Vatican
City, 30 March 2013
(VIS) – From 5:15pm until 6:40 this afternoon, there will be an
extraordinary exposition of the Holy Shroud in the Cathedral of
Turin, Italy. The initiative is part of the Year of Faith that was
proclaimed by Pope Benedict XVI and will be broadcast by the Italian
television channel, RAI1.
For
the occasion, Pope Francis recorded a video message, the text of
which we offer below.
“Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
I
join all of you gathered before the Holy Shroud, and I thank the Lord
who, through modern technology, offers us this possibility.”
“Even
if it takes place in this way, our gaze is not a mere 'observing',
but rather a veneration. It is a prayerful gaze. I would go further:
It is a letting ourselves be looked upon. This Face has eyes that are
closed. It is the face of one who is dead and yet, mysteriously, He
is watching us and in silence He speaks to us. How is this possible?
How is it that the faithful, like you, pause before this Icon of a
man who has been scourged and crucified? It is because the Man of the
Shroud invites us to contemplate Jesus of Nazareth. This image,
impressed upon the cloth, speaks to our hearts and moves us to climb
the hill of Calvary, to look upon the wood of the Cross, and to
immerse ourselves in the eloquent silence of love.”
“Let
us therefore allow ourselves to be reached by this gaze, which is
directed not to our eyes but to our hearts. In silence, let us listen
to what He has to say to us from beyond death itself. By means of the
Holy Shroud, the unique and supreme Word of God comes to us: Love
made man, incarnate in our history; the merciful Love of God who has
taken upon himself all the evil of the world in order to free us from
its power. This disfigured Face resembles all those faces of men and
women marred by a life that does not respect their dignity, by war
and the violence that afflict the weakest… And yet, the Face of the
Shroud conveys a great peace. This tortured body expresses a
sovereign majesty. It is as if it let a restrained but powerful
energy within it shine through, as if to tell us: have faith; do not
lose hope; the power of God's love, the power of the Risen One,
conquers all.”
“So,
looking upon the Man of the Shroud, I make Saint Francis of Assisi's
prayer before the Crucifix my own: 'Most High and glorious God,
enlighten the darkness of my heart, and grant me true faith, certain
hope, and perfect charity, sense and understanding, Lord, so that I
may carry out your holy and true command. Amen.'”
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