Thousands of Catholics from across East Anglia took part in three days of celebrations in Norwich led by the new Catholic Bishop of East Anglia, the Rt Rev Alan Hopes. His press officer Father Mark Hackeson looks back at the memorable event.

The celebrations marked the end of a Year of Faith called by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

Bishop Alan described the period of 13 months as 'a time for rediscovering the joy of faith – the freedom and hope that knowing Christ and His message of love brings to our lives'.

Certainly, joy was one of the dominant features of the opening mass in Norwich which drew over 1,000 young people, representing the 30 Catholic schools that serve the region.

The music was led by choirs and orchestra from the schools.

Bishop Alan spoke in his homily of heroes of faith: St Edmund, the martyred King of the East Angles, and Blessed Mother Theresa, who showed both courage and compassion drawn from the example of Christ.

'With God's grace,' said the bishop, 'if you keep close to Christ and His Church, you too can become heroes of faith – making the world a more just and joyful place in which to live.'

At the end of the ceremony each school received a special candle as a sign of the Light of Christ which was to be taken from the cathedral and lighted in school.

The mass was followed by lunch and then older secondary school pupils stayed on for an afternoon of activities and discussion before they joined hundreds of people on Castle Hill in Norwich from where a candle-light procession wound its way through the centre of historic Norwich to the Catholic cathedral.

The eucharistic procession, in which the Bishop carried the Blessed Sacrament, in which Catholics believe Christ to be truly present in sacramental form, numbered around 700 people, who were joined by others on the route to the cathedral, and hundreds more who were unable to make the walk who waited in the mighty church built by the 15th Duke of Norfolk.

The procession moved with silent and prayerful dignity through the city, and young people from the UEA Catholic Society and the Diocesan Youth Council handed out leaflets explaining what was going on to people who were in the streets, or who came out of restaurants to watch.

The procession marked the beginning of an all-night vigil of prayer in the cathedral where each hour saw young people from one part or other of the huge diocese leading prayer which included readings, meditations, liturgical dance and personal testimony.

Even at 3am there were 150 people at prayer.

The bishop drew the Vigil to a close at 10am with benediction and preparations began for a closing diocesan mass which saw the cathedral filled to capacity again. The bishop reminded the congregation that the Year of Faith had not been an end in itself, but was meant to be the springboard into a new era of evangelisation.

'We must let Christ touch and transform our personal lives so that our actions are in tune with the faith we profess. We must let that same Christ touch our parishes and communities so that they are ever-more welcoming places in which those seeking hope and reconciliation can meet Christ. Finally, we must go out and share the Light of Christ with others. That is the mission of the whole Church, bishop, clergy, religious and lay people.'

At the end of the mass, representatives of around 150 parishes and communities collected candles which they carried out in front of the Bishop.

An icon of Jesus on the Cross, which had been painted by the young people during the all-night vigil, was also carried out to begin its own pilgrimage around the parishes of the diocese in 2014.

The three days of celebrations drew to a close away from the cathedral as the candles were received by the parish communities throughout the diocese during an act of commitment on Sunday morning.