November 26, 2024 at 9:45 a.m.

'EVERY SIN LEAVES A MARK'

JUBILEE YEAR 2025: Idulgences include pilgrimage, penance, service
T-shirts and hoodies featuring the official logo of the Holy Year 2025 are seen in the "Jubilee Official Store" on Via della Traspontina in Rome, not far from the main boulevard leading to St. Peter's Square May 31, 2024. The Vatican chose the company that owns the store to be the official provider of jubilee merchandise. (CNS photo/Cindy Wooden)
T-shirts and hoodies featuring the official logo of the Holy Year 2025 are seen in the "Jubilee Official Store" on Via della Traspontina in Rome, not far from the main boulevard leading to St. Peter's Square May 31, 2024. The Vatican chose the company that owns the store to be the official provider of jubilee merchandise. (CNS photo/Cindy Wooden) (Courtesy photo of Cindy Wooden)

By Cindy Wooden | Comments: 0 | Leave a comment

VATICAN CITY — Pilgrims passing through the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica during the Holy Year 2025, going to confession, receiving Communion and praying for the intentions of the pope can receive an indulgence, but so can inmates in prison and those who work to defend human life or assist migrants and refugees.

THE JUBILEE CALENDAR
DECEMBER 2024
Dec. 24 -
Opening of the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica (Rome)
Dec. 26 - Opening of a Holy Door at Rebibbia Prison (Rome)
Dec. 29 - Opening of the Holy Door of St. John Lateran Basilica (Rome)
JANUARY 2025
Jan. 1 
- Opening of the Holy Door of St. Mary Major Basilica (Rome)
Jan. 5 - Opening of the Holy Door of St. Paul Outside the Walls (Rome)
Jan. 24-26 - Jubilee of the World of Communications
FEBRUARY
Feb. 8-9 -
Jubilee of the Armed Forces, Police and Security Personnel
Feb. 16-18 - Jubilee of Artists
Feb. 21-23 - Jubilee of Deacons
MARCH
March 8-9 -
Jubilee of the World of Volunteering
March 28-24 - Hours for the Lord
March 28-30 - Jubilee of the Missionaries of Mercy
APRIL
April 5-6 -
Jubilee of the Sick and Health Care Workers
April 25-27 - Jubilee of Teenagers (Youth)
April 28-30 - Jubilee of Persons with Disabilities
MAY
May 1-4 -
Jubilee of Workers
May 4-5 - Jubilee of Entrepreneurs
May 10-11 - Jubilee of Musical Bands
May 16-18 - Jubilee of Confraternities
May 24-25 - Jubilee of Children
May 30-June 1 - Jubilee of Families, Grandparents, and the Elderly
JUNE
June 7-8 - 
Jubilee of Ecclesial Movements, Associations, and New Communities
June 9 - Jubilee of the Holy See
June 14-15 - Jubilee of Sports
June 20-22 - Jubilee of Governments
June 23-24 - Jubilee of Seminarians
June 25 - Jubilee of Bishops
June 26-27 - Jubilee of Priests
June 28 - Jubilee of the Eastern Churches
JULY/AUGUST
July 28-Aug. 3 - 
Jubilee of Young Adults and Young People
SEPTEMBER
Sept. 15 - 
Jubilee of Consolation
Sept. 20 - Jubilee of Justice
Sept. 26-28 - Jubilee of Catechists
OCTOBER
Oct. 5 - 
Jubilee of Migrants
Oct. 8-9 - Jubilee of Consecrated Life
Oct. 11-12 - Jubilee of Marian Spirituality
Oct. 18-19 - Jubilee of the Missions
Oct. 30-Nov. 2 - Jubilee of the World of Education
NOVEMBER
Nov. 16 - 
Jubilee of the Poor
Nov. 21-23 - Jubilee of Choirs
DECEMBER
Dec. 14 - 
Jubilee of Prisoners
Dec. 28 - Closing of the Holy Doors around the world (Note: At this time, all holy doors will close with the exception of Saint Peter in Rome)
JANUARY 2026
Jan. 6 - 
Closing of the Holy Door of Saint Peter’s Basilica (Rome)

Fasting “at least for one day of the week from futile distractions” such as social media also can be a path toward a jubilee indulgence, according to norms published by the Vatican.

For centuries a feature of holy year celebrations has been the indulgence, which the church describes as a remission of the temporal punishment a person is due for their sins.

“Every sin ‘leaves its mark’ ” even after a person has received forgiveness and absolution through the sacrament of reconciliation, Pope Francis wrote in the document proclaiming the Holy Year. “Sin has consequences, not only outwardly in the effects of the wrong we do, but also inwardly, inasmuch as ‘every sin, even venial, entails an unhealthy attachment to creatures, which must be purified either here on earth, or after death, in the state called Purgatory,’” he wrote, quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

The norms for receiving an indulgence during the Holy Year were signed by Cardinal Angelo De Donatis, the new head of the Apostolic Penitentiary, a Vatican court dealing with matters of conscience and with the granting of indulgences.

The basic conditions, he wrote, are that a person is “moved by a spirit of charity,” is “purified through the sacrament of penance and refreshed by Holy Communion” and prays for the pope. Along with a pilgrimage, a work of mercy or an act of penance, a Catholic “will be able to obtain from the treasury of the Church a plenary indulgence, with remission and forgiveness of all their sins, which can be applied in suffrage to the souls in Purgatory.”

The Rome pilgrimage, Cardinal De Donatis said, can be to the papal basilicas of St. Peter’s, St. Mary Major, St. John Lateran or St. Paul Outside the Walls. But also to one of the churches connected to outstanding women saints and doctors of the church: St. Catherine of Siena at the Basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva; St. Brigid of Sweden at Campo de’ Fiori; St. Teresa of Avila at the Church of Santa Maria della Vittoria; St. Thérèse of Lisieux at Trinità dei Monti; and St. Monica at the Church of St. Augustine.

Pilgrims to the Holy Land also can receive the Holy Year indulgence by praying at the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem or the Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth.

For those who cannot travel abroad, local bishops around the world can designate their cathedral or another church or sacred place for pilgrims to obtain the indulgence, the cardinal wrote, asking bishops to “take into account the needs of the faithful as well as the opportunity to reinforce the concept of pilgrimage with all its symbolic significance, so as to manifest the great need for conversion and reconciliation.”

People who cannot leave their residence — “especially cloistered nuns and monks, but also the elderly, the sick, prisoners and those who, through their work in hospitals or other care facilities, provide continuous service to the sick — can spiritually join a pilgrimage and receive the indulgence, according to the norms.

Visiting the sick or a prisoner, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked or welcoming a migrant, “in a sense making a pilgrimage to Christ present in them,” can be another way to receive the indulgence, the cardinal said, adding that an indulgence could be obtained each day from such acts of mercy.

“The Jubilee Plenary Indulgence can also be obtained through initiatives that put into practice, in a concrete and generous way, the spirit of penance which is, in a sense, the soul of the Jubilee,” he wrote, highlighting in particular abstaining on Fridays from “futile distractions” like social media or from “superfluous consumption” by not eating meat.

“Supporting works of a religious or social nature, especially in support of the defense and protection of life in all its phases,” helping a young person in difficulty or a recently-arrived migrant or immigrant -- anything involving “dedicating a reasonable portion of one’s free time to voluntary activities that are of service to the community or to other similar forms of personal commitment” also are paths toward an indulgence, he said.

“Despite the rule that only one plenary indulgence can be obtained per day,” Cardinal De Donatis wrote, “the faithful who have carried out an act of charity on behalf of the souls in Purgatory, if they receive Holy Communion a second time that day, can obtain the plenary indulgence twice on the same day,” although the second indulgence is “applicable only to the deceased.”


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