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An ocean of tears calls for mercy, compassion, pope says

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An ocean of tears calls for mercy, compassion, pope says

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The tears shed by men, women and
children around the world each day cry out for mercy, compassion and
consolation, Pope Francis said during a special Year of Mercy prayer service
for those who weep.

“How many tears are shed every second in our world;
each is different but together they form, as it were, an ocean of desolation
that cries out for mercy, compassion and consolation,” the pope said May 5
as he led the prayer service in St. Peter’s Basilica.

Before the pope spoke, he and the congregation listened to three
testimonies. Giovanna Astarita and Domenico Pellegrino and their son Raffaele
spoke about the suicide of Antonio, the couple’s first son. He was only 15. “Antonio
dragged my life, my soul and my mind into that tomb, too,” his mother
said. Faith in God and an experience of God drying her tears was and is the
only thing “that prevents me from going crazy,” she said.

Maurizio Fratamico spoke about how he worked, traveled, made
a lot of money, “used and threw away” a lot of young women, but felt
empty and alone. His twin brother had a conversion experience and shared it.
Thanks to the tears of his parents and his own tears of remorse, Fratamico said
he has set out on a journey of faith and has found “the joy I was always
seeking.”

Qaiser Felix, a Catholic journalist from Pakistan, spoke
about how his reporting on anti-Christian discrimination led to threats against
him and against his family, eventually forcing him to flee and to try to start
life over in Italy. “To know persecution and the fear of death is a
terrible experience, especially when I think of my children,” he said.

The service included special prayers for persecuted
Christians; those in imminent danger of death; people enslaved; victims of war
and terrorism; abused children; the seriously ill and their caregivers; the
unjustly accused and prisoners; those who feel abandoned, depressed and
desperate; people suffering from addictions; families who have experienced a
miscarriage or the death of a child; and those who have lost or been forced to
leave their homes, families or jobs.

But before the formal prayers were read, ushers went through
the basilica with baskets, collecting the prayer requests of the congregation.

At the beginning of his homily, Pope Francis asked people to
join him in asking for the Holy Spirit’s presence. “May he enlighten our
minds to find the right words capable of bringing comfort. May he open our
hearts to the certainty that God is always present and never abandons us in
times of trouble.”

Everyone has experienced the sadness or suffering that makes
them yearn for a comforting presence and a word of consolation, he said. “The
bitterest tears are those caused by human evil,” especially when a loved
one is violently killed.

When one is in pain or mourning, he said, God offers
consolation and “in his tenderness comes to wipe the tears from our eyes.”

For centuries, the pope said, Christians have drawn
consolation from knowing they are not alone in their pain and that Jesus, too,
knew what it meant to weep for the loss of a loved one.

“In one of the most moving pages of the Gospel, Jesus
sees Mary weeping for the death of her brother Lazarus” and he, too,
begins to weep, the pope said. “If God could weep, then I too can weep, in
the knowledge that he understands me.”

But in addition to offering consolation to believers, Jesus’
tears encourage believers to open themselves to compassion for others, he said.
“The tears of Jesus serve as an antidote to my indifference before the
suffering of my brothers and sisters. His tears teach me to make my own the
pain of others, to share in the discouragement and sufferings of those
experiencing painful situations,” particularly the death of a loved one.

“Jesus’ tears cannot go without a response on the part
of those who believe in him,” Pope Francis insisted. “As he consoles,
so we, too, are called to console.”

Turning to the copy of the Weeping Madonna of Syracuse, a
Marian image chosen especially for the prayer service, the pope said: “At
the foot of every cross, the mother of Jesus is always there. With her mantle,
she wipes away our tears. With her outstretched hand, she helps us to rise up,
and she accompanies us along the path of hope.”

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