Pope in Fatima: May We, With Mary, Become Signs of Mercy

Holy Father spoke to pilgrims before leading the Rosary at the Chapel of the Apparitions on the first night of his two-day pilgrimage to Fatima.

Pope prays the Rosary May 12 at Fatima. (Photo: Main photo with Pope, LUSA Press Agency; candles in crowd via CTV; video courtesy of Alan Holdren/CNA)

 

FATIMA, Portugal — Pope Francis asked pilgrims in Fatima on Friday evening to think about the qualities the Virgin Mary possesses, being careful not to make her into something she is not — especially elevating her mercifulness above that of her Son.

“Thank you for your welcome and for joining me on this pilgrimage of hope and peace,” he said, assuring those united with him, either physically or spiritually, that they have a special place in his heart.

He said that he felt Christ had entrusted them all to him, especially those most in need, as Our Lady of Fatima taught in one of her apparitions to the shepherd children.

“May she, the loving and solicitous Mother of the needy, obtain for them the Lord’s blessing!”

He then reflected on who Mary is.

“Pilgrims with Mary … but which Mary? A teacher of the spiritual life, the first to follow Jesus on the ‘narrow way’ of the cross by giving us an example, or a Lady ‘unapproachable’ and impossible to imitate?”

“The Virgin Mary of the Gospel, venerated by the Church at prayer, or a Mary of our own making: one who restrains the arm of a vengeful God; one sweeter than Jesus … one more merciful than the Lamb slain for us?” Pope Francis asked May 12.

“If we want to be Christian, we have to be Marian,” he emphasized.

It is through Mary’s cooperation and participation in salvation that she also became a channel of God’s mercy, he explained, praying that, with Mary, we might — “each of us — become a sign and sacrament of the mercy of God, who pardons always and pardons everything.”

“No other creature ever basked in the light of God’s face as did Mary,” he continued, and “she in turn gave a human face to the Son of the eternal Father.”

Pope Francis greeted pilgrims before leading the Rosary at the Chapel of the Apparitions on the first night of his two-day pilgrimage to Fatima.

In his greeting, Francis said that we do a great injustice to God and his grace if we speak of his justice without speaking also of his mercy. “Obviously, God’s mercy does not deny justice, for Jesus took upon himself the consequences of our sin, together with its due punishment,” he said.

Because Christ redeemed our sin upon the cross, “we put aside all fear and dread, as unbefitting those who are loved,” he explained.

Speaking of the Rosary he would pray shortly, he said that, in the recitation of the prayer’s mysteries, we can contemplate Mary’s life, in the joyful, luminous, sorrowful and the glorious moments.

“Each time we recite the Rosary, in this holy place or anywhere else, the Gospel enters anew into the life of individuals, families, peoples and the entire world.”

Quoting from his 2013 apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, Pope Francis said that in looking at Mary we are able to believe again “in the revolutionary nature of love and tenderness.”

“In her, we see that humility and tenderness are not virtues of the weak, but of the strong, who need not treat others poorly in order to feel important themselves.”

Ending his message with a prayer, Francis prayed that, “under the watchful gaze” of the Virgin Mary, all may come to sing about the mercy of God with joy and gladness, crying out that God would show to him and to each of them the mercy he has shown his saints.

“My one hope of glory, Lord, is this: that your Mother will take me in her arms, shelter me beneath her mantle, and set me close to your heart. Amen.”

 

 

Read more

Notre Dame’s New Ethics Center Causes Controversy, Indicates Potential Catholic-Identity Clashes Ahead

Critics contend that the new Jenkins Center bypasses the already-established de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture — and may be...

China, Church and State: Easter in Beijing at Three Cathedrals

PHOTO ESSAY: A surreal balance exists between accepting state monitoring and confessing one’s faith without fear.

Demographic Trends, Financial Challenges Force Catholic College Closures

Magdalen College of the Liberal Arts has become one of 21 Catholic colleges across the country to shut its doors, merge with another...