Assisi, Italy — For the first time, the remains of Francis of Assisi will be exposed for public veneration from February 22 to March 22 in the lower church of the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, as preparations begin for the 800th anniversary of the saint’s death in 2026.
Church officials expect between 15,000 and 18,000 visitors daily — up to 370,000 pilgrims over the month — in what is being described as both a devotional milestone and a moment of spiritual renewal.
More Than a Devotional Gesture
Speaking to Vatican News, Fr. Giulio Cesareo, communications director of the Sacred Convent of Assisi, said the exposition is not merely an act of popular devotion but a profound ecclesial event.
“Christians have always venerated relics because the saints testified with their lives that the love of God fully embraced them,” he explained. “God’s love is not abstract — it involves the flesh.”
The organizers have chosen as their spiritual theme John 12:24: “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.”
Fr. Cesareo described Francis as that “grain of wheat” — one who gave himself completely in prayer, poverty and service to others.
“Whoever gives himself is consumed,” he said. “But he bears fruit.”
Strengthening Communion
Church leaders believe the exposition will strengthen unity among the faithful, both locally and worldwide.
“Our faith is not a pre-existing belief, but a relationship with the Lord,” Fr. Cesareo said. Venerating Francis’ relics, he added, reinforces the conviction that love given freely — even at personal cost — builds lasting bonds of communion.
Eight centuries after his death, Francis’ witness continues to resonate precisely because it was lived concretely, through relationships, sacrifice and simplicity.
A City Transformed
The impact on Assisi has already been significant. Hotels and restaurants in and around the Umbrian hill town have been fully booked for months.
For the local Church and community, however, the event is seen as more than an economic boost.
“In a society that tells us to think only of ourselves, Francis says the opposite,” Fr. Cesareo noted. “His bones testify to someone who gave himself completely.”
He described the relics as the “shell of a seed” — the physical trace of a life that blossomed through charity and continues to inspire.
A Message for Today’s World
Francis lived in an era marked by religious wars, political conflicts and social divisions — conditions not unlike today’s global tensions.
Yet his response was radical simplicity and Gospel-centered living. Known in his lifetime as alter Christus — an image of Christ — Francis demonstrated that embracing the Gospel could transform relationships and communities.
In a world often marked by pessimism and feelings of powerlessness, Fr. Cesareo said Francis’ enduring message is one of hope.
“We may not change the whole world,” he said, “but if each of us takes one step, that step leaves an impact.”
As pilgrims prepare to file past the saint’s remains in the Basilica crypt, Church leaders hope the encounter will not only honor history but renew hearts — reminding believers and non-believers alike that authentic love, once sown, continues to bear fruit across centuries.
