logo
Vatican Unveils Pope Funeral Details & Images Of Pontiff Lying In Open Casket; First Confirmed Guests Include Trump, Zelensky & Prince William

Vatican Unveils Pope Funeral Details & Images Of Pontiff Lying In Open Casket; First Confirmed Guests Include Trump, Zelensky & Prince William

Yahoo22-04-2025

The Vatican has announced that Pope Francis's funeral will be held on Saturday (April 26) and released images of the pontiff lying in a simple wooden open casket in the chapel of the Santa Marta guesthouse as well as his last words.
The images show Cardinal Kevin Farrell presiding over the rite of certification of death of the pope following his death at the age of 88 from a stroke and heart failure on Monday (April 21).
More from Deadline
Pope Francis The Film Buff: Pontiff Cited Federico Fellini's 'La Strada' As Favorite Movie
Pope Francis Cause Of Death Disclosed And Place Of Rest Revealed
Pope Francis Remembered By Martin Scorsese, Antonio Banderas, Eva Longoria, Whoopi Goldberg, Russell Crowe, JD Vance, GLAAD And Others
In his last words, Pope Francis is reported to have expressed gratitude to his aides who facilitated his final appearance in Saint Peter's Square on Easter Sunday, saying 'Thank you for taking me into the square.'
The funeral mass will begin at 10am CET (1am PT) and take place on the parvis of Saint Peter's Basilica, or the space in front of the basilica.
Pope Francis's coffin will be transferred from the chapel of the Santa Marta guesthouse to Saint Peter's Basilica on Wednesday morning (April 23), where it will be placed by the main alter for the public to visit and pay their final respects.
Queues are already forming in Saint Peter's Square. When Pope Francis's retired predecessor Pope Benedict XVI died on December 31, 2022, some 35,000 people a day filed past his coffin.
Given that Pope Francis was still in office at the time of his death and that Rome is already full of Catholic pilgrims to celebrate the 2025 Jubilee Year, numbers are expected to be even higher over the coming days.
Hundreds of TV news crews have also joined the crowds in St Peter's Square, with their numbers set to swell even further in the lead up to Saturday.
Vatican Media will be running a multi-camera live signal of the funeral but news agencies and networks are also setting up on balconies and terraces overlooking St Peter's Square, many of which were secured by monthly retainers years ago for substantial amounts of money.
The funeral liturgy will be presided over by Italian Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, who is the Dean of the College of Cardinals.
At the end of funeral ceremony, Pope Francis' coffin will be taken into Saint Peter's Basilica and from there to the Basilica of Saint Mary Major (Santa Maria Maggiore) for burial.
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to attend the open-air ceremony and line the streets of Rome as the coffin is transferred across the city. The entire ceremony is expected to last around three to four hours.
Heads of state and other dignitaries already confirmed to attend include U.S. President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Prince William, who is standing in for his father King Charles, who met with Pope Francis in Rome just days before his death.
The Basilica of Saint Mary Major is one of four major papal basilicas, but Pope Francis has broken with tradition in his request to be laid to rest there, rather than in one of the crypts of St Peter's Basilica inside the Vatican City.
The start date for Conclave at which 135 cardinals from across the world will vote on the next pope has yet to be announced.
Traditionally, it begins 15 to 20 days after the death of the last pope, but this timeframe was conditioned by the length of time it would take cardinals to get to Rome prior to widespread air travel.
There are suggestions that the process which takes place in absolute secrecy in the Sistine Chapel could be brought forward if all 135 cardinals gather in Rome before the 15-day deadline.
Frontrunners to become the next pope include Italy's Pietro Parolin, the Philippines' Luis Antonio Tagle, Ghana's Peter Turkson and Portugal's José Tolentino Calaça de Mendonça and for the U.S., Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan and Cardinal Robert Prevost, who is already in Rome after a stin in Latin America.
Best of Deadline
'The Last Of Us': Differences Between HBO Series & Video Game Across Seasons 1 And 2
'Ransom Canyon' Book Vs. Show Differences: From Quinn & Staten's Love Story To Yancy Grey's Plot
Everything We Know About Netflix's 'Ransom Canyon' So Far

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pascal Siakam explains 'demonic' viral moment: 'I have this problem where I can't really close my eyes'
Pascal Siakam explains 'demonic' viral moment: 'I have this problem where I can't really close my eyes'

Indianapolis Star

timea day ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Pascal Siakam explains 'demonic' viral moment: 'I have this problem where I can't really close my eyes'

OKLAHOMA CITY – One of Pascal Siakam's agents once told him after a game a camera had caught him during the National Anthem looking like his eyes had rolled up into his head. His eyes were open but his pupils weren't visible — just the sclera or the white part of the eye — so he looked like something out of "The Exorcist" or some other movie about demonic possession. The irony was Siakam had actually been caught in the act of praying. He comes from a devout Catholic family in Cameroon and his father sent him to seminary school in hopes that he would become a priest. Though he graduated, Siakam opted against that life, but still remains religious. He prays multiple times before every game with his eyes closed — well, mostly closed. "I have this problem where I can't really close my eyes," Siakam said Saturday in an off-day media availability at the Paycom Center before Game 7 of the NBA Finals. "Sometimes I'll be thinking I'm closing my eyes, but they are not really closed. Even sometimes having conversations, sometimes I look up and it feels like I'm thinking, and my eyes just go up." And that's what happened Thursday night, he said, when television cameras caught him in a pre-game huddle with his teammates in the hallway outside the Pacers' locker room at Gainbridge Fieldhouse just before Game 6. He had his head bowed but then raised it up and when he did, his pupils were under his eyelids but enough of the whites of his eyes were still visible. This of course, made the rounds on social media with various jokes about Siakam being a demon, accessing some kind of dark magic or that he'd entered the Ancestral Plane from the "Black Panther" movie franchise. Siakam didn't find out about until after the game. He said in a video on Instagram teammate Myles Turner had showed him pictures and videos. Siakam had 16 points and 13 rebounds in the Pacers' 108-91 win but he joked that he wished he'd scored 30 because he could say the spirits took him over. "I'm glad people are enjoying it and having fun with it," Siakam said. "Literally I was praying and trying to close my eyes and I was thinking in my head my eyes were closed, but clearly they weren't closed. That's just all it is, really." Siakam has tried to be cognizant about keeping his eyes as closed as he can, and sometimes even covering his face with his hands. But in the NBA Finals with cameras everywhere, that's not easy to do. "I've got to do better," Siakam said. "I've got to start doing this (covering eyes with hands) or I can put my head down and y'all can't look at me no more. And the NBA with all these cameras, it's too much, man. Get the cameras away from us."

When does Season 3 of 'The Gilded Age' come out? Date, cast, where to watch
When does Season 3 of 'The Gilded Age' come out? Date, cast, where to watch

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

When does Season 3 of 'The Gilded Age' come out? Date, cast, where to watch

Step back into the Gilded Age, "a period of immense economic and social change," with Season 3 of HBO's lavish period drama. The opulent series, created by "Downton Abbey's" Julian Fellowes, follows high society and the battle between "old money" and "new money" in 1800s New York. In the upcoming season, the old guard is weakened following the Opera War and the Russells "stand poised to take their place at the head of society," according to the season synopsis. "Bertha sets her sights on a prize that would elevate the family to unimaginable heights while George risks everything on a gambit that could revolutionize the railroad industry — if it doesn't ruin him first," the synopsis says, adding, "across the street, the Brook household is thrown into chaos as Agnes refuses to accept Ada's new position as lady of the house." "As all of New York hastens toward the future, their ambition may come at the cost of what they truly hold dear," it concludes. Here's what to know about Season 3 of "The Gilded Age," including the release date, cast and trailer. Watch 'The Gilded Age' with Sling + Max Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox When does 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 come out? Season 3 of "The Gilded Age" will premiere on Sunday, June 22, at 9 p.m. ET / PT on HBO and will be available to stream on Max at the same time. Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle. How to watch 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 "The Gilded Age" Season 3 will drop weekly on Sundays on HBO and Max starting Sunday, June 22 at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT. Seasons 1 and 2 of "The Gilded Age" are also available to stream on Max. Watch 'The Gilded Age' with Sling + Max How many episodes will 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 have? Season 3 of 'The Gilded Age' will have eight episodes. Here's what the episode schedule looks like: 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 cast Cast members for Season 3 of "The Gilded Age," among others, include: Watch the 'The Gilded Age' Season 3 trailer Max dropped the trailer for Season 3 of "The Gilded Age" on June 3. Will 'The Gilded Age' return for Season 4? HBO has not made any announcements regarding Season 4 of "The Gilded Age" as yet, a rep told USA TODAY. We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn't influence our coverage. Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@ and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.

Jon Bernthal to play Punisher again in next 'Spider-Man' adventure
Jon Bernthal to play Punisher again in next 'Spider-Man' adventure

UPI

time2 days ago

  • UPI

Jon Bernthal to play Punisher again in next 'Spider-Man' adventure

Jon Bernthal is set to reprise his iconic role of the Punisher in the next "Spider-Man" movie. File Photo by Jim Ruymen/UPI | License Photo June 21 (UPI) -- Jon Bernthal has signed on to play the Punisher again in the next Spider-Man movie. Variety, Deadline and The Hollywood Reporter reported the casting news Friday. The film is set to go into production this summer. Bernthal has played the Marvel comic-book vigilante Frank Castle/the Punisher in his own eponymous TV show, as well as the related shows Daredevil and Daredevil: Born Again. In addition to appearing in Spider-Man: Brand New Day opposite Tom Holland as the titular web-slinger, Bernthal will also play the Punisher in an as-yet-untitled special on Disney+ Both projects are set for release in 2026. Bernthal was also recently seen in The Accountant 2 and The Amateur.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store