Olympic Mass

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The Olympic Mass or Holy Mass for the Opening of the Olympic Truce is a tradition since 1896 in connection with the Olympic Games, during which the Olympic Truce is officially inaugurated by the celebration of a Catholic Mass in the city hosting the incumbent Olympic Games.

Since Antiquity, sports and religion were tightly connected. In fact, "the majority of Greek athletic competitions took place in the context of religious festivals, and the religious tone of the major games cannot be denied."[1] The Olympic Truce was inaugurated by a religions celebration. When Pierre de Coubertin, who was a devout Catholic, intended to bring this spiritual dimension to the modern Olympic Games. While the official opening ceremony of the Olympic Games includes processions and fireworks, it is also an Olympic tradition that a Catholic Mass be celebrated in order to inaugurate the Olympic truce.

History

Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games, is depicted by his father Charles de Coubertin as a child attending the Departure Mass of young missionaries from the Paris Foreign Missions Society. In the background, Father Didon is seen wearing the Dominican habit.

Since the first edition of the modern Olympic Games in 1896, in Athens, a Catholic mass has been celebrated before the sporting event. Pierre de Coubertin, who renovated the Olympic Games in the modern form that we know and was a member of a very practicing Catholic family, was the instigator of this tradition. It was the Dominican Henri Didon, to whom we owe the Olympic motto "Citius, Altius, Fortis" (Faster, higher, stronger), who led the events during the 1896 mass.[citation needed]

Since Pope Pius XII's message in 1956 for the Melbourne Olympics,[2] the various Popes have sent official messages to all the participants on the occasion of the Olympic games. The Pope insists on the harmony of the relationship between Christian principles and sporting activities and that it was up to the athletes, during the Olympics, to demonstrate in their actions that, without losing any of its technical value, sport, a school of energy of self-control, should be ordered to the intellectual and moral perfection of the soul. It is customary for this pontifical message to be proclaimed during the Olympic Mass.[citation needed]

According to Cardinal Mercier, this interest of the Catholic Church for the Olympic Games can be traced back to the letters of Saint Paul:

Anyone who has read the letters of Saint Paul, the most vigorous artisan of our Christian civilization, cannot fail to be struck by the benevolent attention he pays to the games of Greece, to racing, to wrestling, to pugilism.[3]

Occurrences

References

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