Ordinary Jubilees Because of political events, the Jubilees of 1800 (Pius VI and Pius VII) and 1850 (Pius IX) were not celebrated; the 1875 Jubilee was held without ceremony. Extraordinary Jubilees |
From: 'St. Peter's - Guide to Basilica and Square'
The last door on the right is the "Holy Door". This door is bricked up on the inside. On the first day of the Holy Year the Pope strikes the brick wall with a hammer, and so opens the door to let in the pilgrims who come to make the most of the indulgence. It will be closed by the Pope himself at the end of the Holy Year. The Holy Door represents Jesus, the Good Shepherd and the gate of the sheep pen: "I am the gate. Whoever enters through me, will be safe. He will go in and out, and find pasture" (Jn 10:9). The Holy Year is celebrated every 25 years. In this century two extraordinary Holy Years of Redemption have also been celebrated on the anniversary of Jesus' death on the Cross: 1933 and 1983. When the wall is knocked down, the bronze panels of the door made by Vico Consorti appear. Since 24 December 1949 they have replaced the former wooden panels made in 1749.
This door is also called the "Door of the Great Pardon". Its panels portray scenes of man's sin and his redemption through God's mercy:
1. Through disobedience Adam and Eve turned away from God and happiness and were chased from the garden; Mary receives the announcement of salvation from the angel and directs humanity back to God.
2. Through Baptism, Jesus permits us to join his People; he comes to seek us when we stray from him, as the shepherd goes in search of his lost sheep; he awaits our return and welcomes us at the door, as the father welcomes the prodigal son; he cures those who are paralyzed sin.
3. Jesus opens the door of new life to the woman who is sinful but can love; Jesus tells Peter says that one must forgive seventy times seven times. Jesus trusts anew in the man who promises fidelity and then denies him; Jesus opens the door of heaven to the thief who calls on him.
4. Jesus unlocks the heart of doubting Thomas to the faith; he gives his Spirit to the Apostles to enable them to forgive sins; he tumbles Paul from his horse and suddenly opens up a whole new world to him; he knocks at everyone's door and waits for us to open it.
From: 'St. Peter's Basilica - A Virtual Tour' by Our Sunday Visitor
At the right end of the atrium is the Holy Door. In 1949 it was furnished with two bronze wings with eight compartments on each side, produced by Vico Consorti, known as the "maestro degli usci" (master of the doors) because of his various works of commemorative doors.
The Door is purposefully based on a peaceful and expressive decorum and a symmetrical layout, since it was destined to remain closed, revealing the wall to be knocked down every Holy Year. Information about this solemn ceremony dates back to the Jubilee of 1500, under the papacy of Alexander VI, 200 years after the institution of this solemn pardon by Bonifacius VIII, who established that the ceremony would be repeated every 100 years. Afterwards, Clement VI reduced the period to every 50 years, Urban VI to 35 and Paul II to 25.
However, Jubilees were also celebrated outside these predetermined time periods. For example in 1933, with the Jubilee proclaimed by Pius XI to celebrate the anniversary of the death of the Redeemer and in 1983, with the one proclaimed by John Paul II, which is commemorated in one of the marble memorial stones located above the Door. The other stone refers to the last Jubilee celebrated by Paul VI.
From: Guide to St Peter's Basilica, © 2003, Libreria Editrice Vaticana
Last to the right of the atrium is the Holy Door (3.65m X 2.30m). It was closed with a rough wall until 1949, as it was framed with marbles commissioned by Gregory XII for the Jubilee of 1575, then renewed by Paul V. In 1949 the Bishop Francesco Von Streng donated the two bronze panels for the Swiss Catholics, as an ex-voto, because his land was saved from war. It is a work of art full of quiet expressivecomposure and symmetric structure, divided into sixteen rectangular panels distributed in four orders, divided by the coat-of-arms of the thirty six Popes, who celebrated the ordinary Holy Years.
Books
The best English resource on the Holy Door is the book by Virgilio Cardinal Noè, 'The Holy Door in St. Peter's', Ats Italia Editrice, 1999, ISBN 88-86542-69-0.