Pope: Evil won’t have the last word

Pope Francis

ROME – Desperate migrants, suicidal failed business owners, battered women, torture victims and all people suffering in the world were remembered at a torch-lit Good Friday Way of the Cross procession presided over by Pope Francis at the Colosseum.

Near the end of the 90-minute service, Francis told the crowd in brief remarks that the cross represented the “weight of all our sins.” He decried the “monstrosity of man when he lets himself be guided by evil.”

But he sounded a note of optimism. ‘“Evil won’t have the last word, but love, mercy and pardon” will, Francis said.

He ended with a prayer that all those “abandoned under the weight of the cross would find the strength of hope.”

With his head bowed and eyes often closed, Francis joined tens of thousands of faithful in the service in listening to meditations read aloud in the ancient arena in downtown Rome.

One meditation, read by Italian actress Virna Lisi, singled out the plight of child soldiers. Other readings recalled migrants who risk death in trying to reach the shores of affluent nations, women and children enslaved by human traffickers and inmates in overcrowded prisons.

The selection of subjects reflected the pope’s resolve to focus the Catholic church’s attention on those who suffer, often on the margins of society.

The motif of the marginalized also mirrored much of Francis’ outreach in the first year of his papacy. His first pilgrimage outside of Rome as pope took him to a tiny island near Sicily where thousands of migrants arrive on smugglers’ rickety boats.

Francis wore a white overcoat over a plain white cassock against the chill of the night.

Another of the meditations spoke of children whose health might be endangered by Italian mobsters’ dumping of toxic wastes in their neighborhoods and farmland near Naples. Mothers of the children had written to the pope in hopes of drawing attention to the problem.

The prayers read out at each of the 14 stops along the way were written by Italian bishop Giancarlo Bregantini, known for his outspoken condemnation of the mafia.

One of the most solemn ceremonies in Christianity, Good Friday commemorates the death of Jesus Christ before his resurrection on Easter Sunday.

A particularly potent prayer recited on Friday was about the economic crisis – an issue close to Francis from his time as archbishop of Buenos Aires at the height of the economic collapse in Argentina.

“This is the cross which weighs upon the world of labor, the injustice shouldered by workers,” the prayer said.

Others condemned “inhumane” prisons, asked for help for those “who fall into the abyss of drugs or alcohol” and urged people to “embrace the vulnerability of immigrants.”

Outside the Colosseum and along the broad boulevard approaching it, tens of thousands of pilgrims, tourists and Romans stood elbow-to-elbow. They clutched prayer books and candles, in holders fashioned from brightly colored paper. – AP

 

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