The Via Francigena is a historic pilgrimage route from Canterbury Cathedral through France and Switzerland to Rome. The first recorded pilgrimage along the Via Francigena dates back to the 9th century.
"What an inspired idea! A pilgrimage along an old pilgrim route to the Tomb of St Peter!" Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of Durban, South Africa wrote on Twitter Oct. 25.
"Great terrain for praying the Rosary or meditating!" Napier added.
The pilgrimage included stops for prayer with Gospel reflections on the road to Emmaus, a gospel narrative that has framed many of the synod discussions of accompaniment.
"Today we are walking together, like the Emmaus story. Together with the young people, with the bishops, with the priests, we walk together accompanying each other," Archbishop Simon Peter Poh Hoon Seng of Kuching, Malaysia told CNA.
(Story continues below)
Subscribe to our daily newsletter
However, the trek winding around Monte Mario, the highest hill in Rome, was not easy for all of the bishops. Cardinal Napier said the rocky paths on the route were "hard, hard work."
The pilgrimage culminated in a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica with Pope Francis, presided over by Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, General Secretary of the Synod of Bishops.
Youth auditors from the Philippines, Canada, Zimbabwe, and Lebanon prayed the rosary together as they walked. Others chatted and exchanged vocation stories.