Pope Francis’ visit to basilica a sign of improved health

14 Apr 2025

By Contributor

By Cindy Wooden

Britain’s King Charles III and Queen Camilla greet Pope Francis during a visit at the Vatican on the 9 April 2025. Photo: CNS/Vatican Media.

Pope Francis’ surprise visit to St Peter’s Basilica to pray and see ongoing restoration work is a clear sign that his condition is improving, the Vatican press office said.

The 88-year-old Pontiff, pushed in a wheelchair by his nurse and using a nasal cannula to deliver supplemental oxygen, entered the basilica just before 1 pm on 10 April.

Vatican News said he went to the basilica to pray at the tomb of St Pius X.

The Vatican Press Office said on 11 April that the Holy Father had asked his assistants to take him to the basilica to pray, and they did so.

“He was happy to pray in the basilica and to encounter people,” the Press Office said.

Tourists, pilgrims and even priests who minister in the basilica were taken by surprise.

“So much emotion,” Msgr Valerio Di Palma, one of the canons of the basilica told Vatican News.

“My vision blurred with tears, and I couldn’t even take a picture,” Msgr Di Palma said.

Pope Francis, who is taking two months rest as he recovers from double pneu-monia, makes a surprise visit to St Peter’s Basilica not dressed in his usual white papal attire, at the Vatican on the 10 April 2025. Photo: OSV News/Luiz Gil, Handout via Reuters.

Of course, others present in the basilica did take photos and videos on their phones and posted them to social media, capturing him blessing a baby and chatting with a young boy.

Pope Francis was not wearing his white cassock or white zucchetto. Instead, his head was bare, and he wore black trousers and a white shirt. He had a striped blanket draped over his chest and arms.

The Holy Father was released from Rome’s Gemelli hospital on 23 March after 38 days of treatment for breathing difficulties, double pneumonia and an infection of his airways.

His doctors said they released him with a recommendation that he spend two months convalescing, avoiding large groups.

For his first two weeks back at the Vatican, he stayed close to his room and office in the Domus Sanctae Marthae where he lives.

He concelebrated Mass each morning with his secretaries, did physical and respiratory therapy and paperwork.

Two weeks after his release from the hospital, the Holy Father surprised people attending the closing Mass of the Jubilee of the Sick and Health Care Workers on 6 April in St Peter’s Square by arriving at the end of the Mass, wishing people “a happy Sunday” and thanking them for their prayers.

Pope Francis met with Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin on the 7 April, , and with Britain’s King Charles III and Queen Consort Camilla on Wednesday 9 April.

The meeting with the British royals lasted 20 minutes, and the Holy Father did not use or need supplemental oxygen during that time, the Press Office said, adding that Pope Francis has been able to go longer periods without such assistance.

In the days after meeting the King and Queen Consort, the Press office said, the Holy Father met with: Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra, the substitute for general affairs in the Secretariat of State; Archbishop Paul Gallagher, the Vatican foreign minister; Archbishop Luciano Russo, head of the secretariat’s section for diplomatic personnel; and heads of several Roman Curia offices.

The Press Office also announced on 11 April that Argentine Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Vice Dean of the College of Cardinals, would preside over the Vatican celebration of Palm Sunday Mass as Pope Francis’ delegate.

A source said the Holy Father’s presence at the liturgies of Holy Week and Easter would depend both on his condition and the weather.