Bertucci is the director at Ryerson UniversityƵapp Catholic Chaplaincy. For the fifth time in the archdiocese and third time downtown, she has organized Travelling Adoration where the faithful visit seven of the cityƵapp churches in one night.
The custom was born in the Apostolic Age where early Christians visited shrines that were deemed holy by the Passion of the Christ, said Bertucci, adding that in 313 the Roman Emperor Constantine legalized Christianity as the state religion.
As an extension of that tradition, “in the fourth century, pilgrims began to visit seven basilicas in Rome and in the 1300s, Pope Boniface XIII reinstated the unique tradition,” she said. “Today they still do this in Rome.”
Continuing in the spirit of visiting seven different altars of repose in Roman basilicas, the faithful will visit seven altars in Toronto. Typically, after Holy Thursday Mass, parishes offer a time for adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.
This year, the itinerary for the night of April 17 was to take local pilgrims to St. MichaelƵapp Cathedral, St. PaulƵapp Basilica, St. Thomas More (the Anglican Ordinariate housed in Sacre Coeur parish), Our Lady of Lourdes, St. PatrickƵapp, St. BasilƵapp and St. Thomas Aquinas chapel at the Newman Centre.
“You get to see parishes you’d probably never go into,” Bertucci said.
In Rome, pilgrims can walk between sites. In Toronto, participants can also drive or take public transportation.
Activities were to begin at 7 p.m. with dinner at St. MichaelƵapp Cathedral parish hall, and end at midnight.
“ItƵapp nice to gather together on Holy Thursday in honour of the last supper, for us to gather together and to break bread,” said Bertucci, “and then thereƵapp also the practical reason, before we go out and pray to be well fed.”
She was first introduced to Travelling Adoration when she lived in the Archdiocese of St. Louis in Missouri where itƵapp a very common Holy Thursday practice.
“Our faith is meant to be lived in community,” she said.
Large groups of people and families would partake in the annual ritual in St. Louis, and when Bertucci came back to Canada, she and some friends decided the event would be a good fit in Toronto. First she organized Travelling Adoration at St. JosephƵapp parish in Mississauga and now out of the Ryerson Catholic Chaplaincy with students.
Bertucci recalls a parishioner at St. JosephƵapp who was happy to hear of Travelling Adoration in Canada.
“He had not done it in 20 years and he was really excited to participate because it took him back to his childhood because this was something he did with his family,” she said.
At Ryerson, she says itƵapp an opportunity to recognize as a group that the celebration of Easter is not just Easter Sunday.
“ItƵapp the beauty of the Triduum that we enter on Holy Thursday, we move through the darkness of Good Friday and we have the joy of the Resurrection at the Easter Vigil,” she said. “ItƵapp nice to move in prayer in a group, to share that opportunity in community.”