We wake to the most solemn day in the Church year. Although some may choose to fast, there will be a delicious breakfast spread in the quaint garden room filled with the morning light. Fresh fruits, local cheeses, eggs cooked to order and a variety of breads—all food is local and prepared to order.
From Norcia, it is 20 minutes to Roccaporena, St. Rita’s birthplace. It is fitting to visit a shrine to St. Rita, the “Patroness of the Impossible,” on Good Friday, since she received the stigmata on this very day. We will pray the Stations of the Cross as we climb the Rock of St. Rita. This is believed to be the place where St. Rita often prayed.
Late morning we travel on to Cascia, only seven minutes away, to visit St. Rita’s Basilica, which houses her incorrupt body. In the lower Basilica, we also venerate the Eucharistic Miracle preserved since 1330.
We return to Norcia for a bowl of soup before preparing to participate in Good Friday liturgy with the monks in their new chapel outside the city. Their relocated home is on the side of a mountain, built next to the ruins of an old monastery. The monks chant the liturgy in Latin. It is a solemn moment, truly an extraordinary experience—but in an ordinary way, for this is how the monks worship every day. We will have Latin-English missals so that you can follow everything without confusion. We will have our evening meal before the warm glow of the wood-burning grill reflecting upon and sharing our impressions of the day.
On Good Friday, at 9:00 p.m., we will begin our short walk to one of the piazzas inside the ancient walled city of Norcia. Once we have arrived at the piazza, we will take our places alongside the many Italians who journey here year after year from all over Italy to witness, participate in, and, in a way, relive, the poignant events of the first Good Friday. Everyone gathers here for the living Stations of the Cross, including the local people of Norcia, many of whom are actors with roles in the sacred performance, as well as visitors, pilgrims, religious and clergy. The crowd grows with the presence of the horses that will carry the Roman soldiers as they trot into the procession. For many, it feels as if Jerusalem has been transported to Norcia, and the experience borders on the extraordinary. The sacred drama begins with the conferring of a priestly blessing. We see — but more than that, we experience — the touching, key scenes of the Stations, portraying Jesus Christ making His way to Calvary.
At the same time, we, too, make our walk outside the walls of the city. As we stop at each of the Stations depicted, we find ourselves perhaps stepping back in time to that Night of Nights, two millennia ago. From His arrest and appearance before Pilate, to meeting His sorrowful Mother, to encountering the weeping women of Jerusalem, and culminating at the hill of the Cross, we pilgrims witness the Passion of Christ as few Christians can. Though only an hour and a half in duration, this moving experience is the memory of a lifetime.
Overnight in Norcia. Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner included.