Pope during Easter vigil: Reject the ‘glitter of wealth’

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Pope Francis speaks as he presides over the Easter Vigil on Saturday at St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican. | Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images Religion Pope during Easter vigil: Reject the ‘glitter of wealth’

VATICAN CITY — At an Easter vigil in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Francis on Saturday encouraged people to resist cynicism or pursuing the “glitter of wealth,” and to avoid seeking life’s meaning in “things that pass away.”

“Do not bury hope!” Francis exclaimed, after noting that when things go badly, “we lose heart and come to believe that death is stronger than life.”

“We become cynical, negative and despondent,” Francis added.

For Christians, Easter is a day of joy and hope, as they mark their belief that Jesus triumphed over death by resurrection following crucifixion.

“Sin seduces; it promises things easy and quick, prosperity and success, but leaves behind only solitude and death,” the pope said. “Sin is looking for life among the dead, for the meaning of life in things that pass away.”

Encouraging the faithful, Francis said: “Why not prefer Jesus, the true light, to the glitter of wealth, career, pride and pleasure?”

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At the start of the ceremony on Easter’s eve, Francis, dressed in white robes, slowly carried a lit candle up the aisle of a darkened St. Peter’s Basilica. At the chant in Latin for “light of Christ, the basilica’s lights were suddenly switched on in a dramatic tradition.

Arrayed before the steps of the altar was a row of cardinals, wearing ivory robes. Behind them in the pews sat diplomats with their spouses and thousands of rank-and-file Catholics, tourists and pilgrims among them.

Among those in the basilica were eight adults who were baptized by the pope during the Mass. The Vatican said these new faithful are from Italy, Albania, Ecuador, Indonesia and Peru. From a shell-shaped silver dish, Francis poured holy water over the bowed heads of the three men and five women, after they walked up to him, one by one, and listened to him calling their first names.

On Sunday, Francis celebrates Easter Mass in late morning in St. Peter’s Square and gives a speech from the basilica balcony. Known by its Latin name “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and to the world), the speech is an occasion to reflect on the world’s war-ravaged and other tense spots while paying tribute to Catholics’ practicing their faith sometimes in the face of persecution or other difficulties.

TidalPod on April 22nd, 2019 at 02:53 UTC »

I am a little lost on the point. I feel like the building he is in was built a long time ago, and was not built using money from current times.

FreshConqoroor on April 22nd, 2019 at 02:12 UTC »

I was of a similar mindset up until recently when reflecting on the Notre Dame scenario. While these buildings might be a testament of hypocrisy for a branch of religion that could be doing many things better; they are also great examples of human ingenuity that are not as commonly evident in modern society other than things that are computer generated.

CalRipkenForCommish on April 22nd, 2019 at 01:16 UTC »

All that wealth, yet the Vatican can’t afford a mirror.