Most Blessed Sacrament and Rosary focus of 2025 Diocesan Rosary Congress

While the Diocese of Venice Rosary Congress has concluded, the entire month of October is dedicated to the Most Holy Rosary.

The Rosary Congress began Oct. 4, 2025, and concluded on Oct. 10, with 60 different Parishes in the Diocese participating in this important evangelization effort.

The faithful were encouraged to place all prayer intentions and needs into the loving arms of the Blessed Virgin Mary. A special emphasis on praying for peace in our nation and the world was also offered. Parishes also included the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, Eucharistic Adoration, and the hourly praying of the Holy Rosary. The Congress was hosted at some Parishes for a full 24 hours, while others for a large portion of a day.

In its fifth year, the Rosary Congress was introduced by the Diocesan Office of Evangelization in response to Our Lady of Fatima’s call to prayer and conversion. The theme this year was “My Soul Magnifies the Lord” (Luke 1:46). This is Mary’s response to Elizabeth’s exulting in God’s supreme power, her recognition of her own lowly status and the understanding that all honor belongs to God, not to her.

Initiated in 2021, the Rosary Congress is presented by Bishop Frank J. Dewane as a unique opportunity to place all prayer intentions and the needs of the faithful into the loving arms of Our Blessed Mother.

Bishop Dewane said praying the Rosary is, and can be, a key component in one’s spiritual/prayer life. Citing the example of St. Mother Teresa, Bishop Dewane referred to the power of the Rosary, calling everyone to pray it, live it and persevere.

“We pray the Rosary to honor Our Mother, who said that glorious ‘Yes!’ to God, bringing His Son into the world for our salvation,” Bishop Dewane said. “The Rosary Congress encourages us to renew our relationship with Our Lord, through Mary!”

At Epiphany Cathedral in Venice, the Rosary Congress started with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass Oct. 4, the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi. The main celebrant was Parochial Vicar Father Chris Piotrowski.

Father Piotrowski said it is true that the faithful will pray the rosary and adore Jesus in the Most Holy Eucharist, but that they need to remember their true identity as beloved children of God whose names are written in heaven.

“Jesus says, ‘Blessed are the eyes that see what you see.’ What do our eyes see; not only white bread, but Jesus himself, alive in the Eucharist,” Father Piotrowski said. “During the next 24 hours Christ will be living in our midst in a special way.”

Father said St. Francis of Assisi adored Jesus in the Eucharist with a burning love, saying that humans should tremble, the world should quake, and all heaven should be deeply moved when the Son of God appears on the altar in the hands of the priest.

At the conclusion of his homily, Father Piotrowski kicked off the Congress by saying, “May St Francis of Assisi intercede for us; May Mary guide us through the rosary; and may Jesus Christ, who is truly present in the Eucharist, be our strength of peace, and our joy during these 24 hours.”

Following the conclusion of the Mass, Father Piotrowski led the faithful in praying of five decades of the rosary while the Most Blessed Sacrament was exposed in a monstrance on the altar. Next, a Eucharistic Procession took place from the church, through the parking lot to the Parish Adoration Chapel. This was repeated following the evening Spanish-language Mass. The Congress celebration concluded with Mass on Sunday morning.

At Our Lady of the Angels Parish in Lakewood Ranch, participation in the Congress took place on Oct. 7, the Memorial of Our Lady of the Rosary. Following Mass was the praying of the devotion of the Seven Sorrows of Mary. First initiated by St. Bridget of Sweden, where the faithful pray and meditate on the seven sorrows (dolors). By doing this, Our Lady promised to grant seven graces upon those who honor her and her Son every day. On display at the front of the sanctuary was a painting of St. Bridget and a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary with a large wooden rosary draped over her shoulders.

Students at St. Joseph Catholic School in Bradenton participated on Oct. 3, with the entire student body gathered in the Parish church for praying of the rosary and Eucharistic Adoration.

The Memorial of Our Lady of the Rosary, Oct. 7, directly commemorates the 1571 naval Battle of Lepanto. The Holy League (a naval coalition of European Catholic maritime states) defeated the vastly superior Ottoman navy in the Gulf of Patras near modern day Greece, overcoming tremendous odds after Pope Pius V called upon all Catholics to pray the Rosary for victory. This victory successfully halted the spread of the Ottoman Empire into Rome and beyond. The Feast Day is also referred to as Our Lady of Victory.

To promote praying of the rosary, Pope Leo XIV has invited everyone to pray the Rosary for Peace, each day of the month of October, individually, as a family, or as a community. On Saturday, Oct. 11, at noon Florida time (6 p.m. Rome time), Pope Leo will lead the praying of Rosary from St. Peter’s Square. This coincides with the vigil of the Jubilee of Marian Spirituality, while also recalling the anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council.