Express & Star

Pope sits upright in armchair as Argentines in Rome pray for his recovery

Francis is being treated for double pneumonia.

By contributor Nicole Winfield, Trisha Thomas and Sylvia Stellacci, AP
Published
A woman prays for Pope Francis in front of the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic, in Rome
The Pope has been in hospital since February 14 (AP)

The Pope is sitting upright and receiving therapy for double pneumonia, the Vatican said, as Argentines, Romans and others kept up a steady stream of prayers for his recovery.

Francis remains in a critical condition but the Holy See machinery ground on, with the announcement of new bishops and a new church fundraising initiative.

The Vatican said that it hoped to have information later in the day about the results of a CT scan taken on Tuesday evening to check on the status of the complex lung infection that has kept the 88-year-old Pope in hospital since February 14.

Francis has chronic lung disease and was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital after a bout of bronchitis worsened.

Nuns pray for Pope Francis
The hospital in Rome has seen prayers from the faithful for the Pope (AP)

The Vatican said the Pope had a peaceful night and was up, sitting in his armchair on Wednesday receiving therapy.

Doctors have said he is not out of danger, but has had no further respiratory crises since Saturday.

Francis has been working from his hospital room, and the daily grind of the Vatican bureaucracy has been continuing in his absence.

On Wednesday the Vatican said Francis had appointed four new bishops and approved the creation of a new fundraising initiative to encourage donations to the Holy See, which has been enduring a financial crisis for years.

Francis likely approved the bishop appointments awhile back and the new norms for the fundraising entity were approved on February 11, before he was admitted to hospital.

Images of the Pope
The Pope is being treated for double pneumonia (AP)

But the announcements made them official and suggested Francis is still very much in charge and governing.

If he were to look out the hospital window from the 10th floor, he might see that a steady stream of well-wishers are lighting candles and leaving him get-well cards at the statue of St John Paul II near the Gemelli entrance.

It has become something of a makeshift pilgrimage destination, especially for church groups in town for the Vatican’s Holy Year.

On Wednesday, Bishop Gerardo Villalonga from Menorca, Spain, led a group of 50 pilgrims to the site, saying they wanted to be as close to him as possible.

“Because when a family has someone who is sick it is very important that they are surrounded, it is necessary that everyone is near to them, and all the people of God are close the pope,” he said.

Catholic faithful attend a nightly rosary prayer service for the health of Pope Francis in St Peter’s Square
St Peter’s Square has seen a nightly rosary for the Pope’s health (AP)

The dean of the College of Cardinals, meanwhile, was designated to lead the Vatican’s prayer vigil in St Peter’s Square on Wednesday night, thrusting a key figure in a future possible conclave into the spotlight.

Francis recently extended the term of Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, 91, keeping him in the important job rather than naming someone new.

As is now popularly known thanks to the Oscar-nominated film Conclave, the dean is a key point of reference for cardinals. He presides over a papal funeral and organises the conclave to elect a new pope.

From 2000-2010, Cardinal Re was prefect of the Vatican’s congregation for bishops, one of the most powerful and influential positions in the Holy See. Francis made him dean in 2020 and confirmed him in the job in January despite the expiration of his five-year term.

On Tuesday night, the faithful from Francis’ homeland gathered in the Argentine church of Rome for a special Mass presided over by Cardinal Baldassare Reina, the pope’s vicar for Rome. Cardinal Reina was also celebrating the lunchtime Mass on Wednesday at Gemelli to pray for Francis.

The rector of the Argentine church, the Rev Fernando Laguna, said that he hoped the pope could feel the embrace of the community’s prayer.

“I can’t go to Gemelli, because for him to recover he must be isolated,” he said. “I know that I hug him and that he hugs me when I pray. And now I would like to embrace the Pope.”