Pope Leo XIV on Sunday called on Spain to renew its historic Eucharistic faith, warning that the country’s centuries-old religious traditions must not become a museum of the past to be visited, but remain a school of faith. The Pope made the appeal while presiding over Mass, a procession, and Eucharistic blessing for the solemnity of Corpus Christi in Madrid’s Plaza de Cibeles, one of the Spanish capital’s most emblematic sites, with 1.2 million people present. Corpus Christi has deep roots in Spain and throughout the Catholic world. The feast originated after the efforts of St. Juliana of Cornillon, a Belgian religious sister from Liege who promoted a liturgical celebration dedicated to the Blessed Sacrament. Pope Urban IV confirmed the feast for the universal Church in 1264, and within decades it had reached the Iberian Peninsula. King Alfonso X, known as “the Wise,” took part in a Corpus Christi celebration in Toledo in 1280. Over the centuries, the tradition became firmly established in Spain, making the country one of the great centers of Eucharistic devotion. During the period of the Council of Trent, when the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist was contested in parts of Europe, Spanish popular piety continued to exalt it through processions, music, art, and public expressions of faith.
In Madrid, Pope Leo said Corpus
Christi is “more than just another celebration on the liturgical calendar. It is a way of returning to the
heart of the faith to renew our love and fidelity to God.” The Pope
said the Corpus Christi procession is not “an exhibition, a remnant of folklore
or a simple display of beauty. It is a profession of faith in
the presence of the risen Lord, who is alive and continues to walk among us,
who becomes bread to satiate our hunger for life, and visits the recesses of
our hearts and history, even those shrouded in darkness.”
The procession route, about 600 meters along Calle de Alcalá, one of Madrid’s
central thoroughfares, was adorned with 16 floral carpets — eight on each side
— made with more than 30,000 carnations. Numerous faithful joined the pope,
including many boys and girls who had recently received their first Communion. “The
Christ who processes through the streets in the monstrance is the same one who
identifies with the poor, the downtrodden, those who are alone and forsaken,”
he said. “It
is not merely a matter of bringing out the monstrance,” Pope Leo emphasized,
“but of allowing ourselves to be brought out of our selfishness and
indifference, of a comfortable, private faith, so as to respond to his
invitation to conversion, to change our perspective, and to welcome his
presence which transforms us and makes us builders of a new world.”
































