Pope leads Way of the Cross in empty, torch-lit St. Peter's Square
April 11, 2020 at 7:44 p.m.
Two rows of torches lit the pathway from the stage set in front of St. Peter's leading down the square; they surrounded the famed ancient Egyptian obelisk that once stood in the Circus of Nero and is believed to be a "witness" to the martyrdom of St. Peter.
Photo Gallery: Holy Triduum in Rome
The sounds of the Vatican choir chanting somber hymns broke through the eerie silence and echoed throughout the empty square April 10.
Vatican City and Italy have nationwide restrictions on public gatherings to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. It is the first time since 1964 that the annual service commemorating Christ's passion and death did not take place in the ancient Colosseum, which for centuries has served as a symbol of the persecution of early Christians.
While the site of the traditional Way of the Cross changed, the meditations remained centered on those who share in Christ's pain and suffering on the cross. Each year, the Pope asks a different person to write the commentary and prayers for the service.
This year, the meditations for the late-night event were written by members of the Catholic community of the Due Palazzi prison in Padua.
Various people from the prison – including a former prisoner, the prison director, police officers, a volunteer and the prison's chaplain, Father Marco Pozza – took turns carrying a large black cross. The Vatican said five representatives of the Vatican City State health services also participated in carrying the cross.
The meditations on the traditional 14 stations were written not only by prisoners, but also by people directly affected by crime, including prisoners' families, victims and even a priest falsely accused of a crime.
In a letter published in the Italian newspaper Il Mattino di Padova March 10, the Pope said he chose the prison community so that the meditations would reflect on the lives of those involved in the prison system, including "the victim, the prisoner, the prison officer, the volunteer, the family of those detained, probation officers, the Church, and the innocent person who, at times, is unjustly accused."
Although the program released by the Vatican stated that Pope Francis would speak, the pope ended the prayer service with a blessing before leaving.
In a message to the prisoners released by the Vatican April 10, Pope Francis thanked the prisoners for sharing their stories through their meditations.
God, he said, "speaks to us within a story, he invites us to listen attentively and mercifully."
"I want to thank you also because you have scattered your names not in the sea of anonymity but of the many people linked to prison life," the Pope said. "Thus, in the Way of the Cross, you will lend your story to all those in the world who share the same situation."
The Vatican also released a transcript of a brief phone interview to a program aired on RAI, the Italian television station, before the Via Crucis.
When asked about what would be in his heart during the Way of the Cross, the Pope said that he was "close to the people of God, those suffering most, especially the victims of this pandemic, to the pain of the world but looking upward, looking with hope, because hope doesn't disappoint."
Hope "doesn't take away the pain," he added, "but it doesn't disappoint."
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Two rows of torches lit the pathway from the stage set in front of St. Peter's leading down the square; they surrounded the famed ancient Egyptian obelisk that once stood in the Circus of Nero and is believed to be a "witness" to the martyrdom of St. Peter.
Photo Gallery: Holy Triduum in Rome
The sounds of the Vatican choir chanting somber hymns broke through the eerie silence and echoed throughout the empty square April 10.
Vatican City and Italy have nationwide restrictions on public gatherings to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. It is the first time since 1964 that the annual service commemorating Christ's passion and death did not take place in the ancient Colosseum, which for centuries has served as a symbol of the persecution of early Christians.
While the site of the traditional Way of the Cross changed, the meditations remained centered on those who share in Christ's pain and suffering on the cross. Each year, the Pope asks a different person to write the commentary and prayers for the service.
This year, the meditations for the late-night event were written by members of the Catholic community of the Due Palazzi prison in Padua.
Various people from the prison – including a former prisoner, the prison director, police officers, a volunteer and the prison's chaplain, Father Marco Pozza – took turns carrying a large black cross. The Vatican said five representatives of the Vatican City State health services also participated in carrying the cross.
The meditations on the traditional 14 stations were written not only by prisoners, but also by people directly affected by crime, including prisoners' families, victims and even a priest falsely accused of a crime.
In a letter published in the Italian newspaper Il Mattino di Padova March 10, the Pope said he chose the prison community so that the meditations would reflect on the lives of those involved in the prison system, including "the victim, the prisoner, the prison officer, the volunteer, the family of those detained, probation officers, the Church, and the innocent person who, at times, is unjustly accused."
Although the program released by the Vatican stated that Pope Francis would speak, the pope ended the prayer service with a blessing before leaving.
In a message to the prisoners released by the Vatican April 10, Pope Francis thanked the prisoners for sharing their stories through their meditations.
God, he said, "speaks to us within a story, he invites us to listen attentively and mercifully."
"I want to thank you also because you have scattered your names not in the sea of anonymity but of the many people linked to prison life," the Pope said. "Thus, in the Way of the Cross, you will lend your story to all those in the world who share the same situation."
The Vatican also released a transcript of a brief phone interview to a program aired on RAI, the Italian television station, before the Via Crucis.
When asked about what would be in his heart during the Way of the Cross, the Pope said that he was "close to the people of God, those suffering most, especially the victims of this pandemic, to the pain of the world but looking upward, looking with hope, because hope doesn't disappoint."
Hope "doesn't take away the pain," he added, "but it doesn't disappoint."