Pope Leo to hold iconic mass at Spain’s Sagrada Família cathedral


BARCELONA, Spain — Pope Leo XIV will hold Mass at Barcelona’s iconic La Sagrada Familia on Wednesday where he will offer a papal blessing to the highest spire of what is now the tallest church in the world.

Sagrada Familia’s distinctive Modernist basilica has been under construction for more than 140 years but, in February, work finally finished on the central Tower of Jesus Christ, which stands at 566 feet high and is crowned with a gigantic five-story ceramic cross.

The Mass in Barcelona will be a capstone of Leo’s weeklong visit to Spain, his first significant European trip since being elected pontiff last year and the first papal trip to the predominantly Catholic nation in 15 years.

Although rates of church attendance have declined sharply in Spain — like much of Western Europe — the Vatican said that around 1.2 million people turned out on the streets of Madrid on Sunday as the pontiff presided over a vast outdoor Mass.

On Monday, Leo became the first pontiff to address the Spanish parliament, warning lawmakers that military conflict and political polarization were pushing the world into “a profound spiritual and cultural crisis.”

Pope Leo XIV Visits Spain
Pope Leo XIV is greeted by crowds Monday at Calle Mayor in Madrid.Pablo Cuadra / Getty Images

He also spoke out against Europe’s ramped-up defense spending — which is rising in response to Russia’s four-year war in Ukraine and the Trump administration’s criticism of NATO — and called on European governments instead to spend their money on peacemaking initiatives and helping the needy.

“Weapons can impose ⁠a temporary silence, but they can never build an authentic and lasting peace,” he ​said.

At both events, he spoke almost exclusively in Spanish as he will for most of his trip, although he is expected to make some comments in Catalan, the predominant language in Catalonia, the autonomous region in northeastern Spain where Barcelona is located.

The pope’s visit to Sagrada Familia is timed to coincide with the centenary of the death of the man who first imagined it: the legendary Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. After his death, Gaudi’s distinctive architectural style, often incorporating naturalistic, playful elements seen in sites such as Park Guell, came to define Barcelona.

The Sagrada Familia under construction.
La Sagrada Familia under construction in 1887. Universal Images Group via Getty Images file

Gaudí took over the construction of Sagrada Familia in 1883 determined to build a towering monument of Catholic faith, but with a shape and texture unlike any other church at the time.

His work was far from finished when he was struck by a tram and killed June 10, 1926. Gaudí, a committed Catholic, was known for wearing ragged clothes and did not immediately receive medical attention because onlookers mistook him for a beggar.

The vision for Sagrada Familia has long outlived the visionary and work has continued over the century since his death, with planners hoping to finally complete the vast basilica by 2034. Foreigners, whose entrance fees fund its construction, account for 90% of today’s visitors and more Americans visit than Spaniards, according to the basilica.

Mauricio Cortés, a Mexican architect, is among the generations of builders charged with completing Gaudí’s work. His task was among the most delicate: assembling the giant 24-ton cross that now tops the Tower of Jesus Christ.



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