Source:
Zenit
Francis
Says It Is Possible to Break the Cycle of Violence
Pope
Francis led a massive, reverent crowd in praying for peace this evening in St.
Peter's Square.
Last
Sunday, he declared today a Day of Fasting and Prayer for Peace in Syria and
throughout the world. The response to his request was global, with religious
leaders from the Middle East and all around the world -- including the Grand
Mufti of Syria, Ahmad Badreddin Hassou, the spiritual leader of Sunni Islam in
Syria -- welcoming the initiative.
The
four-hour service in the Vatican included the praying of the rosary, and silent
time of Eucharistic adoration. The crowd was estimated at more than 100,000.
Francis
offered a reflection, in which he exhorted us to ask ourselves the question, “Am I
really my brother’s keeper?”
“Yes,
you are your brother’s keeper! To be human means to care for one another,” he exclaimed in
response.
The
Holy Father said that “we bring about the rebirth of Cain in every
act of violence and in every war. All of us! And even today we continue this
history of conflict between brothers, even today we raise our hands against our
brother. Even today, we let ourselves be guided by idols, by selfishness, by
our own interests, and this attitude persists. We have perfected our weapons,
our conscience has fallen asleep, and we have sharpened our ideas to justify
ourselves. As if it were normal, we continue to sow destruction, pain, death!
Violence and war lead only to death, they speak of death! Violence and war are
the language of death!”
Francis
then asked if it is possible to break this chain of violence, to “get
out of this spiral of sorrow and death? Can we learn once again to walk and live
in the ways of peace?”
He
responded that invoking God’s help and Mary's intercession, “I
say: Yes, it is possible for everyone! From every corner of the world tonight,
I would like to hear us cry out: Yes, it is possible for everyone! Or even
better, I would like for each one of us, from the least to the greatest,
including those called to govern nations, to respond: Yes, we want it!”
“My
Christian faith urges me to look to the Cross,” he continued. “How I wish that
all men and women of good will would look to the Cross if only for a moment!
There, we can see God’s reply: violence is not answered with violence, death is
not answered with the language of death. In the silence of the Cross, the
uproar of weapons ceases and the language of reconciliation, forgiveness,
dialogue, and peace is spoken.”
Stay
your hand
Francis
said he prayed that all people would cry out, “violence and war are never the
way to peace!”
He
asked that everyone would look into their consciences, overcome indifference,
conquer “deadly reasoning” and be open to dialogue and reconciliation.
“Look
upon your brother’s sorrow – I think of the children: look upon these… look at
the sorrow of your brother, stay your hand and do not add to it, rebuild the
harmony that has been shattered; and all this achieved not by conflict but by
encounter,”
he pleaded. “May the noise of weapons cease! War always marks the failure of peace,
it is always a defeat for humanity. Let the words of Pope Paul VI resound
again: ‘No more one against the other, no more, never! ... war never again,
never again war!’”

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