Regina Caeli Remarks of Pope Francis

Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia

Regina Caeli Remarks
© Vatican Media

Pope Francis made brief remarks at the reciting of the Regina Caeli on Divine Mercy Sunday. This followed celebration of Mass in the Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia.

In his comments, he thanked the various people involved in the service, including the broadcast media, and the various people who work in the facility.

Pope Francis spoke of the gift of mercy in his homily on the Feast of Divine Mercy, April 11, 2021,

Following are his remarks, provided by the Vatican:

Before concluding this celebration, I would like to thank those who collaborated in preparing it and broadcasting it live. And I greet all those who are connected via the media.

I address a special greeting to you, present here in the Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia, the Shrine of Divine Mercy: regular faithful, nursing staff, inmates, people with disabilities, refugees and migrants, Hospitaller Sisters of Mercy, and Civil Protection volunteers.

You represent some of the situations in which mercy is made tangible; it becomes closeness, service, care for those in difficulty. I hope you will always feel you have been granted mercy, so as to be merciful to others in turn.

May the Virgin Mary, Mother of Mercy, obtain this grace for us all.

© Libreria Editrice Vatican

History of Santo Spirito in Sassia from The Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy

The church of Santo Spirito in Sassia (Holy Spirit in Saxony) in Rome is located near St. Peter’s Square (by the Vatican). Not only is it famous for its beautiful and very rich decorations, (it is adorned with numerous paintings, frescoes, and works of eminent artists from many periods) but it also has a long history of bringing mercy to the human spirit and body.


Already in the eighth century, there was a church in this place called Santa Maria in Sassia and dedicated to the Virgin Mary. The name of the church comes from “the Saxon school” – the place where pilgrims from Northern Europe, from the Saxon nation, received their first spiritual and material assistance. In 1198, at the request of Pope Innocent III, the first Holy Spirit Hospital in Europe was built next to the church. The Pope commissioned the construction and supervision of the work to Guido di Montpellier, the founder of the Hospital Brotherhood of the Holy Spirit in France. The Church and the Hospital of the Holy Spirit enjoyed a very good reputation not only among Roman residents but also among pilgrims. The hospital care gained recognition even in the eyes of Luther who, during his stay in Rome, did not hesitate to adopt a harsh stance towards the Eternal City. He spared only the hospital of the Holy Spirit.

The Church of the Holy Spirit was rebuilt by Pope Sixtus IV for the Jubilee Year of 1475, and later by Pope Paul III, who commissioned the work on the church to Antonio di Sangallo. The interior of the church, besides the main nave, has a number of chapels to the right and left, all of them richly adorned. The dominant theme of the paintings, on account of the hospital adjacent to the church, are evangelical scenes associated with the healing of body and spirit.

The third chapel on the right side is now dedicated to The Divine Mercy and to Saint Sister Faustina. In this chapel are located: the image of Merciful Jesus painted by P. Moskal in 1994; the statue of St. Sister Faustina Kowalska, the Apostle of The Divine Mercy; and her reliquary donated by the Holy Father John Paul II after her canonization. Previously, the chapel was dedicated to the Holy Trinity and to St. Philip Neri. The sixteenth-century paintings are of the four Evangelists, and on the pillars, there are figures of the four Doctors of the Church (Saints Augustine, Athanasius, Ambrose, and John Chrysostom). On the dome, divided into three parts, there are paintings presenting: Abraham with the angels, Tobias restoring sight to his father, and Elisha who cured Naaman of leprosy. On the sides of the altar, there are paintings that present Jesus restoring sight to the blind man and healing the paralytic man.

The Holy Father John Paul II appointed the church of Santo Spirito in Sassia to be The Divine Mercy Spirituality Centre (from 1 January 1994). Fr. Józef Bart has been the Rector of the church since 1 March 1993. He comes from Katowice but belongs to the clergy of the diocese of Rome. Since the beatification of Sister Faustina (1993), the church is also served by the sisters from the Congregation of Our Lady of Mercy.

Sr. M. Elżbieta Siepak OLM

Translated by Orest Pawlak