As we prepare for Christmas at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, we have many special traditions. The Basilica is decorated with more than 50 Christmas trees (some as tall as 15 feet!), 500 poinsettias, and 65,000 brilliant lights inside and out, as well as two manger scenes, one of which is nearly life size. However, on the Fourth Sunday of Advent, the Basilica is filled with not just two, but hundreds of baby Jesus figures on the occasion of the Blessing of the Bambinelli.
The Origin of the Tradition
A beloved annual tradition at the Basilica in preparation for Christmas, the Blessing of the Bambinelli was first instituted by St. John Paul II. On the Third Sunday of Advent, the children of Rome are encouraged to bring the baby Jesus (Bambinelli) from each of their Nativity sets to St. Peter’s Square. Following the Sunday Angelus address, the Pope blesses the figurines.
Now celebrated in other churches around the world, this Advent tradition is a way for children to connect their Nativity scene at home to the celebration of Christmas at their church. At the Basilica, it is observed on the Fourth Sunday of Advent.