Sunday, 29 December 2019

Travel Spain: La Basilica de La Sagrada Familia on the Feast of the Holy Family

(Basilica de La Sagrada Familia)

I was finally standing on the Plaza de Sagrada Familia after walking for 1.3 kilometers to Carrer de Mallorca from Passeig de Gracia just to make it to the schedule in my ticket reservation to enter the Basilica de La Sagrada Familia.

Towering above Barcelona at 566 feet, the Basilica de  La Sagrada Familia is one of the most visited sites in all of Europe, drawing both tourists and pilgrims. That day, I was both.

Designed by a Catalan architect, Antoni Gaudi, also known as “God’s architect” because of his vision and work on this magnificent place of worship, the Basilica de La Sagrada Familia is one of the most beautiful buildings in the world. Gaudi died in 1926 after being hit by a tram in the streets of Barcelona.

While admiring Gaudi’s work from the ground up, one reflects the passages of the Bible as they are depicted by one man’s work that started in 1894 and was a hundred years from being completed when he died.

As the architecture and design of the Basilica are based on the Bible and the Life of Jesus, the three monumental faćades of the Basilica, namely, the Nativity, the Passion, and the Glory faćades, are being completed to educate a tourist and evangelize a pilgrim.

The Nativity faćade shows the sculptures of the birth of Jesus in a scene that is most familiar to Catholics, the Nativity scene. I realized the ‘belen’ is the most popular Bible story we bring to life:  Saint Joseph and the Virgin celebrating the birth of the Son of God surrounded by shepherds and the Wise Men. This is the Holy Family, the Sagrada Familia.

(The sculpture of an angel guiding the donkey 
that carries Mary and the Baby Jesus with 
Joseph walking after them as they are 
fleeing to Egypt)


And in our celebration of the Feast of the Holy Family, not only do we honor and celebrate our mother and father, but we also should honor our grandparents.

According to Pope Francis, grandparents “are a treasure” and that their wisdom “is something we must welcome as an inheritance because a society or community that does not value, respect and care for its elderly members doesn’t have a future because it has no memory; it has lost its memory.”  After all, when we Filipinos say ‘family’, it includes everyone – from grandparents to grandchildren.

And remembering the meaning of the Basilica’s Nativity faćade that symbolically faces east as the rising sun gives birth to life – life that should revolve around the Christian values of faith, hope, and charity.

On the Feast of the Holy Family and in these times, we should pray for families that are being torn apart, are incomplete, and are facing challenges. We should look up to the Holy Family, the Sagrada Familia, as an inspiration of hope, harmony, and understanding among the family members.💖

As a tourist, it was easy for me to see this Basilica of Sagrada Familia as a monument of man’s devotion to his Creator. But as a pilgrim, it is a reminder of my role – our roles in my own families to look up to the Holy Family as a model Christian family that loves, respects and honors one another.🙏

No comments:

Post a Comment