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Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Ukrainian suffering makes Rome's Via Crucis format 'incomprehensible', bishop says

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Catholic News Agency recently issued the following announcement.

Another Ukrainian bishop has voiced concern about the incorporation of both Russian and Ukrainian families into Pope Francis’ Way of the Cross devotional this Good Friday, noting that many Ukrainians have a hard time understanding this portrayal amid continued Russian aggression.

“In itself, this gesture of reconciliation is good, but its details may be incomprehensible and unacceptable to those who suffer now from the aggressor. This is why is such a strong reaction has arisen.” Bishop Vitaliy Kryvytskyi of Kyiv-Zhytomyr said in a message posted on Facebook April 12.

On Monday, the Vatican published the meditations and prayers for the pope’s Via Crucis, or the Way of the Cross. The devotional is scheduled to take place at the Colosseum in Rome, a practice dating back more than two centuries.

The Way of the Cross is a widespread Good Friday observance in Latin rite Catholic practice. The devotional takes inspiration from the gospels and Christian tradition, focusing meditation and reflection on fourteen scenes or “stations” in the last days of Christ, from his condemnation to death through his crucifixion and burial.

This year the pope’s Via Crucis which will focus this year on the “crosses” of family life. The thirteenth station, “Jesus dies on the Cross,” has a portrayal alluding to the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine. A Ukrainian family and a Russian family are due to read a reflection they wrote together about how their lives were upended by the pain of war.

Bishop Kryvytskyi is one of the several Latin rite bishops heading six dioceses and one archdiocese in Ukraine. They serve about 370,000 laity, about one percent of the total population. The Latin rite Catholic population is concentrated in the west of Ukraine and has cultural ties to Poland and Hungary.

The bishop lamented how reports of this portrayal have affected his fellow Ukrainians.

“I don’t want to be a judge to anyone, and I won’t be original when commenting on the scenario of the Way of the Cross on Good Friday at the Colosseum, where the cross should be carried jointly by Ukrainians and Russians,” he said, according to the Religious Information Service of Ukraine. “I share the opinion of many compatriots that the issue of its Thirteenth Station causes suffering rather than unites warring peoples, all the more because Russia does not stop its aggressive plans.”

At the Thirteenth Station, the Russian and Ukrainian families are expected to carry a wooden cross together in the Colosseum before passing it to a family of migrants, who will carry the cross for the final station.

“Why has my land become as dark as Golgotha? We have no tears left. Anger has given way to resignation,” the text of the reflection says. “Lord, where are you? Speak to us amid the silence of death and division, and teach us to be peacemakers, brothers and sisters, and to rebuild what bombs tried to destroy,” it continues.

The prayer following the meditation calls Christ's pierced side a “wellspring of reconciliation for all peoples” and asks God that “families devastated by tears and blood may believe in the power of forgiveness.”

Bishop Kryvytskyi explained concerns and objections using the example of a joint replacement procedure. The procedure is not complex in itself but is complicated when the bone of the joint suffers from serious inflammation.

“A new joint is not something bad, but it will not fall into the desired place if the disease is not cured,” he said.

On April 12 Ukraine’s new ambassador to the Holy See, Andrii Yurash, said his embassy “understands and shares the general concern in Ukraine” about the portrayal. His embassy is trying to explain the “difficulties” and “possible consequences” of how the Way of the Cross in Rome incorporates the situation in Ukraine.

Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuck of Kyiv-Halych, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, said the portrayal was “untimely,” “ambiguous” and “even offensive.” He worried that the decision “does not take into account the context of Russia’s military aggression against Ukraine.”

Bishop Kryvytskyi’s commentary on Facebook included a photo of Michelangelo’s Pieta.

“It seems to me that over the past 24 hours, I have done everything possible to convey the inconsistency of this liturgical gesture in the context of the terrible war and its planned possible escalation,” he said.

Original source can be found here.

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