His Holiness Pope Leo XIV: Easter opens us up to hope that never fails

At the Easter Sunday Mass, His Holiness Pope Leo XIV reminds us that the Easter proclamation that Christ is risen from the dead "opens us up to a hope that never fails, to a light that never fades, to a fullness of joy that nothing can take away: death has been conquered forever; death no longer has power over us!"

Vatican News

His Holiness Pope Leo XIV on Easter Sunday, Saint Peter's Square (@Vatican Media)

Presiding over the Easter Sunday Mass in Saint Peter's Square with over fifty thousand faithful gathered, His Holiness Pope Leo XIV explained how all creation today is "resplendent with new light" and we rejoice as "a song of praise rises from the earth ... Christ is risen from the dead, and with him, we too rise to new life!"

Easter brings fullness of joy

The Easter proclamation "embraces the mystery of our lives and the destiny of history," the Pope explained. And even into the depths of death when we can feel overhwelmed, Easter opens us up "to a hope that never fails, to a light that never fades, to a fullness of joy that nothing can take away" as "death has been conquered forever" and no longer has power over us.

Read the full text of the Pope’s Homily Here 

40th anniversary of Dutch flowers

The Easter celebration took place in a Saint Peter's Square adorned with over 65 thousand tulips, daffodils, hyacinths; 7,800 flowers of various types, along with over 1,200 plumosa and long willow catkin branches.

This year marks the 40th year that the Netherlands have offered this floral gift to the Pope at Easter. The initiative has been promoted by Dutch florists and volunteers in collaboration with the Dutch Bishops' Conference and the "Bloemenpracht Rome" Foundation.

Challenged to embrace hope

Continuing his homily, the Pope acknowledged that the Easter message of hope and light is not always easy to accept, since the power of death constantly threatens us both interiorly and externally.

From within, the weight of our sins can prevent us "from 'spreading our wings' and taking flight" or suffering can cause us to lose hope and "feel as if we have ended up in a tunnel with no end in sight."

Externally, death is daily in front of our eyes - "present in injustices, in partisan selfishness, in the oppression of the poor, in the lack of attention given to the most vulnerable."  The violence in our world and the wounds it causes are for all to see, he went on to say, "in the cry of pain that rises from every corner because of the abuses that crush the weakest among us, because of the idolatry of profit that plunders the earth’s resources, because of the violence of war that kills and destroys"…

This report was originally published on the Website of Vatican News. Please click here to read the full text.

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