The evening procession on yesterday, highlighted Francis' deep spiritual side a day after he showed off his rebel streak by calling on young Catholics to shake things up in their parishes and make a "mess" by going out to the streets to spread their faith.
Francis took a long drive in his open car along Rio's oceanfront to reach the stage, kissing babies brought to him and waving to the shrieking crowds held behind fences and soldiers in camouflage. He then watched on in prayer as young people began the procession, which recounts the final hours of Christ's life as he is condemned to death and crucified. The procession is one of the mainstay events of World Youth Day, designed to remind young Catholics about the root of their faith that Christ died to forgive their sins. Francis drove home that message at the start of yesterday, hearing confessions of five young pilgrims in a Rio park.
Later, he met privately with a few juvenile detainees, a priority of his ever since his days as archbishop of Buenos Aires and an expression of his belief that the church must reach out to the most marginalized and forgotten of society. Even now as pope, he calls a group of youths in a Buenos Aires detention center every two weeks just to keep in touch, and one of his most memorable gestures as pope was his Holy Thursday Mass at a juvenile detention center in Rome where he washed the feet of young offenders.