
Washington D.C., Aug 20, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).
After years of planning, Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., officially opened its new Frassati Chapel earlier this month. Members of the parish say they hope it will help galvanize Catholics to make perpetual adoration possible in the city.
The chapel was blessed on Aug. 9 by Bishop Juan R. Esposito-Garcia, auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Washington in the District of Columbia and Southern Maryland.
Named after the soon-to-be canonized Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati — who was known to spend hours throughout the night in adoration — the Frassati Chapel will serve as a place for Catholics in the District to pray throughout the day and to attend Eucharistic adoration at designated times throughout the week.
As of yet, no parish in Washington, D.C., offers perpetual adoration, but Immaculate Conception’s pastor, Father Charles Gallagher, said he hopes Catholics in the city will band together to change the tide.
A place for people in the capital to pray before the Blessed Sacrament
Located on the ground floor of a building one block from the church, the Frassati Chapel has just enough room for the tabernacle, a handful of chairs, and a kneeler. A portrait of Frassati hangs on the wall alongside a relic of his clothes.
“I thought it would be really cool to have a little chapel in the place with an outside-access door so that people could just come and go,” Gallagher said, noting the idea came to him while in conversation with some of the young adults in the parish. “Everyone was thrilled with the idea.”
“I think this really can fill what I believe is a real need in the capital city here, where there is no perpetual adoration,” he said, explaining that most churches in the archdiocese only offer a few hours per day.
Gallagher pointed out that while many Catholics, himself included, grew up with perpetual adoration chapels in their suburban communities, no such thing exists in D.C.
“[Adoration] has always been something very special to me,” he said. “I remember before I was in seminary, at my home parish in Hyattesville [Maryland], St. Mark’s, there was a perpetual adoration chapel.”
“When I was discerning more about whether to enter the seminary, I would go there sometimes to pray, and it just had a powerful impact on me,” he recalled. “And so that’s just been part of something just central to our own prayer life.”
When Gallagher first arrived at Immaculate Conception eight years ago, the parish had one Holy Hour per month. He said he remembered thinking: “That’s awesome — but we can improve.” The parish has since grown its adoration times from one hour per month to three hours per week. “It’s not a ton, but it’s a significant increase, so that’s been the trajectory.”
All adoration times at the parish are now located in the new Frassati Chapel, except for the parish’s exceedingly popular Holy Hour at 7 p.m. on Thursdays, which is regularly attended by 50 to 60 people, according to Gallagher.
“There’s a need not just to have Eucharistic exposition, which is a great blessing, but to have a place for people to pray before the Blessed Sacrament before and after work hours, basically, because there’s nothing like that,” he said.
Gallagher emphasized the particular need for such a place in D.C., where he said “there is a real temptation to worship power.”
“I think there’s just something about giving people access to just sitting before God and worshipping God has a way of just grounding people and giving them peace, but also giving them perspective,” he said. “When you walk around town, there’s these monuments that are just overwhelming; and the deals that are made here, the power brokers that live here, the major politicians. I don’t need to emphasize how crucial the city is in the world of prayers.”
‘Like an explosion of grace in the city’
Kevin J. Parker, a parishioner at Immaculate Conception since 2001, told CNA that the opening of the Frassati Chapel is “a wonderful move: both seemingly old fashioned but at the same time innovative.” A sacristan and lector at the parish, Parker has devoted the past year to researching the parish’s history from its founding in 1864 to the present.
“Immaculate Conception,” he said, “is no stranger to innovation.” According to the retired fundraising consultant, “the first time a Mass was ever broadcast live on East Coast radio was from Immaculate Conception in 1930.”
“It’s been a challenge getting to this point,” he said of the chapel, “but I think that a lot of us are thrilled that this is finally happening.”
Parker added: “I think that our move to revive — or reinvigorate the practice of perpetual adoration — is something that is greatly needed, particularly in Washington where so many have seen their careers and livelihoods disappear overnight and where, I believe, we feel the weight of world events and suffering perhaps more than other places.”
“I think that the biggest challenges, frankly, are logistical and ensuring that access to the chapel is simple and safe at all hours,” he continued.
“The story of the parish is one of faith, resilience, and innovation, and the Frassati Chapel represents one more way in which our little Church is both responding to and a leader in facing some of the challenges that face us today,” he said.
Olivia Morris, 28, a parishioner of Immaculate Conception since January 2023 and a graduate student at George Washington University, has also been looking forward to the chapel opening, in particular due to her schedule.
“I don’t operate on the 8-5 schedule like everyone else in the city so having a chapel open for me to go pray when I need it will bring untold blessings to my life,” she said.
Morris stressed the importance of Immaculate Conception’s efforts to bring perpetual adoration to the city, declaring: “Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament being exposed perpetually will literally change the fabric of the city of Washington.”
“The lifestyle in D.C. that tells young people to work harder and longer hours, earn more money and advance in their careers to be happy is not satisfying,” she said. “Young people are waking up to that lie and are very aware of their thirst for something deeper. That is why we are seeing so many young people convert to Catholicism or return to the Church after years of being away … I am convinced that we would see more peace in the city, more conversions of hearts, and just an all around better D.C. if we had perpetual adoration.”
Echoing Morris, another parishioner, Taylor Dockery, 28, told CNA: “Perpetual adoration would serve a tremendous benefit to the spiritual health of our city. The collective sacrifice it would require, in a city where so many pack their schedule, would be a powerful and visible testament to the Catholic faith.”
An Immaculate Conception parishioner since 2023, Dockery expressed the importance of adoration in his life as “an intentional pause” outside Sunday Mass. “I am excited!” he said of the chapel’s opening. “I know there’s been years of prayer and work to bring it to completion.”
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If this chapel is for Eucharistic adoration, why is it that there is only a single kneeler and a half-doazen or dozen chairs with no kneelers? Shouldn’t this be named the “Pope Francis” Chapel since it is public fact that he refused to kneel before the Blessed Sacrament and thus apparently abolished the practice of kneeling and praying before the Blessed Sacrament?