GOOD FRIDAY
THE PASSION OF THE LORD
THE WAY OF THE CROSS
COLOSSEUM
ROME, 7 APRIL 2023
STATIONS OF THE CROSS 2023
“Voices of Peace in a World at War”
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, you are “our peace” (Eph 2:14).
Before your Passion, you said: “Peace I leave
with you; my peace I give to you; not as the
world gives do I give to you” (Jn 14:27).
Lord, we need your peace, the peace we
are unable to build with our own strength.
We need to hear again the words with
which, after your resurrection, you strengthened
the hearts of the disciples three times: “Peace
be with you” (Jn 20:19.21.26).
Jesus, who embraced the cross for us,
look upon our wold, thirsting for peace while
the blood of your brothers and sisters continues
to be shed and the tears of so many mothers who
have lost children in war mingle with those of
your holy Mother.
You also, Lord, wept over Jerusalem for
it had not recognized the way of peace (cf. Lk
19:42).
Tonight, the way of the cross winds its path
behind you, directly from the Holy Land.
We will walk it, listening to your
suffering reflected in that of our brothers and
sisters who have suffered and still suffer from
the lack of peace in the world, allowing
ourselves to be pierced by the testimonies and
reflections that reached the ears and heart also
of the Pope during his visits.
They are echoes of peace that resurface
in this “third world war being fought
piecemeal”, cries that come from countries and
areas torn apart today by violence, injustice
and poverty.
All the places where conflict, hatred and
persecution are endured are present in the
prayer of this Good Friday.
Lord Jesus, at your birth the angels in heaven
announced: “On earth, peace among those whom he
favours” (Lk 2:14).
Now our prayers rise up to heaven to
appeal for “Peace on earth,which humanity
throughout the ages has so longed for” (Pacem in
Terris, 1).
Let us pray, beseeching the peace that
you have left us and that we are unable to keep.
Jesus, you embrace the whole world from
the cross: forgive our failings, heal our
hearts, grant us your peace.
First Station: Jesus is condemned to death
(Voices of peace from the Holy Land)
Then [Pilate] released for them Barabbas, and
having scourged Jesus, delivered him to be
crucified (Mt 27:26).
Barabbas or Jesus?
They must choose.
This is not like any other choice: it
involves deciding where to stand, what position
to take in the complex events of life.
Peace, which we all desire, is not born
of itself; instead, it awaits our decision.
Then, as now, we are continually called
to choose between Barabbas or Jesus: rebellion
or meekness, weapons or witness, human power or
the silent strength of the small seed, the power
of the world or that of the Spirit.
In the Holy Land, it seems that our
choice always falls on Barabbas.
Violence seems to be our only language.
The engine of reciprocal retaliation is
continuously fueled by a person’s own pain,
which frequently becomes the only criterion for
judgement.
Justice and forgiveness cannot talk to
each other.
We live together, without recognizing one
another, rejecting each other’s existence,
condemning each other, in an endless and
increasingly violent vicious circle.
In this context, full of hatred and
resentment, we too are called to express a
judgment and make our decision.
And we cannot do this without gazing at
the one who was silent and condemned to death: a
failure, yet the one on whom our choice has
fallen, Jesus.
Christ invites us not to use the standard
of Pilate and of the crowd, but to recognize the
suffering of others, to place justice and
forgiveness in dialogue and to desire salvation
for everyone, even for thieves, even for
Barabbas.
Let us pray together, saying: Enlighten us, Lord
Jesus!
When we believe we are always right: Enlighten
us, Lord Jesus!
When we condemn our brothers and sisters without
appeal: Enlighten us, Lord Jesus!
When we close our eyes to injustice: Enlighten
us, Lord Jesus!
When we stifle the good around us: Enlighten us,
Lord Jesus!
Second Station: Jesus takes up his Cross
(Voices of peace from a migrant from West
Africa)
He himself bore our sins in his body on the
tree, that we might die to sin and live for
righteousness.
By his wounds you have been healed (1 Pet
2:24).
My way of the Cross began six years ago, when I
left my city.
After a thirteen day journey, we arrived
at the desert and passed through it for eight
days, coming across burnt out cars, empty water
cans and dead bodies, until we reached Libya.
Those who still had to pay the smugglers
for the crossing were locked up and tortured
until they paid.
Some lost their lives, others their
minds.
They promised to put me on a ship for
Europe, but the trips were canceled and we did
not get our money back.
There was war there and we reached the
point where we stopped paying attention to
violence and stray bullets.
I found work as a plasterer in order to
pay for the crossing.
Eventually I boarded a raft with more
than a hundred people.
We sailed for hours before an Italian
ship saved us.
I was full of joy and we knelt down to
thank God.
Then we discovered that the ship was
returning to Libya.
There, we were confined in a detention
centre, the worst place in the world.
Ten months later, I was again on a boat.
The first night there were high waves,
four people fell into the sea and we managed to
save two of them.
I fell asleep hoping to die.
When I woke up, I saw people smiling next
to me.
Some Tunisian fishermen called for help,
the ship docked and NGOs gave us food, clothing
and shelter.
I worked to pay for another crossing.
This was the sixth time; after three days
at sea, I reached Malta.
I stayed in a centre for six months and
there I lost my mind.
Every night I asked God why: why should
people like ourselves consider us enemies?
Many people who are fleeing from war are
carrying crosses like mine.
Let us pray together, saying: Deliver us, Lord
Jesus!
From the easy condemnation of our neighbour:
Deliver us, Lord Jesus!
From hasty judgments: Deliver us, Lord Jesus!
From criticism and useless words: Deliver us,
Lord Jesus!
From destructive gossip: Deliver us, Lord Jesus!
Third Station: Jesus falls for the first time
(Voices of peace from young people from Central
America)
Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our
sorrows; yet we esteemed him stricken, struck
down by God, and afflicted.
But he was wounded for our
transgressions, he was bruised for our
iniquities (Is 53:4-5).
We young people want peace.
Yet we frequently fall and the fall has
many names: we are knocked down by laziness,
fear, discouragement, and also the empty
promises of an easy but dishonest life made up
of greed and corruption.
This increases the cycle of drug
trafficking, violence, addictions and the
exploitation of people, while too many families
continue to mourn the loss of their children,
and the lack of accountability on the part of
those who deceive, kidnap and kill has no end.
How can we achieve peace?
Jesus, you fell under the cross, but then
you got up, took up the cross again and with it
gave us peace.
You push us to take charge of our lives,
you push us to the courage of commitment, which
in our language is called compromiso.
This means saying no to many compromisos,
to false compromises that kill peace.
We are full of these compromises: we do
not want violence, but we attack those who do
not think like us on social media; we want a
united society, but we do not make the effort to
understand those who are next to us; worse, we
neglect those who need us.
Lord, place in our hearts the desire to
raise up someone who has fallen to the ground.
As you do with us.
Let us pray together, saying: Raise us up, Lord
Jesus!
From our laziness: Raise us up, Lord Jesus!
From our falls: Raise us up, Lord Jesus!
From our sadness: Raise us up, Lord Jesus!
From thinking that helping others is not up to
us: Raise us up, Lord Jesus!
Fourth Station: Jesus meets his Mother
(Voices of peace from a South American mother)
Simeon blessed them and said to Mary his mother,
“Behold, this child is set for the fall and
rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is
spoken against – and a sword will pierce through
your own soul also – that the thoughts of many
hearts may be revealed” (Lk 2:34-35).
In 2012, the explosion of a bomb planted by the
guerrillas severely damaged my leg.
The shrapnel caused dozens of wounds to
my body.
Of that moment, I remember people’s
screams and blood everywhere.
Yet what terrified me the most was seeing
my seven-month old baby, covered in blood, with
many pieces of glass stuck in her face.
What it must have been like for Mary to
see Jesus’ face bruised and bloodied!
At first, I, a victim of that senseless
violence, felt anger and resentment, but then I
discovered that if I spread hatred, I created
even more violence.
I realized that within and around me
there were wounds deeper than those of the body.
I understood that many victims needed to
discover, like me and through me, that it was
not over for them either and that we cannot live
with resentment.
So I began to help them: I studied in
order to teach them how to prevent accidents due
to the millions of mines scattered in our land.
I thank Jesus and his Mother for having
discovered that drying other people’s tears is
not a waste of time, but the best medicine for
healing ourselves.
Let us pray together, saying: Grant that we may
recognize you, Lord Jesus!
In the disfigured faces of those who suffer:
Grant that we may recognize you, Lord Jesus!
In those who are small and poor: Grant that we
may recognize you, Lord Jesus!
In those who cry out for an act of love: Grant
that we may recognize you, Lord Jesus!
In those persecuted for the sake of justice:
Grant that we may recognize you, Lord Jesus!
Fifth Station: Simon of Cyrene helps Jesus carry
his cross
(Voices of peace from three migrants from
Africa, South Asia and the Middle East)
And as they led him away, they seized one Simon
of Cyrene, who was coming in from the country,
and laid on him the cross, to carry it behind
Jesus (Lk 23:26).
[1] I am someone wounded by hatred.
Once you experience hatred, you do not
forget it, it changes you.
Hatred takes on terrible forms.
It leads a human being to use a pistol
not only to shoot others, but also to break
their bones while other people look on.
There is a void of love inside me that
makes me feel like a useless weight.
Who will be a Cyrenian for me?
[2] I
live my life on the road: I escaped from bombs,
knives, hunger and pain.
I have been pushed onto a truck, hidden
in trunks, thrown onto unsafe boats.
Yet my journey continued in order to
reach a place of safety, one that offers freedom
and opportunity, where I can give and receive
love, practice my faith and where hope is real.
Who will be a Cyrenian for me?
[3] Frequently, I am asked: Who are you?
Why are you here?
What is your status?
Do you expect to stay?
Where will you go?
These are not questions that are intended
to hurt, but they do hurt.
They reduce my hopes to a check on the
boxes of a form.
I must choose foreigner, victim, asylum
seeker, refugee, migrant or other.
Yet what I want to write is person,
brother, friend, believer, neighbour.
Who will be a Cyrenian for me?
Let us pray together, saying: Forgive us, Lord
Jesus!
When we disdained you in the unfortunate:
Forgive us, Lord Jesus!
When we ignored you in those who need help:
Forgive us, Lord Jesus!
When we abandoned you in the defenceless:
Forgive us, Lord Jesus!
When we did not serve you in those who suffer:
Forgive us, Lord Jesus!
Sixth Station: Veronica wipes the face of Jesus
(Voices of peace from a religious priest from
the Balkan Peninsula)
Come, O blessed of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
the world; for I was hungry and you gave me
food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was
a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and
you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I
was in prison and you came to me (Mt 25:34-36).
I was a forty year old pastor when the war came:
some armed guards entered the parish house and
took me to a camp where I spent four months.
They were terrible: lacking the minimum
conditions of hygiene, we suffered from hunger
and thirst without being able to wash or shave.
We were physically mistreated, beaten and
tortured with various objects.
They brought me outside, even five times
a day, above all at night, calling me “Pastor”
and striking me.
Among other things, they broke three ribs
and threatened to pull out my fingernails, put
salt in my wounds, and skin me alive.
Once it was so hard to resist that I
begged the guard to kill me, convinced as I was
that they would do it anyway.
The guard answered me: “You will not die
so easily; for you we will get one hundred fifty
of our men in return”.
Those words reawakened in me the hope of
surviving.
Yet I would not have been able to bear
all that evil by myself, without God: prayer,
repeated in the heart, worked wonders.
And Providence came, in the form of aid
and food, through a Muslim woman, Fatima, who
managed to reach me, making her way through the
hatred.
She was for me what Veronica was for
Jesus.
Now, until the end of my days, I bear
witness to the horrors of war and cry out: Never
again war!
Let us pray together, saying: Grant us your
gaze, Lord Jesus!
That we may love those who are unloved: Grant us
your gaze, Lord Jesus!
That we may help those who have lost their way:
Grant us your gaze, Lord Jesus!
That we may take care of those who suffer
violence: Grant us your gaze, Lord Jesus!
That we may welcome those who repent of evil:
Grant us your gaze, Lord Jesus!
Seventh Station: Jesus falls for the second time
(Voices of peace from two teenagers from North
Africa)
“Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you,
or thirsty and give you drink?
And when did we see you a stranger and
welcome you, or naked and clothe you?
And when did we see you sick or in prison
and visit you?”
And the king will answer them, “Truly, I
say to you, as you did it to one of the least of
these my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt
25:37-40).
[1] I am Joseph, and I am sixteen.
I arrived at the camp for internally
displaced persons with my parents in 2015 and
have been living there for more than eight
years.
If there had been peace, I would have
stayed in my home where I was born and enjoyed
my childhood.
Here life is not good.
I am afraid of the future, for myself and
for the other young people.
Why are we suffering in the camp for
internally displaced persons?
Because of the ongoing conflicts in my
country, which has been plagued by war for as
long as it has existed.
Without peace, we will not be able to get
up again.
Peace is always promised, but we continue
to fall under the weight of war, our cross.
I thank God who raises us up like a
father, and so many generous men and women whom
I perhaps will never know and who, by helping
us, allow us to survive.
[2] I am Johnson and since 2014 I have
been living in another camp for internally
displaced persons in Block B, Section Two.
I am fourteen, and I am in the third
grade.
Here life is not good; many children do
not go to school because there are not enough
teachers and schools for everyone.
The place is too small and crowded, there
is not even room to play football.
We want peace so that we can go back
home.
Peace is good, war is bad.
I would like to say this to the world’s
leaders.
And I ask all my friends to pray for
peace.
Let us pray together, saying: Make us strong,
Lord Jesus!
In time of trial: Make us strong, Lord Jesus!
In the effort to build bridges of fraternity:
Make us strong, Lord Jesus!
In carrying our cross: Make us strong, Lord
Jesus!
In bearing witness to the Gospel: Make us
strong, Lord Jesus!
Eighth Station: Jesus meets the women of
Jerusalem
(Voices of peace from Southeast Asia)
And there followed him a great multitude of the
people, and of women who bewailed and lamented
him (Lk 23:27).
Jesus, you carried your cross.
And I think that my country is also
carrying its cross.
We are a people that loves peace, yet we
are crushed by the cross of conflict: by
violence, internal displacements, attacks on
places of worship…
It is a heavy burden that we are
dragging, Jesus: a way of the cross that seems
endless.
Our mothers shed tears and grieve over
the hunger of their children.
And like them, I too do not have many
words to pray with, but many tears to offer.
Lord, the procession that led you to
Calvary was dreadful, but some grieving women
made their way through the crowd, which was
degraded by evil.
It was they who gave you strength,
mothers who saw in you not a condemned man, but
a son.
From us, too, a woman came out of the
crowd and became a mother in spirit for many.
She knelt down in defence of her people
before the power of the weapons that were lined
up and, willing to give her life, meekly pleaded
for peace and reconciliation.
Jesus, now as then, in the grisly turmoil
of hate the dance of peace arises.
And we Christians want to be instruments
of peace.
Convert us to you, Jesus, and give us
strength, for you alone are our strength.
Let us pray together, saying: Convert us, Lord
Jesus!
From trafficking in weapons without qualms of
conscience: Convert us, Lord Jesus!
From allocating money for armaments instead of
for food: Convert us, Lord Jesus!
From the slavery of money that gives rise to war
and injustice: Convert us, Lord Jesus!
That spears may be turned into pruning hooks:
Convert us, Lord Jesus!
Ninth Station: Jesus falls for the third time
(Voices of peace from a consecrated woman from
Central Africa)
Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of
wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains
just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears
much fruit.
Those who love their life lose it, and
those who hate their life in this world will
keep it for eternal life (Jn 12:24-25).
On 5 December 2013, at five o’clock in the
morning, I was awakened by the sound of weapons.
The rebels were invading the capital.
Everyone ran and tried to hide, yet all
it took to die was to cross the path of a stray
bullet.
This was the beginning of indescribable
sufferings: killings, loss of family members,
friends and colleagues.
My sister disappeared and never came
back, which traumatized my father.
He left us a few years later following a
short illness.
I continued to cry.
In that valley of tears and of “why”… I
thought of Jesus.
He also fell under the weight of
violence, even to the point of saying on the
cross, “My God, why have you abandoned me?”.
I joined my “why” to his and an answer
came to me: love as Jesus loves you.
This was the light amid the darkness.
I understood that I had to draw upon the
strength to love.
Since then, every time there is a little
bit of peace, I go to Mass.
To get to the parish I have to take
several roads and pass through at least three
rebel barricades.
Yet, Mass after Mass, a certitude grew
within me: despite having lost practically
everything, including the house where I grew up,
everything passes away except God.
This lifted me up and with some friends
we started to gather some children, who were
playing soldiers, to try to hand on to them, who
are the future, the Gospel values of mutual
help, forgiveness and honesty, so that the dream
of peace can come true.
Let us pray together, saying: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From the fear of being unloved: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From the fear of being misunderstood: Heal us,
Lord Jesus!
From the fear of being forgotten: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From the fear of failure: Heal us, Lord Jesus!
Tenth Station: Jesus is stripped of his clothes
(Voices of peace from young people from Ukraine
and Russia)
[The soldiers] crucified him, and divided his
garments among them, casting lots for them, to
decide what each should take.
This was to fulfil the Scripture, “They
parted my garments among them, and for my
clothing they cast lots” (Mk 15:24; Jn 19:24).
[1] Last year, my mother and father brought me
and my youngest brother to Italy, where our
grandmother has worked for more than twenty
years.
We left Mariupol at night.
At the border, the soldiers stopped my
father and told him that he had to stay in
Ukraine to fight.
We continued on by bus for two more days.
When we arrived in Italy, I was sad.
I felt stripped of everything: completely
bare.
I did not know the language and had no
friends.
My grandmother tried hard to make me feel
fortunate but all I did was say I wanted to go
home.
In the end my family decided to go back
to Ukraine.
Here the situation continues to be hard:
there is war on all sides, the city is
destroyed.
Yet in my heart there remained that
certitude which my grandmother used to tell me
about when I cried: “Everything will pass,
you’ll see.
And with the help of the good Lord, peace
will return”.
[2] I, on the other hand, am from Russia…
as I say it, I almost feel a sense of guilt, yet
at the same time I do not understand why and I
feel doubly bad.
I feel stripped of happiness and of
dreams for the future.
I have seen my grandmother and mother cry
for two years.
A letter informed us that my oldest
brother was dead; I still remember him on his
eighteenth birthday, smiling and bright like the
sun, and all this just a few weeks before
leaving for a long journey.
Everyone told us we should be proud, but
at home there was only much suffering and
sadness.
The same thing happened also to my father
and grandfather: they too left and we know
nothing more.
Some of my classmates, with great fear,
whispered in my ear that there was war.
When I returned home, I wrote a prayer:
Jesus, please, let there be peace in the whole
world and let us all be brothers and sisters.
Let us pray together, saying: Purify us, Lord
Jesus!
From resentment and bitterness: Purify us, Lord
Jesus!
From violent words and reactions: Purify us,
Lord Jesus!
From attitudes that create division: Purify us,
Lord Jesus!
From seeking to look good by humiliating others:
Purify us, Lord Jesus!
Eleventh Station: Jesus is nailed to the cross
(Voices of peace from a young person from the
Near East)
And with him they crucified two robbers, one on
his right and one on his left.
And those who passed by derided him,
shaking their heads, and saying, “Aha!
You who would destroy the temple and
build it in three days, save yourself and come
down from the cross!” (Mk 15:27-30).
In 2012, a group of armed extremists invaded our
neighbourhood and started killing those who were
on balconies and inside apartment buildings with
bursts of machine gun fire.
I was nine years old.
I remember the anguish of my mother and
father; in the evening we found ourselves
embracing and praying, aware of the harsh new
reality ahead of us.
Every day the war became more atrocious.
For long periods there was no light and
water, and wells were dug everywhere.
Food was a daily problem.
In 2014, while we were on the balcony, a
bomb exploded in front of the house, hurling us
inside and covering us with glass and splinters.
A few months later another bomb hit my
parents’ room.
They miraculously survived and
reluctantly decided to leave the country.
Another “calvary” began because, after
two attempts to obtain a visa, we had no choice
but to board a ship.
We risked our lives, we stayed on a rock
waiting for dawn and a coast guard vessel.
Once we were saved, the locals welcomed
us with open arms, understanding our hardships.
The war was the cross of our lives.
War kills hope.
In our country, many families, children
and the elderly are without hope, even more so
after terrible natural disasters.
In the name of Jesus, who opened his arms
on the cross, stretch out a hand to my people!
Let us pray together, saying: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From the inability to dialogue: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From distrust and suspicion: Heal us, Lord
Jesus!
From impatience and haste: Heal us, Lord Jesus!
From being closed in on ourselves and from
isolation: Heal us, Lord Jesus!
Twelfth Station: Jesus dies forgiving those who
crucified him
(Voices of peace from a mother from West Asia)
And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them; for they
know not what they do”.
It was now about the sixth hour, and
there was darkness over the whole land until the
ninth hour, while the sun’s light failed; and
the curtain of the temple was torn in two.
Then Jesus, crying out with a loud voice,
said, “Father, into your hands I commit my
spirit!”
And having said this he breathed his last
(Lk 23:34.44-46).
On 6 August 2014, the city was awakened by
bombs.
Terrorists were at the gates.
Three weeks earlier, they had invaded the
nearby cities and villages, treating them
cruelly.
So we fled, but after a few days we
returned home.
One morning, while we were busy and the
children were playing in front of the houses, we
heard the sound of a mortar shell.
I ran outside.
The children’s voices were no longer
heard, but the screams of the adults increased.
My son, his cousin and the young neighbor
who was preparing to marry had been struck: they
were dead.
The killing of these three angels drove
us to flee: if this had not happened to them, we
would have stayed in the city and would have
inevitably fallen into the hands of the
terrorists.
It is not easy to accept this situation.
Nonetheless, faith helps me to hope, for
it reminds me that the dead are in the arms of
Jesus.
And we survivors try to forgive the
aggressor because Jesus forgave his
executioners.
So in our dead, we believe in you, the
Lord of life.
We want to follow you and bear witness
that your love is stronger than everything.
Let us pray together, saying: Teach us, Lord
Jesus!
To love as you loved us: Teach us, Lord Jesus!
To forgive as you forgave us: Teach us, Lord
Jesus!
To take the first step towards reconciliation:
Teach us, Lord Jesus!
To do good without demanding recompense: Teach
us, Lord Jesus!
Thirteenth Station: Jesus is taken down from the
cross
(Voices of peace from a Sister from East Africa)
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
Shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril,
or sword?... No, through all these things we are
more than conquerors through him who loved us
(Rom 8:35.37).
It was 7 September 2022, the day when, in our
country, we remember the Agreement by which our
people’s right to full independence was finally
recognized.
Suddenly something happened that
shattered our joy: a Sister, who had been a
long-time missionary in our lands, was killed.
Terrorists entered the house and without
mercy took her life.
The day of victory turned into defeat:
fear and uncertainty flooded our hearts.
The experience of hundreds of families
who witnessed the tragic death of their loved
ones became reality: in our arms lay the
lifeless body of our Sister.
It is not easy to witness the violent
death of a family member, a friend or a
neighbour, just as it is not easy to see one’s
own home and possessions reduced to ashes and
the future become dark.
Yet this is the life of my people, it is
my life.
However, as we have heard and as we learn
at the school of the Virgin of Nazareth, who
received the lifeless Jesus into her arms and
gazed upon him with love illuminated by faith,
we must never stop finding the courage to dream
of a future of hope, peace and reconciliation.
For the love of the Risen Christ has been
poured into our hearts; for he is our peace, he
is our true victory.
And nothing will ever separate us from
his love.
Let us pray together, saying: Have mercy on us,
Lord Jesus!
Good Shepherd, who gave your life for your
flock: Have mercy on us, Lord Jesus!
You, who by dying destroyed death: Have mercy on
us, Lord Jesus!
You, who made life pour forth from your pierced
heart: Have mercy on us, Lord Jesus!
You, who from the tomb shed light on history:
Have mercy on us, Lord Jesus!
Fourteenth Station: Jesus is placed in the tomb
(Voices of peace from young girls from Southern
Africa)
After this Joseph of Arimathea… asked Pilate
that he might take away the body of Jesus, and
Pilate gave him leave.
So he came and took away his body.
Nicodemus also… came bringing a mixture
of myrrh and aloes, about a hundred pounds’
weight.
They took the body of Jesus, and bound it
in linen cloths with the spices (Jn 19:38-40).
It was a Friday evening when the rebels raided
our village.
They took as many hostages as they could,
deported whoever they found and loaded us down
with what they had looted.
On the way, they killed many men with
bullets or knives.
They took the women to a park.
Every day we were mistreated in body and
soul.
Stripped of clothes and dignity, we lived
naked so that we could not escape.
Thankfully one day, when they sent us to
get water from the river, I managed to get away.
Our province is still today a place of
tears and pain.
When the Pope came to our continent, we
placed under the cross of Jesus the clothes of
the armed men, who still frighten us.
In the name of Jesus we forgive them for
all that they did to us.
We ask the Lord for the grace of a
peaceful and human coexistence.
We know and believe that the tomb is not
the final resting place, but that we are all
called to a new life in the heavenly Jerusalem.
Let us pray together, saying: Preserve us, Lord
Jesus!
In the hope that does not disappoint: Preserve
us, Lord Jesus!
In the light that does not go out: Preserve us,
Lord Jesus!
In the forgiveness that renews the heart:
Preserve us, Lord Jesus!
In the peace that makes us blessed: Preserve us,
Lord Jesus!
Concluding Prayer (Fourteen “thank yous”)
Lord Jesus, eternal Word of the Father, you
became silent for us.
And in the silence that leads us to your
tomb, there is still a word that we want to say
to you, recalling the journey of the Stations of
the Cross we have traveled with you: thank you!
Thank you, Lord Jesus, for the meekness that
overwhelms arrogance.
Thank you, for the courage with which you
embraced the cross.
Thank you, for the peace that flows from your
wounds.
Thank you, for having given us your holy Mother
to be our Mother as well.
Thank you, for the love shown in the face of
betrayal.
Thank you, for turning tears into smiles.
Thank you, for having loved everyone without
excluding anyone.
Thank you, for the hope you instill in time of
trial.
Thank you, for the mercy that heals sufferings.
Thank you, for stripping yourself of everything
to enrich us.
Thank you, for having transformed the cross into
the tree of life.
Thank you, for the forgiveness you offered your
executioners.
Thank you, for having defeated death.
Thank you, Lord Jesus, for the light you kindled
in our nights.
In reconciling all divisions, you made us
all brothers and sisters, children of the same
Father who is in heaven:
Pater noster… |