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OFFICE FOR THE LITURGICAL CELEBRATIONS OF
THE SUPREME PONTIFF
STATIONS OF THE CROSS AT THE COLOSSEUM
LED BY HIS HOLINESS POPE JOHN PAUL II
GOOD FRIDAY 2000 HOLY YEAR
MEDITATION AND PRAYERS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE
JOHN PAUL II
OPENING PRAYER
The Holy Father:
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
R. Amen.
“If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his
cross and follow me” (Mt 16:24).
Good Friday evening. For twenty centuries the Church has gathered on
this evening to remember and to re-live the events of the final stage
of the earthly journey of the Son of God. Once again this year, the
Church in Rome meets at the Colosseum, to follow the footsteps of Jesus,
who “went out, carrying his cross, to the place called the place of the
skull, which is called in Hebrew Golgotha” (Jn 19:17).
We are here because we are convinced that the Way of the Cross of
the Son of God was not simply a journey to the place of execution.
We believe that every step of the Condemned Christ, every action and every
word, as well as everything felt and done by those who took part in this
tragic drama, continues to speak to us. In his suffering and death too,
Christ reveals to us the truth about God and man.
In this Jubilee Year we want to concentrate on the full meaning of
that event, so that what happened may speak with new power to our minds
and hearts, and become the source of the grace of a real sharing in it.
To share means to have a part.
What does it mean to have a part in the Cross of Christ? It means to
experience, in the Holy Spirit, the love hidden within the Cross of Christ.
It means to recognize, in the light of this love, our own cross. It
means to take up that cross once more and, strengthened by this love, to
continue our journey... To journey through life, in imitation of the one who
“endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of
the throne of God” (Heb 12:2).
Brief pause for silence.
Let us pray.
Lord Jesus Christ, fill our hearts with the light of your Spirit, so
that by following you on your final journey we may come to know the price of
our Redemption and become worthy of a share in the fruits of your
Passion, Death and Resurrection. You who live and reign for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
FIRST STATION Jesus is condemned to death
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“Are you the King of the Jews?” (Jn 18:33). “My Kingdom is not of
this world; if my Kingdom were of this world, my servants would fight, that I
might not be handed over to the Jews; but my Kingdom is not from the world” (Jn
18:36).
Pilate said to him: - “So you are a king?” Jesus answered: - “You
say that I am a king. For this I was born, and for this I have come into the
world, to bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears my
voice.” Pilate said in answer: “What is truth?”. At this point, the
Roman Procurator saw no need for further questions. He went to the Jews and told
them: “I find no crime in him” (cf. Jn 18:37-38). The tragedy of
Pilate is hidden in the question: What is truth?
This was no philosophical question about the nature of truth, but an
existential question about his own relationship with truth. It was an
attempt to escape from the voice of conscience, which was pressing him to
acknowledge the truth and follow it. When someone refuses to be guided by truth
he is ultimately ready even to condemn an innocent person to death. The
accusers sense this weakness in Pilate and so do not yield. They relentlessly
call for death by crucifixion. Pilate’s attempts at half measures are of no
avail. The cruel punishment of scourging inflicted upon the Accused is not
enough. When the Procurator brings Jesus, scourged and crowned with thorns,
before the crowd, he seems to be looking for words which he thinks might soften
the intransigence of the mob.
Pointing to Jesus he says: Ecce homo! Behold the man! But the
answer comes back: “Crucify him, crucify him!” Pilate then tries to buy
time: “Take him yourselves and crucify him, for I find no crime in him” (Jn
19:5-7). He is increasingly convinced that the Accused is innocent, but this
is not enough for him to decide in his favour. The accusers use their final
argument: “If you release this man, you are no friend of Caesar; everyone who
makes himself a king sets himself against Caesar” (Jn 19:12).
This is clearly a threat. Recognizing the danger, Pilate finally gives in and
pronounces the sentence. But not without the contemptuous gesture of washing his
hands: “I am innocent of this ... blood; see to it yourselves!” (Mt
27:24).
Thus was Jesus, the Son of the living God, the Redeemer of the world,
condemned to death by crucifixion. Over the centuries the denial of truth
has spawned suffering and death. It is the innocent who pay the price of
human hypocrisy. Half measures are never enough. Nor is it enough to wash
one’s hands. Responsibility for the blood of the just remains. This is
why Christ prayed so fervently for his disciples in every age: Father,
“sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth” (Jn 17:17).
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, you accepted an unjust judgment. Grant to us and to
all the men and women of our time the grace to remain faithful to the truth.
Do not allow the weight of responsibility for the sufferings of the innocent
fall upon us and upon those who come after us. To you, O Jesus, just Judge,
be honour and glory for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father...
Stabat Mater:
At the Cross her station keeping stood the mournful Mother weeping,
close to Jesus to the last.
SECOND STATION Jesus takes up his Cross
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
The cross. The instrument of a shameful death. It was not lawful to
condemn a Roman citizen to death by crucifixion: it was too humiliating. The
moment that Jesus of Nazareth took up the Cross in order to carry it to Calvary
marked a turning-point in the history of the cross.
The symbol of a shameful death, reserved for the lowest classes, the cross
becomes a key. From now on, with the help of this key, man will open the
door of the deepest mystery of God. Through Christ’s acceptance of the
Cross, the instrument of his own self-emptying, men will come to know that
God is love. Love without limits: “God so loved the world that he gave
his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal
life” (Jn 3:16). This truth about God was revealed in the Cross.
Could it not have been revealed in some other way? Perhaps. But God chose
the Cross. The Father chose the Cross for his Son, and his Son
shouldered it, carried it to Mount Calvary and on it offered his life. “In
the Cross there is suffering, in the Cross there is salvation, in the
Cross there is a lesson of love. O God, he who once has understood you,
desires nothing else, seeks nothing else” (Polish Lenten hymn). The
Cross is the sign of a love without limits!
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, who accept the Cross at the hands of men to make of it
the sign of God’s saving love for humanity, grant us and all the men and
women of our time the grace of faith in this infinite love. By passing
on to the new millennium the sign of the Cross, may we be authentic
witnesses to the Redemption. To you, O Jesus, Priest and Victim, be
praise and glory for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father...
Stabat Mater:
Through her heart, his sorrow sharing, all his bitter anguish bearing,
now at length the sword had passed.
THIRD STATION Jesus falls the first time
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“God laid on him the sins of us all” (cf. Is 53:6). “All we like
sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the
Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Is 53:6). Jesus
falls under the Cross. This will happen three times along the comparatively
short stretch of the “via dolorosa”. Exhaustion makes him fall. His body is
stained with blood from the scourging, his head is crowned with thorns. All this
causes his strength to fail. So he falls, and the weight of the Cross
crushes him to the ground.
We must go back to the words of the Prophet, who foresaw this fall centuries
earlier. It is as though he were contemplating it with his own eyes: seeing the
Servant of the Lord, on the ground under the weight of the Cross, he tells us
the real cause of his fall. It is this: “God laid on him the sins of us all”.
It was our sins that crushed the divine Condemned One to the ground. It was
our sins that determined the weight of the Cross that he carries on his
shoulders. It was our sins that made him fall. With difficulty Christ
gets up again to continue his journey. The soldiers escorting him urge him
on with shouts and blows. After a moment the procession sets out again.
Jesus falls and gets up again. In this way, the Redeemer of the world
addresses in a wordless way all those who fall. He exhorts them to get up
again. “He himself bore our sins in his body on the wood of the cross,
that we might no longer live for sin but for righteousness – by his wounds we
have been healed” (cf. 1 Pt 2:24).
PRAYER
O Christ, as you fall under the weight of our faults and rise again for
our justification, we pray, help us and all who are weighed down by sin
to stand up again and continue the journey. Give us the strength of the
Spirit to carry with you the cross of our weakness. To you, O Jesus,
crushed under the weight of our faults be our praise and love for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father...
Stabat Mater:
Oh, how sad and sore distressed was that Mother highly blessed of the
sole begotten One!
FOURTH STATION Jesus meets his Mother
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favour with God. And behold, you
will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. He
will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God
will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the
house of Jacob for ever; and his kingdom will have no end” (Lk 1:30-33).
Mary remembered these words. She often returned to them in the secret of her
heart. When she met her Son on the way of the Cross, perhaps these very
words came to her mind. With particular force. “He will reign... His kingdom
will have no end”, the heavenly messenger had said.
Now, as she watches her Son, condemned to death, carrying the Cross on which
he must die, she might ask herself, all too humanly: So how can these words be
fulfilled? In what way will he reign over the House of David? And how can it be
that his kingdom will have no end? Humanly speaking, these are reasonable
questions. But Mary remembered that, when she first heard the Angel’s
message, she had replied: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done
to me according to your word” (Lk 1:38).
Now she sees that her word is being fulfilled as the word of the Cross.
Because she is a mother, Mary suffers deeply. But she answers now as she had
answered then, at the Annunciation: “May it be done to me according to your
word”. In this way, as a mother would, she embraces the cross together
with the divine Condemned One. On the way of the Cross Mary shows herself to
be the Mother of the Redeemer of the world. “All you who pass by the way,
look and see whether there is any suffering like my suffering, which has been
dealt me” (Lam 1:12). It is the Sorrowful Mother who speaks, the
Handmaid who is obedient to the last, the Mother of the Redeemer of the
world.
PRAYER
O Mary, who walked the way of the Cross with your Son, your mother’s
heart torn by grief, but mindful always of your fiat and fully
confident that He to whom nothing is impossible would be able to fulfil his
promises, implore for us and for the generations yet to come the grace
of surrender to God’s love. Help us, in the face of suffering, rejection,
and trial, however prolonged and severe, never to doubt his love. To
Jesus, your Son, honour and glory for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
Christ above in torment hangs, she beneath beholds the pangs of her
dying, glorious Son.
FIFTH STATION Simon of Cyrene helps Jesus to
carry his Cross
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
They compelled Simon (cf. Mk 15:21). The Roman soldiers did this
because they feared that in his exhaustion the Condemned Man would not be able
to carry the Cross as far as Golgotha. Then they would not be able to carry out
the sentence of crucifixion. They were looking for someone to help carry the
Cross. Their eyes fell on Simon. They compelled him to take the weight upon
his shoulders. We can imagine that Simon did not want to do this and objected.
Carrying the cross together with a convict could be considered an act offensive
to the dignity of a free man. Although unwilling, Simon took up the Cross to
help Jesus.
In a Lenten hymn we hear the words: “Under the weight of the Cross Jesus
welcomes the Cyrenean”. These words allow us to discern a total change of
perspective: the divine Condemned One is someone who, in a certain sense,
“makes a gift” of his Cross. Was it not he who said: “He who does not
take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me” (Mt 10:38)?
Simon receives a gift. He has become “worthy” of it. What the
crowd might see as an offence to his dignity has, from the perspective of
redemption, given him a new dignity. In a unique way, the Son of God has
made him a sharer in his work of salvation. Is Simon aware of this? The
evangelist Mark identifies Simon of Cyrene as the “father of Alexander and
Rufus” (15:21).
If the sons of Simon of Cyrene were known to the first Christian community,
it can be presumed that Simon too, while carrying the Cross, came to believe in
Christ. From being forced, he freely accepted, as though deeply touched by the
words: “Whoever does not carry his cross with me is not worthy of me.” By
his carrying of the Cross, Simon was brought to the knowledge of the gospel
of the Cross. Since then, this gospel has spoken to many, countless
Cyreneans, called in the course of history to carry the cross with Jesus.
PRAYER
O Christ, you gave to Simon of Cyrene the dignity of carrying your Cross.
Welcome us too under its weight, welcome all men and women and grant to
everyone the gift of readiness to serve. Do not permit that we should turn
away from those who are crushed by the cross of illness loneliness,
hunger or injustice. As we carry each other’s burdens, help us to become
witnesses to the gospel of the Cross and witnesses to you, who live and
reign for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father . . .
Stabat Mater:
Is there one who would not weep, whelmed in miseries so deep,
Christ’s dear Mother to behold?
SIXTH STATION Veronica wipes the face of Jesus
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
Veronica does not appear in the Gospels. Her name is not mentioned, even
though the names of other women who accompanied Jesus do appear. It is
possible, therefore, that the name refers more to what the woman did. In fact,
according to tradition, on the road to Calvary a woman pushed her way through
the soldiers escorting Jesus and with a veil wiped the sweat and blood from the
Lord’s face. That face remained imprinted on the veil, a faithful reflection, a
“true icon”. This would be the reason for the name Veronica. If this is
so, the name which evokes the memory of what this woman did carries with it the
deepest truth about her.
One day, Jesus drew the criticism of onlookers when he defended a sinful
woman who had poured perfumed oil on his feet and dried them with her hair. To
those who objected, he replied: “Why do you trouble this woman? For she has done
a beautiful thing to me . . . In pouring this ointment on my body she has done
it to prepare me for burial” (Mt 26:10, 12). These words could likewise
be applied to Veronica. Thus we see the profound eloquence of this event.
The Redeemer of the world presents Veronica with an authentic image of his face.
The veil upon which the face of Christ remains imprinted becomes a message for
us. In a certain sense it says: This is how every act of goodness, every
gesture of true love towards one’s neighbour, strengthens the likeness of the
Redeemer of the world in the one who acts that way. Acts of love do not pass
away. Every act of goodness, of understanding, of service leaves on people’s
hearts an indelible imprint and makes us ever more like the One who “emptied
himself, taking the form of a servant” (Phil 2:7). This is what
shapes our identity and gives us our true name.
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, you accepted a woman’s selfless gesture of love,
and in exchange ordained that future generations should remember her by
the name of your face. Grant that our works and the works of all who
will come after us will make us like unto you and will leave in the
world the reflection of your infinite love. To you, O Jesus, splendour
of the Father’s glory, be praise and glory for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father . . .
Stabat Mater:
Can the human heart refrain from partaking in her pain, in that
Mother’s untold pain?
SEVENTH STATION Jesus falls the second time
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“I am a worm, and no man; scorned by men, and despised by the people” (Ps
22:6). These words of the Psalm come to mind as we see Jesus fall to the ground
a second time under the Cross. Here in the dust of the earth lies the
Condemned One. Crushed by the weight of his Cross. His strength drains away from
him more and more. But with great effort he gets up again to continue his march.
To us sinners, what does this second fall say? More than the first one, it seems
to urge us to get up, to get up again on our way of the cross.
Cyprian Norwid wrote: “Not behind us with the Saviour’s Cross, but behind the
Saviour with our own Cross.” A brief saying, but one that conveys much truth. It
explains how Christianity is the religion of the Cross.
It tells us that every person here below meets Christ who carries the Cross
and falls under its weight. In his turn, Christ, on the way to Calvary,
meets every man and woman and, falling under the weight of the Cross, does not
cease to proclaim the good news. For two thousand years the gospel of the
Cross has spoken to man. For twenty centuries Christ, getting up again from
his fall, meets those who fall. Throughout these two millennia many people
have learned that falling does not mean the end of the road. In meeting the
Saviour they have heard his reassuring words: “My grace is sufficient for
you; for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Cor 12:9).
Comforted, they have gotten up again and brought to the world the word of
hope which comes from the Cross. Today, having crossed the threshold of
the new millennium, we are called to penetrate more deeply the meaning of this
encounter. Our generation must pass on to future centuries the good news
that we are lifted up again in Christ.
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, you fall under the weight of human sin and you get
up again in order to take it upon yourself and cancel it. Give to us, weak
men and women, the strength to carry the cross of daily life and to get
up again from our falls, so that we may bring to future generations the
Gospel of your saving power. To you, O Jesus, our support when we are weak,
be praise and glory for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father . . .
Stabat Mater:
Bruised, derided, cursed, defiled, she beheld her tender Child, all
with bloody scourges rent.
EIGHTH STATION Jesus speaks to the women of
Jerusalem
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and
for your children. For behold, the days are coming when they will say,
'Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that never bore, and the breasts that
never gave suck!' Then they will begin to say to the mountains, 'Fall on
us'; and to the hills, 'Cover us.' For if they do this when the wood is
green, what will happen when it is dry?” (Lk 23:28-31).
These are the words of Jesus to the women of Jerusalem who were weeping with
compassion for the Condemned One. “Do not weep for me, but weep for
yourselves and for your children.” At the time it was certainly difficult to
understand the meaning of these words. They contained a prophecy that would soon
come to pass. Shortly before, Jesus had wept over Jerusalem, foretelling the
terrible fate that awaited the city. Now he seems to be referring again to
that fate: “Weep for your children . . .” Weep, because these, your very
children, will be witnesses and will share in the destruction of Jerusalem, the
Jerusalem which “did not know the time of her visitation” (cf. Lk
19:44). If, as we follow Christ on the way of the Cross, our hearts are
moved with pity for his suffering, we cannot forget that admonition.
“For if they do this when the wood is green, what will happen when it is
dry?” For our generation, which has just left a millennium behind, rather
than weep for Christ crucified, it is now the time for us to recognize “the
time of our visitation”. Already the dawn of the resurrection is shining
forth. “Behold, now is the acceptable time; behold, now is the day of
salvation” (2 Cor 6:2). To each of us Christ addresses these words of
the book of Revelation: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if any one hears
my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with
me. He who conquers, I will grant him to sit with me on my throne, as I myself
conquered and sat down with my Father on his throne” (3:20- 21).
PRAYER
O Christ, you came into this world to visit all those who await
salvation. Grant that our generation will recognize the time of its
visitation and share in the fruits of your redemption. Do not permit
that there should be weeping for us and for the men and women of the new
century because we have rejected our merciful Father’s outstretched hand.
To you, O Jesus, born of the Virgin Daughter of Zion, be honour and praise
for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
Let me share with you his pain who for all my sin was slain, who for
me in torments died.
NINTH STATION Jesus falls the third time
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
Once more Christ has fallen to the ground under the weight of the Cross. The
crowd watches, wondering whether he will have the strength to rise again.
Saint Paul writes: “Though he was in the form of God, he did not count
equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself taking the form of
a servant, being born in human likeness. And being found in human form, he
humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a Cross” (Phil
2:6-8).
The third fall seems to express just this: the self-emptying, the
kenosis of the Son of God, his humiliation beneath the Cross. Jesus
had said to the disciples that he had come not to be served but to serve (cf.
Mt 20:28). In the Upper Room, bending low to the ground and washing
their feet, he sought, as it were, to prepare them for this humiliation of
his. Falling to the ground for the third time on the way of the Cross,
he cries out loudly to us once more the mystery of himself. Let us
listen to his voice! This Condemned Man, crushed to the ground beneath the
weight of the Cross, now very near the place of punishment, tells us: “I am the
way, and the truth and the life” (Jn 14:6). “He who follows me will not
walk in darkness, but will have the light of life” (Jn 8:12). Let us
not be dismayed by the sight of a condemned man, who falls to the ground
exhausted under the cross. Within this outward sign of the death which is
approaching the light of life lies hidden.
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, through your humiliation beneath the Cross you
revealed to the world the price of its redemption. Grant to the men and
women of the third millennium the light of faith, so that, as they
recognize in you the Suffering Servant of God and man, they may have the
courage to follow the same path which, by way of the Cross and
self-emptying, leads to life without end. To you, O Jesus, our support
when we are weak, be honour and glory for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
O you Mother, fount of love! Touch my spirit from above, make my
heart with yours accord.
TENTH STATION Jesus is stripped and offered gall
and vinegar to drink
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“When he tasted it, he would not drink it” (Mt 27:34). He did not
want a sedative, which would have dulled his consciousness during the agony.
He wanted to be fully aware as he suffered on the Cross, accomplishing
the mission he had received from the Father. That was not what the soldiers
in charge of the execution were used to. Since they had to nail the condemned
man to the Cross, they tried to dull his senses and his consciousness. But
with Christ this could not be. Jesus knows that his death on the Cross must be a
sacrifice of expiation. This is why he wants to remain alert to the very
end. Without consciousness, he could not, in complete freedom, accept the
full measure of suffering. Behold, he must mount the Cross, in order to
offer the sacrifice of the New Covenant. He is the Priest. By means of his
own blood, he must enter the eternal dwelling-places, having accomplished the
world’s redemption (cf. Heb 9:12). Conscience and freedom:
these are the essential elements of fully human action. The world has so
many ways of weakening the will and of darkening conscience. They must be
carefully defended from all violence. Even the legitimate attempt to control
pain must always be done with respect for human dignity. If life and death
are to retain their true value, the depths of Christ’s sacrifice must be
understood, and we must unite ourselves to that sacrifice if we are to hold
firm.
PRAYER
Lord Jesus, who, with supreme dedication, accepted death on the Cross
for our salvation, grant to us and to all the world’s people a share in
your sacrifice on the Cross, so that what we are and what we do may
always be a free and conscious sharing in your work of salvation. To
you, O Jesus, Priest and Victim, be honour and glory for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
Make me feel as you have felt; make my soul to glow and melt with the
love of Christ our Lord.
ELEVENTH STATION Jesus is nailed to the Cross
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“They tear holes in my hands and my feet; I can count every one of my bones”
(Ps 21:17- 18). The words of the Prophet are fulfilled. The
execution begins. The torturers’ blows crush the hands and feet of the
Condemned One against the wood of the Cross. The nails are driven violently
into his wrists. Those nails will hold the condemned man as he hangs in the
midst of the inexpressible torments of his agony. In his body and his
supremely sensitive spirit, Christ suffers in a way beyond words. With him
there are crucified two real criminals, one on his right, the other on his left.
The prophecy is fulfilled: “He was numbered among the transgressors” (Is
53:12). Once the torturers raise the Cross, there will begin an agony that
will last three hours. This word too must be fulfilled: “When I am lifted up
from the earth, I will draw all people to myself” (Jn 12:32).
What is it that “draws” us to the Condemned One in agony on the Cross?
Certainly the sight of such intense suffering stirs compassion. But compassion
is not enough to lead us to bind our very life to the One who hangs on the
Cross. How is it that, generation after generation, this appalling sight has
drawn countless hosts of people who have made the Cross the hallmark of their
faith? Hosts of men and women who for centuries have lived and given their
lives looking to this sign? From the Cross, Christ draws us by the power
of love, divine Love, which did not recoil from the total gift of self;
infinite Love, which on the tree of the Cross raised up from the earth the
weight of Christ’s body, to counterbalance the weight of the first sin;
boundless Love, which has utterly filled every absence of love and allowed
humanity to find refuge once more in the arms of the merciful Father. May
Christ lifted high on the Cross draw us too, the men and women of the new
millennium! In the shadow of the Cross, let us “walk in love, as Christ
loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God” (Eph
5:2).
PRAYER
O Christ lifted high, O Love crucified, fill our hearts with your
love, that we may see in your Cross the sign of our redemption and,
drawn by your wounds, we may live and die with you, who live and reign
with the Father and the Spirit, now and for ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
Holy Mother, pierce me through; in my heart each wound renew of my
Saviour crucified.
TWELFTH STATION Jesus dies on the Cross
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Lk 23:34).
At the height of his Passion, Christ does not forget man, especially those who
are directly responsible for his suffering. Jesus knows that more than anything
else man needs love; he needs the mercy which at this moment is being poured out
on the world. “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise” (Lk
23:43). This is how Jesus replies to the plea of the criminal hanging on his
right: “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom” (Lk 23:42).
The promise of a new life. This is the first fruit of the Passion and
imminent Death of Christ. A word of hope to man. At the foot of the Cross
stood Mary, and beside her the disciple, John the Evangelist. Jesus says:
“Woman, behold your son!” and to the disciple: “Behold your mother!” (Jn
19:26-27). “And from that moment the disciple took her to his own home” (Jn
19:27). This is his bequest to those dearest to his heart.
His legacy to the Church. The desire of Jesus as he dies is that
the maternal love of Mary should embrace all those for whom he is giving his
life, the whole of humanity. Immediately after, Jesus cries out: “I am
thirsty” (Jn 19:28). A word which describes the dreadful burning which
consumes his whole body. It is the one word which refers directly to his
physical suffering.
Then Jesus adds: “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?” (Mt
27:46; cf. Ps 22:2). These words of the Psalm are his prayer. Despite
their tone, these words reveal the depths of his union with the Father.
In the last moments of his life on earth, Jesus thinks of the Father. From this
moment on, the dialogue will only be between the dying Son and the Father who
accepts his sacrifice of love. When the ninth hour comes, Jesus cries out:
“It is accomplished!” (Jn 19:30). Now the work of the redemption is
complete. The mission, for which he came on earth, has reached its goal.
The rest belongs to the Father: “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit”
(Lk 23:46). And having said this, he breathed his last. “The
curtain of the temple was torn in two...” (Mt 27:51). The “Holy of
Holies” of the Jerusalem Temple is opened at the moment when it is entered by
the Priest of the New and Eternal Covenant.
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, in the moment of your agony you were not
indifferent to humanity’s fate, and with your last breath you entrusted
to the Father’s mercy the men and women of every age, with all their
weaknesses and sins. Fill us and the generations yet to come with your
Spirit of love, so that our indifference will not render vain in us
the fruits of your death. To you, crucified Jesus, the wisdom and the power
of God, be honour and glory for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father ...
Stabat Mater:
She looked upon her sweet Son, saw him hang in desolation, till his
spirit forth he sent.
THIRTEENTH STATION Jesus is taken down from the
Cross and given to his Mother
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy Cross you have redeemed the world.
O quam tristis et afflicta Fuit illa benedicta Mater Unigeniti.
In the arms of his Mother they have placed the lifeless body of the Son. The
Gospels say nothing of what she felt at that moment. It is as though by
their silence the Evangelists wished to respect her sorrow, her feelings and her
memories. Or that they simply felt incapable of expressing them.
It is only the devotion of the centuries that has preserved the figure of the
“Pietą”, providing Christian memory with the most sorrowful image of the
ineffable bond of love which blossomed in the Mother’s heart on the day
of the Annunciation and ripened as she waited for the birth of her divine Son.
That love was revealed in the cave at Bethlehem and was tested already
during the Presentation in the Temple. It grew deeper as Mary stored and
pondered in her heart all that was happening (cf. Lk 2:51). Now this
intimate bond of love must be transformed into a union which transcends the
boundary between life and death. And thus it will be across the span of the
centuries: people pause at Michelangelo’s statue of the Pietą, they kneel
before the image of the loving and sorrowful Mother (Smetna Dobrodziejka)
in the Church of the Franciscans in Kraków, before the Mother of the Seven
Sorrows, Patroness of Slovakia, they venerate Our Lady of Sorrows in
countless shrines in every part of the world. And so they learn the
difficult love which does not flee from suffering, but surrenders trustingly
to the tenderness of God, for whom nothing is impossible (cf. Lk 1:37).
PRAYER
Salve, Regina, Mater misericordię; vita dulcedo et spes nostra, salve.
Ad te clamamus... illos tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte et
Iesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui, nobis post hoc exilium ostende.
Implore for us the grace of faith, hope and charity, so that we, like
you, may stand without flinching beneath the Cross until our last
breath. To your Son, Jesus, our Saviour, with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, all honour and glory for ever and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father . . .
Stabat Mater:
Let me mingle tears with you, mourning him who mourned for me, all
the days that I may live.
FOURTEENTH STATION Jesus is laid in the tomb
V/. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. R/. Because by
your holy cross you have redeemed the world.
“He was crucified, died and was buried...” The lifeless body of Christ
has been laid in the tomb. But the stone of the tomb is not the final seal on
his work. The last word belongs not to falsehood, hatred and violence.
The last word will be spoken by Love, which is stronger than death. “Unless
a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it
dies, it bears much fruit” (Jn 12:24). The tomb is the last stage of
Christ’s dying through the whole course of his earthly life; it is the sign
of his supreme sacrifice for us and for our salvation. Very soon this
tomb will become the first proclamation of praise and exaltation of the Son
of God in the glory of the Father. “He was crucified, died and was
buried,. . . on the third day he rose from the dead”. Once the lifeless body
of Jesus is laid in the tomb, at the foot of Golgotha, the Church begins the
vigil of Holy Saturday. In the depths of her heart, Mary stores and ponders
the Passion of her Son; the women agree to meet on the morning of the day
after the Sabbath, in order to anoint Christ’s body with aromatic ointments;
the disciples gather in the seclusion of the Upper Room, waiting for the Sabbath
to pass. This vigil will end with the meeting at the tomb, the empty tomb of
the Saviour. Then the tomb, the silent witness of the Resurrection, will
speak. The stone rolled back, the inner chamber empty, the cloths on the
ground, this will be what John sees when he comes to the tomb with Peter:
“He saw and he believed” (Jn 20:8). And with him the Church
believed, and from that moment she never grows weary of communicating to
the world this fundamental truth of her faith: “Christ has been raised from
the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Cor
15:20). The empty tomb is the sign of the definitive victory of
truth over falsehood, of good over evil, of mercy over sin, of life
over death. The empty tomb is the sign of the hope which “does not
deceive” (Rom 5:5). “[Our] hope is full of immortality” (cf. Wis
3:4).
PRAYER
Lord Jesus Christ, by the power of the Holy Spirit, you were drawn by
the Father from the darkness of death to the light of a new life in
glory. Grant that the sign of the empty tomb may speak to us and to
future generations and become a wellspring of living faith, generous
love, and unshakeable hope. To you, O Jesus, whose presence, hidden and
victorious, fills the history of the world, be honour and glory for ever
and ever.
R. Amen.
All:
Our Father . . .
Stabat Mater:
While my body here decays, may my soul your goodness praise, safe in
paradise with you. Amen. The Holy Father addresses those present.
At the conclusion of his address the Holy Father imparts the Apostolic
Blessing.
V/. The Lord be with you. R/. And also with you.
V/. Blessed be the name of the Lord. R/. Now and forever.
V/. Our help is in the name of the Lord. R/. Who made heaven
and earth.
V/. May Almighty God bless you, the Father, and the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. R/. Amen.
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