature, the Vatican's diplomatic mission in Washington on Sept. 23, 2015. President Barack will host Pope Francis during a state visit at the White House.

Attendees, waiting hours to hear Pope Francis speak at Independence...

REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Attendees, waiting hours to hear Pope Francis speak at Independence Hall later in the day, watch on large screens as he celebrates mass at a nearby cathedral in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sept. 26, 2015.

Pope Francis presides over evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral...

Alex Brandon/AP Photo

Pope Francis holds the head of a small child as he leans from the popemobile during a parade on Sept. 23, 2015, in Washington.

Pope Francis attends a multi-religious service for the victims of...

Pope Francis attends a multi-religious service for the victims of 9/11 in New York on Sept. 25, 2015. Pope Francis, who has built a wide global following for his reform-minded views, is on a five-day official visit to the US.

Thousands of people gathered at Benjamin Franklin Parkway for the...

Michael Perez/AP Photo

Thousands of people gathered at Benjamin Franklin Parkway for the Papal Mass on Sept. 27, 2015. Pope Francis is in Philadelphia for the last leg of his six-day visit to the United States.

Pope Francis' cape is lifted by the wind as he...

VINCENZO PINTO/AFP/Getty Images

Pope Francis' cape is lifted by the wind as he speaks at Independence Hall in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015.

People watch Pope Francis on a large screen television from...

People watch Pope Francis on a large screen television from the West Front of the Capitol in Washington on Sept. 24, 2015, as the Pope speaks inside before a joint meeting of Congress. The Pope Francis is the first pontiff in history to speak before a joint meeting of Congress.

Nuns share a joke as they eagerly await Pope Francis...

Nuns share a joke as they eagerly await Pope Francis at St. Patrick's Cathedral for an evening prayer service on Sept. 24, 2015.

Harry Connick Jr. sings during a pre-Mass program in preparation...

Harry Connick Jr. sings during a pre-Mass program in preparation for the arrival of Pope Francis who is to celebrate Mass at Madison Square Garden on Sept. 25, 2015.

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is in attendance at...

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is in attendance at St. Patrick's Cathedral in anticipation of Pope Francis' evening prayer service on Sept. 24, 2015.

Pope Francis blesses an inmate as he meets with prisoners...

Pope Francis blesses an inmate as he meets with prisoners at Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility in Philadelphia on Sept. 27, 2015.

The religious flock to St. Patrick's Cathedral to see Pope...

The religious flock to St. Patrick's Cathedral to see Pope Francis's evening prayer service on Thursday September 24, 2015  - (Susan Watts/New York Daily News)

Pope Francis is accompanied by Cardinal Timothy Dolan (c.) as...

Pope Francis is accompanied by Cardinal Timothy Dolan (c.) as he visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem in New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

Inocencia Polanco, of Philadelphia and originally form the Dominican Republic,...

Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo

Inocencia Polanco, of Philadelphia and originally form the Dominican Republic, center in hat, joined by Freddy Espana of Honduras, left in striped shirt, and Maria Zuleta of Columbia, low center in white, pray a novena together as they crowd into Independence Mall ahead of Pope Francis' speech outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015.

Pope Francis embraces Cardinal Timothy Dolan after presiding over evening...

Pope Francis embraces Cardinal Timothy Dolan after presiding over evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City on Sept. 24, 2015.

Marie Eveleth, of Washington, N.J., wears earnings that spell out...

Marie Eveleth, of Washington, N.J., wears earnings that spell out 'pope' as she sells them to pedestrians around City Hall before Pope Francis comes through the area for a parade in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015.

The pontiff waves as he rides up Fith Ave. toward...

The pontiff waves as he rides up Fith Ave. toward St. Patrick's Cathedral prior to evening services.

Pope Francis takes to the stage to lead a mass...

MICHAEL APPLETON/The New York Times/POOL

Pope Francis takes to the stage to lead a mass in front of a staggering 20,000 people at Madison Square Garden on Sept. 25, 2015.

Vice President Joe Biden, second from right, and his wife...

Vice President Joe Biden, second from right, and his wife Jill Biden, left, say goodbye to Pope Francis, right, as he prepares to depart Philadelphia International Airport in Philadelphia on Sept. 27, 2015, on his way back to the Vatican.

Parishioners wait patiently for the Pope to arrive on Sept....

Parishioners wait patiently for the Pope to arrive on Sept. 24, 2015 at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan, New York.

Pope Francis waves to those gathered in Philadelphia as he...

Pope Francis waves to those gathered in Philadelphia as he makes his way to his last mass service in the US on Sept. 27, 2015.

Pope Francis is guided through the 9/11 Memorial by Former...

REUTERS/Susan Watts/Daily News/POOL

Pope Francis is guided through the 9/11 Memorial by Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg (l.) and Cardinal Timothy Dolan (r.), pictured here standing next to a segment of the radio and television antenna that was atop the North Tower.

Pope Francis arrives for the canonization Mass for Junipero Serra...

Rob Carr/Getty Images

Pope Francis arrives for the canonization Mass for Junipero Serra at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception on Sept. 23, 2015 in Washington, D.C. Junipero Serra was an 18th century Spanish Franciscan friar who founded a mission in Baja, California to bring Christianity to the indigenous population. This is the first-ever canonization by a Pope on U.S. soil.

A woman shows off her rosary while waiting outside of...

A woman shows off her rosary while waiting outside of St. Patrick's Cathedral ahead of the Pope Francis' visit to Manhattan, New York September 24, 2015. Pope Francis is scheduled to attend evening prayer services at St. Patrick's Cathedral. REUTERS/Pearl Gabel

Pope Francis arrived in the Popemobile to St. Patrick's Cathedral...

Pope Francis arrived in the Popemobile to St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan on Sept. 24, 2015.

The Combined Choirs of St. Charles Borromeo sing gospel songs...

The Combined Choirs of St. Charles Borromeo sing gospel songs prior to a mass led by Pope Francis at Madison Square Garden on Sept. 25, 2015 in New York City.

A group of nuns excitedly await Pope Francis' celebration of...

A group of nuns excitedly await Pope Francis' celebration of evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City on Sept. 24, 2015.

Pope Francis arrives in his popemobile for the Festival of...

REUTERS/Jewel Samad/POOL

Pope Francis arrives in his popemobile for the Festival of Families along Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015.

Pope Francis arrives by helicopter to the Wall Street Heliport...

Alessandra Tarantino/AP Photo

The Pope hugs a wheelchair-bound fan during the World Meeting of Families on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Sept. 26, 2015. Hundreds of thousands of Roman Catholics made the pilgrimage to Philadelphia to see Pope Francis on the last leg of his visit to the United States, where they hoped to catch a glimpse of the popular pontiff.

US President Barack Obama welcomes Pope Francis to the White...

Pope Francis waves as he departs the Apostolic Nunciature, the Vatican's diplomatic mission in Washington on Sept. 24, 2015, en route to the Capitol to address a joint meeting of Congress.

Pope Francis touches a student's face as he visits Our...

Pope Francis touches a student's face as he visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem in New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

Archbishop Charles Chaput, left, and Bishop Timothy Senior, right, listen...

Mel Evans/AP Photo

Archbishop Charles Chaput, left, and Bishop Timothy Senior, right, listen as Pope Francis, addresses a gathering in Saint Martin's Chapel at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary on Sept. 27, 2015.

Pope Francis sprinkles Holy water at the entrance to the...

Pope Francis sprinkles Holy water at the entrance to the St. Patrick's Cathedral on Sept. 24, 2015 at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan, New York.

Nuns watch as Pope Francis leads Mass attended by thousands...

Nuns watch as Pope Francis leads Mass attended by thousands of the ticketed faithful at Madison Square Garden in New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 24: Madame Tussauds New York...

Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Madame Tussauds

NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 24: Madame Tussauds New York unveils a never-before-seen Pope Francis figure with a tour around New York City in a 'Pope Mobile' to celebrate the Pope's inaugural U.S. visit on September 24, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for Madame Tussauds New York)

Pope Francis arrives by helicopter to the Wall Street Heliport...

Gardiner Anderson/New York Daily News

Pope Francis arrives by helicopter to the Wall Street Heliport in Manhattan, New York City on Sept. 24 2015.

U.S. President Barack Obama (l.) and Pope Francis watch onstage...

U.S. President Barack Obama (l.) and Pope Francis watch onstage as the "Old Guard" fife and drum corps marches past during an official welcome ceremony on the South Lawn at the White House in Washington on Sept. 23, 2015.

Pope Francis celebrates his final mass of his visit to...

Pope Francis shakes hands with Vice President Joe Biden along with U.S. President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, and other political and Catholic church leaders after arriving from Cuba on Sept. 22, 2015 at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.

Pope Francis prays at the edge of the South Pool...

REUTERS/Julio Cortez/AP/POOL

Pope Francis prays at the edge of the South Pool at the World Trade Center in New York, alongside Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Rudy Giuliani and Cardinal Timothy Dolan on Sept. 25, 2015.

Pope Francis poses with seminarians on the steps of St....

REUTERS/Tom Gralish/Pool

Pope Francis poses with seminarians on the steps of St. Martin of Tours Chapel at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sept. 27, 2015.

People wait eagerly for Pope Francis to arrive in New...

People wait eagerly for Pope Francis to arrive in New York at JFK airport. Thursday September 24, 2015 Debbie Egan-Chin/New York Daily News POPE FRANCIS

People gather along Benjamin Franklin Parkway ahead of a Mass...

People gather along Benjamin Franklin Parkway ahead of a Mass to be led by Pope Francis in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sept. 27, 2015. Pope Francis is on the final day of his trip to the United States and will conduct Mass and meet with organizers, volunteers and benefactors of the World Meeting of Families before returning to Rome this evening.

Pope Francis waits to address the United Nations in New...

Pope Francis waits to address the United Nations in New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

Filmmaker Martin Scorsese is among guests eagerly awaiting for Pope...

Filmmaker Martin Scorsese is among guests eagerly awaiting for Pope Francis to arrive for an evening prayer service at St. Patrick's Cathedral on Sept. 24, 2015.

Pope Francis takes in the view from his automobile after...

Pope Francis takes in the view from his automobile after his arrival at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on Sept. 22, 2015.

Pope Francis is welcomed onstage with applause as he arrives...

AFP PHOTO/VINCENZO PINTO

Pope Francis is welcomed onstage with applause as he arrives for the Festival of Families in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sept. 26, 2015.

Pope Francis arrives for a plenary meeting of the United...

Pope Francis arrives for a plenary meeting of the United Nations Sustainable Development Summit 2015 at United Nations headquarters in Manhattan, New York on Sept. 25, 2015.

Pope Francis visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in...

JIN LEE/Getty Images

Pope Francis visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem, in New York City on Sept. 25, 2015.

Author

As entrances go, this one was divine.

Pope Francis touched down in New York City on Thursday to the strains of “New York, New York” and began his historic 39-hour pilgrimage to the city that never sleeps by taking a drive up Fifth Ave.

Inside St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Francis paused to bless a young girl in a wheelchair and then got a standing ovation when he reached out to a group that has at times felt marginalized — the nuns who serve the church.

“To the religious women of the United States,” Francis said in his native Spanish. “What would the church be without you?”

Continuing his homily after a round of thunderous applause, the Pope said, “I wish to say thank you . . . and to tell you that I love you very much.”

LIVE BLOG: THE DAILY NEWS FOLLOWS THE POPE IN NEW YORK

When the prayer service was over, Timothy Cardinal Dolan asked the Pope to bless the recently refurbished cathedral.

“As soon as you walked through the doors, you became a New Yorker,” Dolan said to laughter and cheers. “Thank you for stopping by. Come back soon.”

Francis quickly obliged Dolan and gave a blessing, this time in English.

It was the dramatic start to Francis’ first-ever visit to New York City — a whirlwind sojourn that will take him from one end of Manhattan to the other.

And it came after Francis’ triumphant tour of Washington, during which he made history by becoming the first Pope to ever address a joint session of Congress .

THE WISDOM OF POPE FRANCIS

Francis landed at 5:23 p.m. at Kennedy Airport where he was met by Dolan, Brooklyn Diocese Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams and hundreds of excited New Yorkers waving Vatican flags.

The pontiff waves as he rides up Fith Ave. toward St. Patrick's Cathedral prior to evening services.

Just as he did when he landed Tuesday at Andrews Air Force base, Francis took off his white skull cap before climbing down the stairs to the tarmac from an American Airlines jet that has been christened Shepherd One.

Francis shook hands with the waiting clergymen and then made a beeline for five excited Catholic school students who handed him a book filled with poems and prayers penned by other students from across Brooklyn and Queens.

From there, Francis turned his attention to the waiting crowd, shaking dozens of hands, handing out Mass cards — and laughing with delight when somebody passed him a Pope Francis doll.

In the crowd was 12-year-old Julia Bruzzese of Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, a student athlete who suddenly lost the ability to walk in May.

“I came here because I want the holy father to touch me and give me a blessing,” Julia said in tears. “I feel like he’ll make me feel better.”

MTA BOSS SAYS TRANSIT AGENCY CAN HANDLE BIG CROWDS TRAVELING TO SEE POPE FRANCIS

Julia’s prayers were answered when Francis put his hands on her forehead, nodded and gave her his blessing.

Meanwhile, a 43-member jazz band from Xavarian Catholic School in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, played Frank Sinatra’s anthem to New York City and “City of God” as Francis set foot in the city.

By 5:31 p.m., just eight minutes after his plane landed, Francis was on a U.S. Marines chopper headed across the East River to the heliport in lower Manhattan.

There, Francis climbed into his now famous Fiat 500L and headed uptown to Fifth Ave. and 54th St., where he climbed into the Popemobile at 6:30 p.m.

Thousands of excited New Yorkers pressed against the police barricades and cheered as Francis rode by, escorted by dozens of NYPD officers on motorcycles — and Dolan riding shotgun.

The pontiff received a standing ovation inside St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Smiling broadly, the 78-year-old leader of the Catholic church waved and blessed the cheering crowd, but unlike in Washington he didn’t stop to kiss any children — to the relief of the Secret Service agents and NYPD officers assigned to protect him.

Francis’ arrival at St. Pat’s was heralded by church bells that began ringing when he was several blocks away.

CALIFORNIA FAMILY VISITS D.C. TO SEE POPE FRANCIS AND GETS AN UNEXPECTED GIFT

Waiting for Francis at the entrance were Mayor de Blasio, Sen. Chuck Schumer and Gov. Cuomo, with whom he exchanged greetings in Italian. NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton attended the service as well.

Also standing on the steps of the iconic edifice were employees of Structure Tone, the family-owned business that oversaw the $177 million restoration — and students from Regis High School, the prestigious, Jesuit-run Roman Catholic high school on the Upper East Side.

Once Francis was inside, a choir burst into song and the worshipers began applauding, among them director Martin Scorsese, who excitedly recorded the Pope’s entrance on his phone.

As Francis made his way to the altar, he stopped to greet and bless people in the pews, paying particular attention to the children.

Francis began the prayer service with a greeting to “our Islamic brothers” who are mourning the deaths of more than 700 pilgrims who were killed in a stampede in Mecca.

He also tried to buck-up the priests who “suffered greatly” and have had to “bear the shame” of the pedophiles in their ranks.

Following vespers, Sandra Lee, Gov. Cuomo’s celebrity chef girlfriend, got a special blessing from the pontiff.

“Sandra Lee and the governor were extremely grateful for his kindness,” a Cuomo aide said.

Lee has been recovering from a double mastectomy after being diagnosed with breast cancer earlier this year.

After the service, Francis climbed back into the Fiat and — waving at well-wishers from an open window — headed the wrong way up Fifth Ave. to the residence of the Vatican’s representative to the United Nations on E. 72nd St.

There he will spend the night — and rest up for Friday, his first full day in the city.

A couple hours before Francis arrived at St. Pat’s, Donald Trump popped out of the nearby tower that bears his name to see what the fuss was all about — only to be chased back inside by boos.

Just minutes before the Pope showed up, Trump appeared again on a balcony of his building and the crowd began chanting “Feo! Feo!” — the Spanish word for ugly.

Francis’ first stop on Friday is an 8:30 a.m. address to the UN General Assembly.

Then Francis heads downtown to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum for a multi-religious service.

The Pope will then travel uptown to Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem to meet with immigrants and poor children.

Following that, Francis will be feted by 80,000 New Yorkers in a procession down West Drive from 72nd St. to 60th St.

Francis will finish off the day by celebrating Mass at Madison Square Garden.

On Saturday morning, Francis heads back to JFK and flies off to Philadelphia.

Even before Francis arrived, the NYPD assigned 7,000 officers to guard His Holiness around the clock — and turned Central Park into an impregnable fortress.

NYPD officers patrol the front of St. Patrick's Cathedral in preparation of the arrival of Pope Francis.

There have been no credible threats against Francis, but just as in Washington neither the local cops nor the Secret Service were taking any chances.

With New York City facing Popelock, transit officials were urging travelers to use the subway and avoid driving in Manhattan.

ON A MOBILE DEVICE? WATCH THE VIDEO HERE .

With Kenneth Lovett, Dan Rivoli, Thomas Tracy, Joe Stepansky, Scott Widener, Raakhee Mirchandani

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Where is Pope Francis? A schedule of his U.S. visit

Pope Francis arrives in St Peter's square at the Vatican on Sept. 9, 2015, for his weekly general audience.

Where in the states is Pontifice Francisco?

Pope Francis began his visit to the USA on Tuesday and plans visits to Washington, D.C., New York City and Philadelphia. Whether you want to catch a glimpse of the Roman Catholic Church's leader or avoid the traffic, follow his six-day schedule below.

Tuesday, Sept. 22

4 p.m. — President Obama greets Pope Francis as he arrives at Joint Base Andrews.

Wednesday, Sept. 23

9:15 a.m. — President Obama welcomes the pope to the White House.

11:30 a.m. — The pope leads a prayer at St. Matthew's Cathedral with U.S. bishops.

4:15 p.m. — Pope Francis holds a canonization Mass  for Junipero Serra, an 18th Spanish Franciscan missionary who established schools for American Indians along the California coast. The first-ever canonization Mass on U.S. soil was held at the nation's largest Catholic church, the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.

Thursday, Sept. 24

10 a.m. — The Senate and House welcome the pope in a joint session. He will make the first-ever address to Congress, which will broadcast live on the Capitol's West Front . This speech will be one of four he will hold in English . The remaining 14 speeches on his U.S. trip will be in his native Spanish.

11 a.m. — He makes a stop on the Capitol's West Front, which overlooks the National Mall.

11:15 a.m. — St. Patrick's Catholic Church and Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese host Pope Francis. Only 60 parishioners culled from a lottery of church volunteers and about 250 clients and volunteers from Catholic Charities will be allowed in during the visit. Catholic Charities St. Maria's Meals, which offers three weekly food programs in the Washington area, set up 55 tables for the poor and homeless to have lunch as the pope blesses the food and walks through.

4 p.m. — The pope departs from Washington via Joint Base Andrews for New York.

New York City

5 p.m. — Arrives in New York through John F. Kennedy International Airport.

6:45 p.m. — The pope holds an evening prayer service at St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Friday, Sept. 25

8:30 a.m. — Pope Francis meets with the United Nations General Assembly. It's the 70th anniversary of the U.N .

11:30 a.m. — A multireligious service is held at the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

4 p.m. — The pope visits Our Lady Queen of Angels School in East Harlem.

5 p.m. — He will lead a procession through Central Park . About 80,000 tickets were awarded by the city in a lottery pick .

6 p.m. — Mass is held in Madison Square Garden. The chair he will sit on was built by mostly immigrant day laborers. Young men at Lincoln Hall Boys Haven in Lincolndale built the altar.

Saturday, Sept. 26

8:40 a.m. — Pope Francis departs New York for Philadelphia through John F. Kennedy International Airport.

Philadelphia

9:30 a.m. — Arrives at Atlantic Aviation.

10:30 a.m. — Mass is held at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul.

4:45 p.m. — The pope visits Independence Mall — the birthplace of American democracy. This historic area of Philadelphia is home to the Liberty Bell, and Independence Hall, where the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were signed.

7:30 p.m. — Pope Francis stops by the Festival of Families on Benjamin Franklin Parkway and holds a prayer vigil with the World Meeting of Families — the largest meeting of Catholic families held every three years. Singer Arethra Franklin will perform for the Pope as well as Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, Colombian singer/songwriter Juanes, the Philadelphia Orchestra, The Fray, comedian Jim Gaffigan and Mark Wahlberg — who will host the event.

Sunday, Sept. 27

9:15 a.m. — He holds a papal meeting with bishops at St. Martin's Chapel of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Wynnewood, right outside Philadelphia.

11 a.m. — The pope visits Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility. Inmates at a neighboring prison — Philadelphia Industrial Correctional Center — built the chair that the pope will sit on. Several inmates learned carpentry through vocational workshops.

4 p.m. — Mass is held with the World Meeting of Families.

7 p.m. — At Atlantic Aviation, he talks with organizers, volunteers and benefactors of the World Meeting of Families . Philadelphia International Airport expects 20%-25% more passengers traveling during the pope's visit — that's similar to a very busy Thanksgiving holiday.

8 p.m. — Pope Francis departs for Rome.

Pope Francis visit: Pontiff leaves New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral as his long day ends

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Pope Francis' New York itinerary started with a ride down Fifth Avenue and evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral. Then he left in a small Fiat to spend the night at the Vatican's diplomatic residence. The second leg of his three-city American visit came after he addressed a joint meeting of Congress. The pope implored officials gathered in the House chamber to welcome immigrants, abolish the death penalty and protect families “threatened, perhaps as never before, from within and without."

--  Pope weighs in on  political controversies

-- Which four people did the pope say Americans should honor? 

Waving goodnight to pope

Into the fiat, pope leaves evening prayers, fifth avenue greeting.

New York, the city that never sleeps, got a new reason to stay awake as Pope Francis arrived in Manhattan for a whirlwind tour that will take him from the heights of international authority at the United Nations to the World Trade Center and a school in East Harlem.

Fresh from a speech to a joint meeting of Congress, where he pushed his agenda of helping immigrants and the poor while healing the planet from the effects of climate change, Francis arrived for evening prayers at the legendary St. Patrick's Cathedral on Manhattan's storied, high-end shopping district along Fifth Avenue.

Thousands of people lined up along police barricades for a glimpse of the pontiff. Some wore Francis T-shirts, others waved Vatican flags. All praised the pope who had traveled more than 4,200 miles from the Holy See to share his message of compassion and tolerance.

"He's a very meaningful person because of his character and the way he loves people," said Grace Cordoza, 75, of Hyde Park, N.Y. "It always touched me."

Her friend, Gail Giacobbe, 67, of Basking Ridge, N,J., said she admired the example he sets for others.

"We want to emulate not only what he says but how he lives his life," Giacobbe said.

Non-Catholics joined the expectant crowd. Janie and Michael Huddleton, siblings from Birmingham, Ala., described themselves as a non-denominational Christian and an atheist, respectively.

"I wanted to be part of what New Yorkers experience," said Janie Huddleton, 27. "Nothing like this ever happens in Birmingham."

--Tina Susman and Vera Haller

From Birmingham to New York

Along Fifth Avenue, just south of St. Patrick's Cathedral, an audible sigh of disappointment swept through the crowd waiting for a glimpse of Pope Francis.

Word had spread that the pope had entered St. Patrick's for evening prayers without passing the thousands of spectators who had been waiting for hours, lined up five or six deep. Others peered out of upper floors of office buildings and stores lining the avenue.

But the sighting wasn't to happen. "I'm a little disappointed, but I had to be here," said Madeline Russo, 86, of Manhattan. "He is a beautiful leader who can take us out of this turmoil."

John Sterling, 40, an occupational therapist from Queens, said he thought security concerns might be higher in New York than in other cities, which was why the pope went right into the cathedral.

"I'm OK because I'm taking my mom to Philadelphia," the next leg of the pope's U.S. visit, said Sterling, a Roman Catholic. "I think this pope is a little more liberal and not afraid to voice his opinions on real issues."

Non-Catholics were among the crowd too. Janie and Michael Huddleton, siblings from Birmingham, Ala., described themselves as nondenominational Christian and atheist, respectively.

They came to try to see the pope as part of their New York experience while in town for a family wedding.

"I wanted to be part of what New Yorkers experience," said Janie, 27. "Nothing like this ever happens in Birmingham."

'Popemobile' in New York

Pope fan in new york, pope parade, a glance inside st. patrick's cathedral.

New York Police officers patrol Fifth Avenue in front of St. Patrick's Cathedral in preparation for Pope Francis' arrival to lead an evening prayer service. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

New York Police officers patrol Fifth Avenue in front of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in preparation for Pope Francis’ arrival to lead an evening prayer service. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

Pope Francis will soon arrive for evening prayers at New York's cathedral.

Here are some facts about the landmark site.

The Architecture

Neo-Gothic. The cathedral's two ornately carved spires grace Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. Inside, the sanctuary is marked by soaring arches and intricate stained-glass windows. It is undergoing a major restoration; a cleaning of its marble exterior, now a gleaming white, was completed in December.

May 25, 1879

At its transept, the cathedral measures 174 feet across and 332 feet long. The spires are 330 feet tall.

Noteworthy events

Among the many notable funerals held at the cathedral were Babe Ruth's on Aug. 19, 1948, Robert F. Kennedy's on June 8, 1968, and Andy Warhol's on April 1, 1987.

Past papal visits

Pope Paul VI in October 1965, Pope John Paul II in October 1979 and October 1995, Pope Benedict XVI in April 2008.

--Vera Haller

See how New York photogs are ready for Pope Francis

Pope's new york whirlwind begins.

Parishioners wait patiently for Pope Francis to arrive at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan, New York. EPA/Robert Sabo / POOL

Parishioners wait patiently for Pope Francis to arrive at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan, New York. EPA/Robert Sabo / POOL

Pope Francis arrived in New York City to begin a whirlwind visit of 39 hours and 40 minutes that will take him from the U.N. headquarters to a school in East Harlem.

The pope's chartered American Airlines 777 landed at John F. Kennedy International Airport where he was greeted by Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio and five Roman Catholic schoolchildren.

He was whisked by helicopter to Manhattan, where he will attend evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral, the seat of the head of the New York Archdiocese.

"It is a tremendous honor to welcome Pope Francis to New York state," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement. "Both in his teachings and in his travels around the globe, Pope Francis has inspired countless people to live with kindness for one another, and to reach out for and help those in need. These are ideals that are also deeply entwined in the spirit of New York, and I am honored that the Holy Father is including our state in his first visit to the United States.

"On behalf of all New Yorkers, I am proud to receive him with open arms, and I hope that his visit will be peaceful and rewarding."

--Michael Muskal

The pope's visit to NYC by the numbers

Pope Francis will be in New York City for about 39 hours, time enough to turn the city upside down. The New York Police Department has gathered the following numbers associated with the papal visit.

The number of barriers the NYPD will use. About 14,000 are owned by the department. They total 196,000 feet, or about 37 miles.

The number of traffic cones the police department will use.

The pieces of concrete block to be used citywide. They weigh 3,900 pounds each, totaling 818 tons.

The number of different motorcades in the city between the pope and dignitaries attending the United Nations General Assembly.

The number of miles Pope Francis will travel while he is in New York.

The number of barrier trucks the police department will use over the course of the pope's visit.

--Tina Susman

Maybe the pope could just pop in?

In the part of Queens known as "Little Argentina," people tried in vain to win their neighborhood a place on Pope Francis' schedule.

After all, they said, it's so close to Kennedy Airport, couldn't he maybe just stop by on the way in to the city?

They didn't make it into the official plans, but on Thursday, they were still hoping. Maybe Francis, born in Argentina, would pop in for a quick taste of home.

—Vera Haller

In a section of Queens known as "Little Argentina," shop owners hoped for a surprise visit from the Argentine pope when he arrived in New York.

In a section of Queens known as “Little Argentina,” shop owners hoped for a surprise visit from the Argentine pope when he arrived in New York.

Who is she? Why did the pope praise her?

In this circa 1960 file photo, Dorothy Day is seen. In his speech to Congress, Pope Francis highlighted the contributions of Americans he said helped shape fundamental values that will “endure forever in the spirit of the American people.’’ Day, long a revered figure among Catholic progressives, founded the Catholic Worker Movement in the 1930s as she sought to help the poor and homeless. A pacifist, Day was arrested many times as she fought to bring attention to the plight of the poor and working class.

In this circa 1960 file photo, Dorothy Day is seen. In his speech to Congress, Pope Francis highlighted the contributions of Americans he said helped shape fundamental values that will “endure forever in the spirit of the American people.’’ Day, long a revered figure among Catholic progressives, founded the Catholic Worker Movement in the 1930s as she sought to help the poor and homeless. A pacifist, Day was arrested many times as she fought to bring attention to the plight of the poor and working class.

In his historic address to Congress on Thursday, Pope Francis invoked the name of this woman and three other Americans who, through "hard work and sacrifice" were able to build "a better future" and shape fundamental American values.

They are: Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr. and Thomas Merton.

Pictured above is the fourth, Dorothy Day.

-- Sarah Parvini

NYC eagerly awaits the pope

Pope is wheels up to new york.

After reaching out to a sea of children, Pope Francis left the Apostolic Nunciature in Washington D.C., for Joint Base Andrews, where he departed on an American Airlines 777 for New York City, the second stop on his historic U.S. visit.

A crowd of well-wishers cheered as he departed.

Earlier, Francis worked the crowd of children outside the Vatican's top diplomatic mission in the nation's capital. Cellphone cameras snapped papal selfies as he moved along the line.

He is scheduled to arrive in New York around 5 p.m. and will attend a prayer service this evening at St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Pope Francis greets school children as he departs the Apostolic Nunciature, the Vatican's diplomatic mission in the heart of Washington, en route Andrews Air Force Base. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Pope Francis greets school children as he departs the Apostolic Nunciature, the Vatican’s diplomatic mission in the heart of Washington, en route Andrews Air Force Base. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Pope pilgrims flock to Philly shrines

Pope Francis arrives in Philadelphia on Saturday. While the faithful wait for him, some of the many who have come to see him are making the rounds of the area's national shrines.

St. Rita of Cascia in South Philadelphia made it easy for visitors, offering free trolley rides from the downtown area, called Center City.

Visitors came to the shrine Thursday from Virginia, Minnesota, the Dakotas, Europe and Zimbabwe.

-- Molly Hennessy-Fiske

Papal security: No free passes

House chaplain got his blessed moment, new york awaits francis, pope reaches out to d.c. homeless.

Felton Pierce, left, and Eric Dyer, who are both homeless, talk ahead of a visit by Pope Francis to a lunch for the homeless who are served by Catholic Charities in Washington. (Brian Snyder/Pool Photo via AP)

Felton Pierce, left, and Eric Dyer, who are both homeless, talk ahead of a visit by Pope Francis to a lunch for the homeless who are served by Catholic Charities in Washington. (Brian Snyder/Pool Photo via AP)

Pope Francis traveled to the other side of the tracks in Washington, D.C. and spoke to the homeless, telling them that Jesus, too, was born without a place to live.

"The Son of God knew what it was to start life without a roof over his head," Pope Francis said to about 400 people at St. Patrick Church, including the homeless and hungry who were eating a meal. The pope blessed the food.

Homelessness has again become a key national issue. Los Angeles recently declared an emergency to strengthen the fight in dealing with the issue. In New York City, where the pope heads next, officials have long worked to shelter those who cannot afford housing.

As he has with other concerns, Pope Francis linked a tradition of the church to a modern flaw.

"We can imagine what Joseph must have been thinking," Francis told the crowd, describing the husband of Mary, the mother of Jesus.

"How is it that the Son of God has no home? Why are we homeless, why don't we have housing? These are questions which many of you may ask daily."

L.A. Archbishop: 'The immigrant spirit is a wellspring'

Yesterday was a glorious day in our nation's capitol. Wonderful to pray with Pope Francis and to hear him speaking in English and in Spanish!

He began his pilgrimage by identifying with America's immigrant experience. He said: "As the son of an immigrant family, I am happy to be a guest in this country, which was largely built by such families."

A wonderful tribute to the immigrant spirit! As an immigrant's son, his father fled fascism in Italy to settle in Argentina. Francis understands that the immigrant spirit is a wellspring for economic and moral revitalization.

At the end of the day, he canonized St. Junípero Serra, a missionary and immigrant who became the founding father of California. A beautiful day for the Latino people. Our first Latino saint!

I had the privilege to be on the altar with Pope Francis and to celebrate the canonization Mass with him.

I was praying for all the people of Los Angeles, of every religion and race and culture and language. I was asking our new saint to intercede for all of us, to ask God to open our hearts to the beauty of his plan for creation so that we can be more loving, more compassionate, more merciful and forgiving.

--Archbishop José H. Gomez

3 powerful quotes from the pope's speech to Congress

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of Congress, making history as the first pontiff to do so.

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of Congress, making history as the first pontiff to do so.

"A political society endures when it seeks, as a vocation, to satisfy common needs by stimulating the growth of all its members, especially those in situations of greater vulnerability or risk."

Immigration

"On this continent, too, thousands of persons are led to travel north in search of a better life for themselves and for their loved ones, in search of greater opportunities. Is this not what we want for our own children? We must not be taken aback by their numbers, but rather view them as persons, seeing their faces and listening to their stories, trying to respond as best we can to their situation."

Death penalty

"Recently my brother bishops here in the United States renewed their call for the abolition of the death penalty. Not only do I support them, but I also offer encouragement to all those who are convinced that a just and necessary punishment must never exclude the dimension of hope and the goal of rehabilitation."

See how the pope made grown men cry

Pope mingles with catholic charity workers.

Pope Francis greets Catholic Charities workers and the homeless people they serve at a lunch in Washington.

Pope Francis greets Catholic Charities workers and the homeless people they serve at a lunch in Washington.

Pope comforts the homeless

After challenging Washington's elites in a joint meeting of Congress, Francis offered comfort to some of the city's neediest.

He spoke to homeless people at St. Patrick Parish and pressed into a crowd at Catholic Charities, where people surrounded him and took selfies after he offered a blessing before their lunch.

He called on the faithful to solve the problem of homelessness, declaring: "Let me be clear: There can be no social or moral justification, no justification whatsoever, for lack of housing."

Late in the day he was leaving for New York for more prayer services and a speech to the United Nations.

--Associated Press

FBI gets a papal wave

Can there be goodness in congress.

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Sept. 24.

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Sept. 24.

Intending to bring words of encouragement to a divided Congress, Pope Francis made a spirited case Thursday for the goodness of politics, drawing on church teachings and landmark moments in U.S. history to nudge lawmakers toward a more inspired professional pursuit.

The pope used his moral authority to weigh in on a variety of U.S. political controversies, including immigration, income inequality, the death penalty and the environment.

Francis said his speech was for the entire nation, especially common workers and the elderly, and he urged legislators not to ignore the dispossessed.

"A political society endures when it seeks, as a vocation, to satisfy common needs by stimulating the growth of all its members, especially those in situations of greater vulnerability or risk," he said.

The pope challenged Congress to act with compassion in dealing with migrants from south of the border.

-- Michael A. Memoli

-- Lisa Mascaro

Protocol busters tweet from House floor

Several members of Congress, including Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.), were tweeting photos from the House floor this morning in violation of protocol. Lawmakers are forbidden from doing this except during the brief period of time a new Congress is sworn in every two years.

-- Christina Bellantoni

Congress' religious affiliations

More than 9 in 10 members of the House and Senate are Christian and about 57% are Protestant, which is about the same as in the 113th Congress, according to the Pew Research Center. About one-third of members are Catholic, the same as in the previous Congress.

'A good political leader...seizes the moment in a spirit of openness and pragmatism'

What makes a good political leader, work toward 'common good,' pope francis tells congress.

The address before a joint meeting of Congress was a historic first for a leader of the Catholic Church, and the soft-spoken pontiff arrived at a House chamber where the partisan split was on full display, with Vice President Joe Biden to his one side and House Speaker John A. Boehner on the other.

Francis sought to balance his views for a politically divided audience, discussing the importance of life and family in a way that appealed to Republicans, while leaning more heavily into the issues of immigration, climate change and income inequality that have made him popular with Democrats. He called for an end to the death penalty.

He invoked historical lessons from American icons Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, appealing to a sense of American exceptionalism that resonated with lawmakers.

"You are called to defend and preserve the dignity of your fellow citizens in the tireless and demanding pursuit of the common good, for this is the chief aim of all politics," the pope said, speaking in English from prepared notes.

A small outburst

And in philly..., renew spirit of cooperation, francis says, meanwhile, in new york..., these tailgaters are nuns, defend and care for your people, pope tells congress, in congress, the powerful get the pope tickets.

Members of Congress have been scrambling to see the pope in the Fiat who humbly visits the poor, but it's the bigwigs who are getting tickets.

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's guest list includes billionaires, members of political dynasties, and a man who has given tens of millions to Democratic causes: Matilda Cuomo, widow of Mario Cuomo; Thomas D'Alesandro III, former mayor of Baltimore; wealthy entrepreneurs Marc and Lynne Benioff of San Francisco; Tom Steyer, the environmentalist political donor and his wife, Kat Taylor.

Pelosi's husband and the head of the Service Employees International Union are also on her list.

Others in the audience include former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich and his wife Callista, and John Calipari, the University of Kentucky basketball coach.

But don't worry, there's still a place for the little people: on the lawn. Pelosi's office said some constituents, local college students, nuns, and immigration advocates who fasted have seats on the West Front of the Capitol, where Francis is expected to appear following his remarks.

-- Noah Bierman

Eager for the best view

The thousands of people gathered here on the Capitol's West Lawn lined up during the small hours of the morning to ensure the best glimpse of the pope when he walks out to greet them from the Speaker of the House's balcony.

Many with red and blue "standing room only" tickets plopped their blankets on the ground to catch up on sleep, weaving into one another for warmth.

Spectators draped their arms over the fence and peered at the Jumbotron, hoping to catch a first look at Pope Francis.

"I came today because the pope's message of justice and peace resonates with me as well as his Jesuit values -- competence, conscience, and compassion," said José Cabrales, 37, of Watsonville, Calif.

--Mary Ann Toman-Miller

Live: Pope addresses Congress

A reflection on Francis' emphasis on the family

Students, chaperone Tika Lee and Daniel Annarelli look at photos from Annarelli's participation in a Kairos retreat during his time at St. Joseph Preparatory in Philadelphia.

Students, chaperone Tika Lee and Daniel Annarelli look at photos from Annarelli’s participation in a Kairos retreat during his time at St. Joseph Preparatory in Philadelphia.

Family. It is the culminating theme of the holy father's visit to the United States when he makes his planned visit to Philadelphia this weekend, wrapping up the celebration of the Catholic World Meeting of Families.

It is this theme of family that is the tinder for excitement and anticipation in this country that has not been seen since the hope-filled message of a newly elected president in 2008.

How fitting it is that the theme of family is what gets so many people coming together from around the world with a newfound zeal. After all, what gets people more impassioned than their families? What elicits from us a greater joy than the hug of a loved one or a greater sense of gratitude than seeing a parent or child after a long time apart?

What, too, delivers such disappointment and pain than those moments where family fails us? And yet, we keep coming back to family. We all have a sense of family, whatever our history or background. Because in the end, nothing reveals the depth of our humanity more than our families.

Today, and throughout the weekend, we have the privilege to celebrate what family means to us. We dialogue about our different family values, share our family traditions, and debate the pros and cons of family life.

We kicked off this celebration with 20 people from different families converging on one home -- that of my childhood family. It was a particularly special night for me, because I was able to give my mom and dad that hug after being apart for a long time. And simultaneously I was able to give my students -- those from my Loyola family -- a glimpse of what family means to me. We ate a home cooked meal, we laughed, we sang songs, we looked at old pictures and even poked some fun at the Dean's high school scrapbook.

From one family opening its door and its heart to others, we've started a conversation that will continue throughout the weekend -- one where, hopefully, we can all get a window into each other's families and share in the joyful spirit of what it means to simply belong.

--Daniel Annarelli

Crazy for pope bobbleheads

Samir Sabir, at City Souvenirs in Manhattan, opens a fresh supply of bobblehead Pope Francis dolls, which are scarce in New York City.

Samir Sabir, at City Souvenirs in Manhattan, opens a fresh supply of bobblehead Pope Francis dolls, which are scarce in New York City.

It was a simple request. Someone wanted a Pope Francis doll.

You know the ones.

The bobblehead dolls that show the smiling pontiff, his right hand waving to adoring crowds and his head bobbing gently.

They're everywhere, right?

Pope Francis has arrived

A papal playlist.

pope francis visit to new york

Streaming service Spotify is promoting a special playlist for Pope Francis' visit, with songs ranging from "Ave Maria" to Alicia Keys' "Empire State of Mind."

The company reached out to Tim O'Malley, director of the Notre Dame Center for Liturgy, for his papal playlist. There are 53 songs on the list, or about three-and-a-half hours of music.

Some of the songs are hymns and psalms, but there are also references to the places Francis is visiting: Washington, Philadelphia and New York.

Among the tunes? Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York," "Streets of Philadelphia" by Bruce Springsteen and "Motown Philly" by Boyz II Men.

Joint session or joint meeting?

Here's why the Pope is addressing a joint meeting of Congress.

Each chamber of the Congress, the Senate and the House of Representatives, meets separately to do their work. But on rare and important occasions, the houses come together in either a joint session or joint meeting. The difference between the two is technical and involves parliamentary rules of order.

However, the distinction is important.

When a foreign leader visits, the House and the Senate agree to recess and meet with the other chamber. Lawmakers listen, but do no more than clap in a joint meeting.

In a joint session, however, the bodies adopt a concurrent resolution, a much more formal position. Joint sessions are typically reserved to hear an address from the President of the United States or to count presidential electoral votes as specified by the U.S. Constitution.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives usually presides over both joint sessions and meetings. The president of the Senate presides over joint sessions where the electoral votes are counted.

Pope's day two schedule

6:20 a.m. Addresses joint meeting of Congress

Pope Francis will become the first pontiff to address a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress, but the visit will not be without controversy. Many conservative Republicans see the Pope as too liberal, especially on issues such as climate change.

8:15 a.m. Visits St. Patrick's Church and Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington

Pope Francis will visit St. Patrick's Church in Washington D.C. and give a blessing to the clients and homeless gathered at lunchtime for the St. Maria Meals Program of the Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese of Washington.

1 p.m. Departs Joint Base Andrews for New York

2 p.m. Arrives at John F. Kennedy International Airport

3:45 p.m. Evening prayers at St. Patrick's Cathedral

Pope Francis will pray with priests, men and women religious and such dignitaries as Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio. St. Patrick's, in Midtown Manhattan, is the landmark seat of the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York.

--Source: Catholic Conference of Bishops

Walkers only to D.C. pope viewing

Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington is closed to vehicles, Thursday, Sept. 24, 2015, as people walk to get through security to see Pope Francis appear from the Speaker's Balcony on Capitol Hill. The Pope will addresses a joint meeting of Congress making him the first pontiff in history to do so. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington is closed to vehicles, Thursday, Sept. 24, 2015, as people walk to get through security to see Pope Francis appear from the Speaker’s Balcony on Capitol Hill. The Pope will addresses a joint meeting of Congress making him the first pontiff in history to do so. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

A warm embrace, and then to the Fiat

Waiting for francis to address congress.

Thousands of people are filling the Capitol lawn in anticipation of Pope Francis' historic address to a joint meeting of Congress.

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A History of Papal Visits to America

AP_6510040295

Since the inaugural papal visit to the New World by Paul VI, the United States has become a destination visited as often as possible by pontiffs. Ahead of Pope Francis's first visit to the United States since becoming head of the Roman Catholic Church in 2013, Newsweek's Special Editions takes a look at a history of papal visits to America.

POPE PAUL VI

1965 (10/4) New York

Becoming the first pope to leave the confines of the Italian border since the Napoleonic era, Paul VI made a one-day trip to the U.S. in 1965, also becoming the first pontiff to set foot in the New World. In his 14-hour New York adventure, Pope Paul VI visited St. Patrick's Cathedral on 5th Avenue, making a speech to assembled American Catholics in his slight Italian accent. Upon his arrival at JFK Airport, he proclaimed, "Greetings to you, America. The first pope to set foot on your land blesses you with all his heart. He renews, as it were, the gesture of your discoverer, Christopher Columbus, when he planted the Cross of Christ on this blessed soil."

ST. POPE JOHN PAUL II

1979 (10/1–10/7) Boston; New York; Philadelphia; Chicago; Washington, D.C.; and Des Moines, Iowa.

During his first-ever trip to the United States, the future St. John Paul II led Mass at Yankee and Shea stadiums in New York City, on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia and in the expansive Grant Park in Chicago. More than one million American Catholic worshippers showed up to receive the pope's blessings during his stateside visit.

1981 (2/27) Anchorage, Alaska

After canonizing the first ever Filipino saint, Lorenzo Ruiz, in Manila, Philippines, His Holiness stopped off for half a day in Anchorage, Alaska, which made him the first pontiff ever to visit the American arctic.

1984 (5/2) Fairbanks, Alaska—stopover/several hours

On his way to his visit to the Far East, Pope John Paul II returned to Alaska during a stopover on his way to Seoul, Korea. His trip to the Asian peninsula was for the purpose of canonizing 103 Korean martyrs.

1987 (9/10–9/19) Miami; Columbia, South Carolina; New Orleans; San Antonio; Phoenix; Los Angeles; Monterey, California; San Francisco; Detroit

During his longest ever trip to the United States, John Paul II led Masses in Miami; New Orleans; San Antonio; Phoenix; Los Angeles; Salinas, California; and Pontiac, Michigan. He also met with President Ronald Reagan in the process to discuss world issues.

AP_99012702589

1993 (8/12–8/15) Denver (World Youth Day)

In Colorado for the growing tradition of World Youth Day, Pope John Paul II condemned violence, drug abuse and pornography as threats to the future of society before officially meeting with President Bill Clinton.

1995 (10/4–10/8) Newark, New Jersey; New York (including Brooklyn); Baltimore

Making a tour of the New York Metropolitan Area, Pope John Paul II arrived in Newark and greeted the gathered faithful in typically warm and stately fashion: "It is a great joy for me to return to the United States, as I had hoped to do last year. Thank you all for receiving me so warmly. This is a land of much generosity, and its people have always been quick to extend their hands in friendship and to offer hospitality. Thank you especially, President Clinton, for coming here today in that same spirit.... I look forward to meeting the Catholic communities of Newark, Brooklyn, New York and Baltimore, as well as our brothers and sisters of other Christian Churches and Ecclesial Communities.... I greet all the people of this great nation, of every race, color, creed and social condition. I pray for you all and assure you of my profound esteem."

AP_7910070163

1999 (1/26–1/27)—St. Louis

An aging John Paul II visited St. Louis and held Mass in front of 100,000 people in the city's football stadium. He took the opportunity of an audience in the American heartland to roundly decry the death penalty as cruel and unnecessary.

AP_080416012476

POPE BENEDICT XVI

2008 (4/15–4/20)—Washington, D.C. and New York

After meeting with President George W. Bush at the White House, Benedict said Mass at Nationals Park and moved on to New York. While in the Big Apple, the pope said Mass at both St. Patrick's Cathedral and Yankee Stadium before offering a blessing at the former site of the World Trade Center.

This article appears in Newsweek 's Collector's Edition, Pope Francis The American Journey, by Issue Editor James Ellis.

PopeNoSpineUPC

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Pope Francis Reflects on His Life and Mortality in Memoir

Reuters

Pope Francis' new book "Life: My Story Through History" is pictured in this illustration picture taken on March 15, 2024. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane/Illustration

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis, at 87 increasingly weak and wobbly, takes a trip down memory lane and speaks of his hopes for the Roman Catholic Church's future in a new book reflecting on his life and its intersection with major world events.

"Life - My Story Through History," a memoir written with Italian journalist Fabio Marchese Ragona and published by HarperCollins, goes on sale on March 19, the 11th anniversary of Francis' installation as the first Latin American pope.

While offering little that is new, the 230-page book is a breezy, conversational-style read starting with his childhood in Buenos Aires to today.

It is punctuated by events including World War Two, the Holocaust, the Cold War, the 1969 Moon landing, the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall, the September 11, 2001 attacks and the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI in 2013.

Francis, whose health recently has shown signs of strain with successive bouts of bronchitis, a spate of hospital stays and difficulty walking, repeats that he has no intention of resigning like his predecessor unless "a serious physical impediment were to arise".

He jokes that while some of his conservative critics "may have hoped" he would have announced a resignation after a hospital stay, there is little or no risk of it because "there are many projects to bring to fruition, God willing".

He again defends his recent decision to allow blessings for people in same-sex relationships, reiterating that they are not blessings for the union itself but of individuals "who seek the Lord but are rejected or persecuted".

The Church, he says, does "not have the power to change the sacraments created by the Lord" and that "this (the blessings) does not mean that the Church is in favour of same-sex marriage".

HOPING FOR AN EMBRACING CHURCH

Addressing the controversy about the recent ruling, he says: "I imagine a mother Church that embraces and welcomes everyone, even those who feel they are in the wrong and have been judged by us in the past".

Francis writes that even if some bishops refuse to offer blessings for those in same-sex relationships, as in Africa, "it doesn't mean that this is the antechamber to schism, because the Church's doctrine is not brought into question".

Throughout the book he leans on historical events as backdrops to make appeals relating to current, sometimes similar, situations.

Speaking of World War Two, he writes that still today "Jews continue to be stereotyped and persecuted. This is not Christian; it's not even human. When will we understand that these are our brothers and sisters?"

In recalling when he first heard of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan at the end of the war, he writes: "The use of atomic energy for purposes of war is a crime against humanity, against human dignity, and against any possibility of a future in our shared home."

Reflecting on the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States by Islamists, Francis says, "It is blasphemous to use the name of God to justify slaughter, murder, terrorist attack, the persecution of individuals and entire populations - as some still do. Nobody can invoke the name of the Lord to wreak evil."

The pope dismisses as "fantasy, obviously invented", recent reports by conservative American Catholic media that he would change the rules of conclaves to allow nuns and lay people to enter conclaves to choose future popes.

On the lighter side, Francis speaks of the controversial "Hand of God" goal by compatriot Diego Maradona in Argentina's 1986 World Cup soccer quarter-final against England, which the referee allowed as he did not have a clear view showing that Maradona had used his hand.

Years later, when Maradona visited the pope at the Vatican, "I asked him, jokingly, 'So, which is the guilty hand?'" Francis writes.

(Reporting by Philip Pullella; editing by Mark Heinrich)

Copyright 2024 Thomson Reuters .

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Pope Francis has not accepted an invitation to meet with Vladimir Putin in Russia

pope francis visit to new york

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis has not accepted an invitation to travel to Moscow in June to meet with Vladimir Putin, the director of the Holy See press office said.

A report on the website of Intelligence Online, a French journal, “does not correspond to the truth,” Matteo Bruni told reporters March 20.

A story on the website March 19 had said Ivan Soltanovsky, the Russian ambassador to the Holy See, invited the pope to meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow in June, “an invitation that the pope accepted,” Intelligence Online had reported.

The journal said the pope, who repeatedly has been invited to visit Ukraine, would travel to Kyiv immediately after visiting Moscow.

After Russia launched its large-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Pope Francis said he would be willing to accept the invitation of the Ukrainian government to visit, but only if he could visit Moscow as well.

Earlier the Russian news agency RIA Novosti had reported that Pope Francis had congratulated Putin on his victory in the presidential election March 17, an election Western observers described as rigged. Bruni had told Catholic News Service March 18 that the report was not true.

The Vatican has repeatedly offered to act as a mediator between Ukraine and Russia, and last year Pope Francis sent his peace envoy for Ukraine, Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi of Bologna, to Kyiv, Moscow, Washington and Beijing to meet with foreign leaders and advance peace talks on Ukraine.

In early March, however, the pope caused consternation when segments of an interview were released in which he said Russia and Ukraine need to have the “courage of the white flag” to halt the fighting and negotiate.

The phrase “white flag” usually refers to surrendering, and Ukrainian leaders were outraged.

Pope Francis was not asking Ukraine to consider surrendering to Russia when he called for negotiations to end the war, but he was calling for both Russia and Ukraine to cease hostilities and engage in peace talks, said Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state.

At the end of his weekly general audience March 20, praying for peace in Ukraine and in the Holy Land, Pope Francis said, “War is always a defeat.”

“We must make every effort to discuss, to negotiate to end war,” he said. “Let’s pray for this.”

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Pope Francis is out to prove he’s just a regular guy

In a new memoir, ‘life: my story through history,’ and a self-help book, ‘a good life,’ the pope reinforces his image as approachable.

pope francis visit to new york

It seems hard to believe that just a few short popes ago (and in the centuries preceding) no one, including Catholics, had any real connection with the human running things from the throne of Saint Peter in Rome.

Popes stayed in Italy and didn’t travel, and low-level technology meant Catholics didn’t expect to see or hear from them. Popes would put out authoritative documents now and then called “encyclicals,” but it took time for the messages to trickle out. And even then, average Catholics didn’t usually read the pope’s words; they didn’t feel qualified to interpret them.

Catholics didn’t define themselves like many do today — especially in polarized America — by their affinity to the pope.

No one has done more to make real the face of the papacy than Argentine priest Jorge Mario Bergoglio, otherwise known as Pope Francis. He approves apps that offer his sayings in quippy form, gives chatty interviews, and is known for eschewing fancy homes and clothing. Instead, he takes public transportation, wears clunky orthotic shoes, and says such things as “I am a sinner — that’s not a figure of speech” and, of gay people, “Who am I to judge?”

This radical approachability has become a hallmark since Francis took office in 2013, redrawing the face of the 1.4 billion-person Catholic Church. Many people have loved and been profoundly moved by this change, seeing Francis as a symbol of an outward-looking church focused on accessibility, intimate connection and inclusivity. Many others oppose his frequent blurring of lines, saying he’s harming the church by making the papacy smaller.

In two new books, Francis takes concrete steps toward setting this everyman-pope in stone for literary history. Through “Life,” which will publish Tuesday and is described as his first crack at autobiography, and a second book, called “A Good Life: 15 Essential Habits for Living With Hope and Joy,” the 87-year-old is making it really official: The pope is just a guy.

He’s a guy who is hovering in the late stage of his life. Considering his age and health challenges, and that his predecessor retired, who will succeed Francis is already a topic of speculation among Catholics. In “Life,” Francis says he believes the pope’s ministry is for life and, thus, he would retire only in the case of “a serious physical impediment.” For me, as someone who reports on religion, the book’s informal and accessible style is part of why it’s challenging to picture the next pope being more remote.

“ Life: My Story Through History ” is a chronicle of Francis’s life organized through major world events, from World War II and Argentina’s Dirty War to the 9/11 attacks and the coronavirus pandemic. It intersperses Francis’s words with those of his co-author, Italian journalist Fabio Marchese Ragona, setting rich scenes of the pontiff’s daily life with his description of how he experienced those periods, with whom and how he reflects on them now.

The publisher says the book is aimed at young people in particular, and it shows. The structure is simple, as is the language. Also, it has an almost wow-I-can’t-believe-this-is-my-life vibe as Francis looks back on everything he has been through and pulls from it repeated core lessons.

For the most part, he presents these lessons in a secular, universal way. That’s not to say he doesn’t communicate his theology and faith. Through the book, he frequently speaks of the role of the church, prayer and his feeling of God’s presence. But there is also a thread woven through the book: I am like you, and the Catholic Church isn’t about the trappings you see. And as Francis tries, in his final era as pope, to shift the direction of the church, perhaps this book is trying — in a different way — to say something more like what you expect from a pope: God is like you, and the Catholic Church isn’t about the trappings you see.

Francis describes one of the most famous visual moments of his papacy, at the start of the pandemic, when he stood in a hauntingly empty St. Peter’s Square in the rain to deliver a blessing.

“Many have wondered what I was thinking about … it was nothing remarkable; I was just thinking about people’s loneliness. I was alone, and many people were living in the same situation as me,” he writes.

One of his lessons is that all living things are interconnected, no matter how far away we are from one another. He drives that home through his own experience, as the terrified child Bergoglio, watching scared adults around him during World War II, even as the fighting was taking place in a distant country, and later, as the Buenos Aires archbishop, immediately going into prayer when planes slammed into the World Trade Center.

Another central lesson in the book is that the most important thing we can do to lessen suffering is to eradicate hate and resentment inside ourselves. Many of his chapters are organized around products of war and hate: the Holocaust, the U.S. dropping of atomic bombs on Japan during World War II, political division and violence during the pandemic. The book was created, its jacket says, so young people could hear an older person “reflect on what our planet has lived through, so as not to repeat the mistakes of the past.”

It’s not clear that the stories or core characters in “Life” will be new to people who have read the detailed interviews Francis has given to European journalists, or biographies of him. There are familiar characters, including his Grandma Rosa, who taught him about prayer as well as political activism, as she helped defend the church against the rise of fascism in Argentina. There’s his former teacher Esther, a biochemist who was also an atheist Marxist activist and who became a close friend before she was tortured and murdered by the military regime during the Dirty War.

The world is seen through the eyes of this sincere first-person narrator, who expresses real vulnerability and sadness watching immigrants like his parents yearn for home (in their case, Italy), who tangos with his friends and falls for a girl, and who, during the 2013 conclave that elects him, is terrified to enter the room where people are voting because he’s scared he won. Francis had booked the tightest flight itinerary available because he didn’t like Rome and planned to hustle home.

The second new book, “ A Good Life: 15 Essential Habits for Living With Hope and Joy ,” published last month, reinforces the image of Francis as everyman. The book is part of a genre of Francis guidance that comes bite-sized. One could put it in the category of the snappy, often God-free tweets he posts to his 55 million-plus followers on the X platform, and previous books with such titles as “ Pope Francis Talks to Couples ” and “ Happiness in This Life: A Passionate Meditation on Earthly Existence .”

These titles are a stark contrast to some of the books of Pope Benedict XVI — “ Spirit of the Liturgy ” and “ Church Fathers: From Clement of Rome to Augustine ” — and Pope John Paul II’s books, mostly official papal teachings, such as “On the Relationship Between Faith and Reason” or “On the Christian Meaning of Human Suffering.”

“Pope Benedict was a theologian and wrote like one. Pope John Paul was a philosopher and wrote like one. Pope Francis is neither,” the Rev. Mark-David Janus, president and publisher of the Catholic publishing house Paulist Press, which has published more than a dozen books by Francis, told The Washington Post. “He’s a pastor, so he writes as a pastor.”

Indeed, the legacy Francis leaves in books like these isn’t a radically different theology than that of his predecessors but a radically different emphasis and style. “A Good Life” interests itself in pragmatic, basic ways to improve yourself — Catholic or not. Cry more. Shut off your phone and look in the eyes of the people to whom you’re talking. Don’t be a couch potato.

This is the kind of advice you might expect from a wellness podcast, your Peloton teacher or even Joel Osteen. Popes have been expected to be above that kind of crowd, the elevated embodiment of a truth that is allowed — in love, they’d say — to be judgmental and exclusionary. Francis has used his stature to emphasize different truths in a different way.

My Story Through History

By Pope Francis with Fabio Marchese Ragona. Translated from Italian by Aubrey Botsford

Harper One. 240 pp. $28.99

A Good Life

15 Habits for Living With Hope and Joy

By Pope Francis

Worthy Books. 208 pp. $28

More from Book World

Best books of 2023: See our picks for the 10 best books of 2023 or dive into the staff picks that Book World writers and editors treasured in 2023. Check out the complete lists of 50 notable works for fiction and the top 50 non-fiction books of last year.

Find your favorite genre: These four new memoirs invite us to sit with the pleasures and pains of family. Lovers of hard facts should check out our roundup of some of the summer’s best historical books . Audiobooks more your thing? We’ve got you covered there, too . We also predicted which recent books will land on Barack Obama’s own summer 2023 list . And if you’re looking forward to what’s still ahead, we rounded up some of the buzziest releases of the summer .

Still need more reading inspiration? Every month, Book World’s editors and critics share their favorite books that they’ve read recently . You can also check out reviews of the latest in fiction and nonfiction .

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Pope Francis’ ‘white flag’ comment is met by criticism from Ukraine and its allies

People waves Ukrainian flags before Pope Francis Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlooking St.Peter's Square, at the Vatican, Sunday, March 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

People waves Ukrainian flags before Pope Francis Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlooking St.Peter’s Square, at the Vatican, Sunday, March 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Pope Francis reads his message during the Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter’s Square, at the Vatican, Sunday, March 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

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KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian and allied officials Sunday criticized Pope Francis for saying that Kyiv should have the “courage” to negotiate an end to the war with Russia , a statement many interpreted as a call for Ukraine to surrender.

The foreign ministers of Ukraine and Poland, a vocal ally of Kyiv, condemned the pope’s remarks. And a leader of one of Ukraine’s Christian churches on Sunday said that only the country’s determined resistance to Moscow’s full-scale invasion , launched by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 24, 2022, had prevented a mass slaughter of civilians.

In an interview recorded last month with Swiss broadcaster RSI and partially released on Saturday, Francis used the phrase “the courage of the white flag” as he argued that Ukraine, facing a possible defeat, should be open to peace talks brokered by international powers.

“Our flag is blue and yellow. We live, die and win under it. We will not raise other flags,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba posted on Sunday on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy smiles during a joint news conference with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan following their meeting at Dolmabahce palace in Istanbul, Turkey, Friday, March 8, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski tweeted: “How about, for balance, encouraging Putin to have the courage to withdraw his army from Ukraine? Peace would immediately ensue without the need for negotiations.”

In his tweet, Kuleba urged the Holy See to “not repeat historical mistakes” as he alleged that the Vatican didn’t do enough to resist Nazi Germany. Yet he also invited Francis to Ukraine, saying the pope’s visit would show support for the “more than a million Ukrainian (Roman) Catholics, more than 5 million Greek Catholics, all Christians and all Ukrainians.”

The head of Ukraine’s Greek Catholic Church, Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, said Sunday that surrender isn’t on the minds of Ukrainians.

“Ukraine is exhausted, but it stands and will endure. Believe me, it never crosses anyone’s mind to surrender. Even where there is fighting today: listen to our people in Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Odesa, Kharkiv, Sumy,” Shevchuk said while meeting with Ukrainians in New York City. He mentioned the regions that have been under heavy Russian artillery and drone attacks.

Shevchuk also spoke of the brutality of Moscow’s invasion, referencing the town near Kyiv where Russian occupation left hundreds of civilians dead in the streets and in mass graves. He argued that the gruesome scenes seen in Bucha would have been “just an introduction” if not for Ukrainians’ fierce resistance as Russian troops marched on the capital in February 2022.

Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni on Saturday clarified that the pope supported “a stop to hostilities (and) a truce achieved with the courage of negotiations,” rather than an outright Ukrainian surrender. Bruni said that the journalist interviewing Francis used the term “white flag” in the question that prompted the controversial remarks.

“I think that the strongest one is the one who looks at the situation, thinks about the people and has the courage of the white flag, and negotiates,” Francis said, when asked to weigh in on the debate between those who say that Ukraine should agree to peace talks and those who argue that any negotiations would legitimize Moscow’s aggression.

Kyiv remains firm on not engaging directly with Russia on peace talks, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said multiple times that the initiative in peace negotiations must come from the country that has been invaded.

Throughout the war, Francis has tried to maintain the Vatican’s traditional diplomatic neutrality, but that has often been accompanied by apparent sympathy with the Russian rationale for invading Ukraine, such as when he noted that NATO was “barking at Russia’s door” with its eastward expansion.

In the RSI interview, Francis insisted that “negotiations are never a surrender.”

“When you see that you are defeated, that things are not going well, you have to have the courage to negotiate,” he said.

During the Angelus prayer on Sunday from the window overlooking St. Peter’s Square, Francis said that he was praying “for peace in the tormented Ukraine and in the Holy Land.”

“Let the hostilities which cause immense suffering among the civilian population cease as soon as possible,” he said.

Elsewhere, both Ukraine and Russia reported civilian deaths on Sunday after overnight trading drone, missile and shelling attacks that also caused a fire at a Russian oil depot and targeted Ukrainian power stations, according to officials.

Ukrainian air defenses overnight shot down 35 out of 39 drones launched by Russia, air force commander Mykola Oleshchuk reported, following a 4½-hour barrage that officials said also targeted power stations.

Two people died under rubble after Iranian-made Shahed drones around midnight struck private homes and state offices in Dobropillya, a large Ukrainian-held town in the east, authorities said. A 66-year-old man was also reported killed by shelling in Chasiv Yar, northeast of Dobropillya.

In Myrnohrad, another eastern Ukrainian town, 11 civilians were wounded after Russian missiles overnight struck residential buildings, the local prosecutor’s office reported. It also posted photos of rubble lining the courtyard outside a high-rise apartment building, its windows blown out, and of cars parked outside that appeared reduced to piles of twisted metal.

A woman also died in Russia’s Kursk region, which borders Ukraine, after shells fired from Ukraine set her house on fire, while her husband suffered severe burns, local Gov. Roman Starovoit reported.

Starovoit also said that debris from a downed Ukrainian drone sparked a fire at an oil depot in the Kursk region.

Nine Ukrainian drones targeted the Belgorod region, another southern Russian province that borders Ukraine, overnight and on Sunday, according to local Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov. Later on Sunday, Russia’s Defense Ministry said that three drones in total were shot down over the northern Leningrad and Novgorod regions, well over 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from the Ukrainian border.

Earlier on Sunday, Russian media reported on a fire at an aircraft hangar near the main airport in St Petersburg, just kilometers (miles) from the Leningrad region, without specifying what caused it. According to the reports, two people were hospitalized with burns, and flights were briefly diverted away from the airport, Pulkovo.

Nicole Winfield and Giada Zampano in Rome, and Vanessa Gera in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

pope francis visit to new york

Watch CBS News

Pope Francis opens up about personal life, health in new memoir

By Seth Doane

March 18, 2024 / 7:41 PM EDT / CBS News

Pope Francis is known for his words spoken from the pulpit, where he makes urgent calls for peace and advocates for migrants and to protect the environment, but a new memoir is revealing another side of the pontiff.

The new book, "Life: My Story Through History" chronicles the 87-year-old's life through major historic events, such as his joy at the end of World War II and cheering the fall of the Berlin Wall. But he also delves into the more intimate, like when he was briefly "dazzled" by a woman so much that it became "difficult to pray."

Co-author Fabio Marchese Ragona got a close look at the personal side of Pope Francis through hours of interviews and revisions.

He told CBS News the memoir was his idea. 

"I said that there are many people in the world that don't know him, especially in America, in the states," Ragona said, noting the U.S. was a particular focus because "It's a great country."

Conservative Catholics in the U.S. are among this pope's most vocal critics.

Father Sam Sawyer, a Jesuit like Pope Francis and the editor of the Catholic magazine America, told CBS News he thinks the portion of the book dealing with  Pope Benedict XVI  and his resignation will get a fair amount of attention.

But Ragona said that, despite  Benedict's resignation  and Francis' own health concerns, the pope only thinks about resignation because journalists ask about it.

"In the book, we talk about the resignation," Ragona said. "He said, 'I am good right now, I don't think resignation.'"

Francis writes in the book that during  hospital stays  and  medical treatments , he knows others speculate about the next conclave and a new pope.

"Relax. It's human. There's nothing shocking about it," he writes.

seth-doane-promo.jpg

Seth Doane is an award winning CBS News correspondent based in Rome.

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  • pope us visit

PHOTOS: Past papal visits to New York City

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NEW YORK (WABC) -- The arrival of Pope Francis marks the fifth time a pope has paid a visit to New York City.

POPE BENEDICT XVI: APRIL 2008 Pope Benedict XVI arrived in 2008 and addressed the United Nations. He later visited St. Joseph's Parish on the Upper East Side in Yorkville, and then became the first pope to visit ground zero.

Pope Benedict XVI meets with a New York City firefighter after praying and lighting a candle at ground zero. The pope met with survivors and relatives of victims of the World Trade Center attacks as well as first responders at the site of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, Pool)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope Benedict XVI visits the site of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. The pope offered blessings to survivors and family members of those killed in the attack. (AP Photo/Todd Heisler, Pool)

pope francis visit to new york

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, left, greets Pope Benedict XVI as he visits the site of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center. At center is Cardinal Edward Egan, Archbishop of New York. (AP Photo/Todd Heisler, Pool)

pope francis visit to new york

Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch, left, poses with Pope Benedict XVI, center, and Rabbi Arthur Schneier at the Park East Synagogue in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

pope francis visit to new york

New York City Fire Department Chief Salvatore Cassano kisses the hand of Pope Benedict XVI as he visits the site of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. The Pope offered blessings to survivors and family members of those killed in the attack. (AP Photo/Todd Heisler, Pool)

pope francis visit to new york

POPE JOHN PAUL II: OCTOBER 1995 In 1995, Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass at Giants Stadium and the Aqueduct Race Track, addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations, and visited St. Joseph's Seminary in Dunwoodie. There was also a Mass before 125,000 people in Central Park, in which he spoke English and Spanish.

John Cardinal O'Connor speaks to Pope John Paul II inside St. Patrick's Cathedral. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II waves to the crowd from the Popemobile as he arrives at Sacred Heart Cathedral in Newark, N.J. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

pope francis visit to new york

President Bill Clinton greets Pope John Paul II during ceremonies on their arrival at Newark International Airport in Newark. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II addresses the 50th session of the United Nations Thursday Oct. 5, 1995. Appealing to the conscience of humanity,'' the pope urged rich nations to offer more help to the world's poor but told developing countries they won't deserve it unless they respect democracy. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, pool)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II waves at the end of Mass at Central Park in New York.

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II waves from the steps of St. Patrick's Cathderal as he arrives to recite the Rosary and deliver a brief address in New York. (AP Photo/POOL, Tim Clary)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II, blesses wheel-chair bound Steven Norton, 9, who suffers from AIDS, as he walks down the aisle of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Norton is accompanied by his adoptive mother Patricia Norton, left, and family friend Jeff Conway, who also suffers from AIDS.

pope francis visit to new york

POPE JOHN PAUL II: OCTOBER 1979 In his first New York visit in 1979, Pope John Paul II visited St. Charles Borromeo Church of Harlem, held a prayer service at St. Patrick's Cathedral, and attended a youth rally at Madison Square Garden. He also held a Mass for 80,000 people at Yankee Stadium.

Pope John Paul II gestures to the crowd at New York's Shea Stadium after his arrival. Thousands waited under a heavy rain for the Pontiff, whose arrival brought with it, the sun. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II makes farewell address at Shea Stadium. (AP Photo/Cameron Bloch)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II, center, receives gifts from youngsters as student Monica Johnson, 17, holds a t-shirt, presented to him at presentation of symbolic gifts to Pope at New York's Madison Square Garden. The supreme Pontiff received gifts including the t-shirt, a pair of jeans, and a guitar. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II faces the crowd in front of, and surrounding, St. Patrick's Cathedral after his arrival from the United Nations. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope John Paul II is shown on arrival at the United Nations, being greeted by Kurt Waldheim, Secretary General of U.N.. (AP Photo/Ron Frehm)

pope francis visit to new york

POPE PAUL VI: OCTOBER 1965 In 1965, Pope Paul VI became the first pope to visit the United States. He prayed at St. Patrick's Cathedral, visited the United Nations General Assembly and the Vatican exhibit at the New York World's Fair before celebrating Mass at Yankee Stadium.

Pope Paul VI raises his hands to give his final blessing to more than 90,000 persons who jammed New York's Yankee Stadium in the Bronx. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope Paul VI, left, sits in front of the rostrum before addressing the United Nations General Assembly. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope Paul VI delivers an address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The Pope made a plea for peace. (AP Photo)

pope francis visit to new york

Pope Paul VI and President Lyndon B. Johnson are seen during the Pontiff's visit to New York. (AP Photo/File)

pope francis visit to new york

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Pope says option of resigning is 'a distant hypothesis'

Pope Francis at the Vatican on March 13 2024.

Pope Francis has no intention of resigning as he feels that his health is good enough to allow him to carry on, he says in a new book whose excerpts were published by Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper on Thursday.

“This is a distant hypothesis, because I don’t have reasons serious enough to make me think about giving up,” Francis was quoted as saying in “Life: My Story Through History,” a book due out in Italian and English on March 19.

Francis is 87 and has been increasingly frail in recent years, using a wheelchair or a cane to move around and recently suffering from what have been described as bouts of bronchitis or colds that have led him to limit his public speaking.

Nevertheless, in the book he reassures about his condition.

“Thank the Lord, I enjoy good health and, God willing, there are many projects still to be realized,” he said, repeating that he would consider quitting only in case of a “serious physical impediment.”

The pope again defended his recent decision to allow priests to bless same-sex couples , saying it is the duty of the Catholic Church to welcome all and that “God loves everyone, especially sinners.”

At the same time, the decision does not imply any change in Catholic doctrine — which recognizes only heterosexual marriages — and if some bishops do not want to perform same-sex blessings this will not lead to a schism, Francis added.

Elsewhere in the book, he renewed his condemnation of abortion and surrogate parenting , and noted that his focus on the poor and marginalized does not make him a communist or a Marxist.

Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI , was the first pope to resign in around 600 years, citing the strains of old age. He quit in February 2013 at age 85 and went on to live for almost 10 more years, dying at age 95.

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  1. PHOTOS: Pope Francis arrives in New York

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  2. Photos: Pope Francis visits New York

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  3. Pope Francis Visit to NYC

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  4. Pope Francis Begins New York City Visit

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  5. Pope Francis visits the United States

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  6. Pope Francis' visit to New York City poses major logistical challenge

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COMMENTS

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