By Cindy Wooden
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Praying for cardinals and bishops who
died in the past year, Pope Francis urged people to remember the priestly
witness they gave.
Some of the bishops, he said, had been “called to
witness to the Gospel in a heroic way, enduring heavy tribulation.”
The Vatican booklet for the Mass Nov. 4 listed by name the seven
cardinals and 136 bishops from around the world who died since Oct.
25, 2015. The deceased included five bishops from mainland China, all of whom
had served time in prison or labor camps because of their ministry.
The deceased cardinals and bishops, Pope Francis said, were pastors
who dedicated their lives to serving the people entrusted to them. They offered
the sacraments, preached the Gospel and, with a father’s love, “tried to
love everyone, especially the poor, the defenseless and those in need of
help.”
“In the name of the God of mercy and forgiveness, their
hands blessed and absolved,” the pope said. “Their words comforted
and dried tears; their presence witnessed eloquently that the goodness of God
is inexhaustible and his mercy is infinite.”
Remembering the deceased cardinals and bishops, he said,
Catholics give thanks to God for their gift of their lives and confidently pray
that God would welcome them into his kingdom.
The Catholic Church’s special emphasis during the month of
November on prayers for the dead not only is an encouragement to remember those
who have gone before us, he said, but it also is a reminder that earthly life
will end in eternity with a definitive encounter with the Lord.
The Christian faith urges believers to trust firmly that God
is “a judge whose characteristics are mercy and compassion.”
The journey toward God, he said, “begins for each of us
on the very day we open our eyes to the light and, through baptism, to
grace.”
For priests and bishops, an important stage of the journey
“is the moment in which we say ‘Here I am’ during our priestly
ordination,” he said. “At the hour of our death, we will pronounce
our last ‘Here I am’ united with that of Jesus, who died entrusting his spirit
to the hands of the Father.”
The cardinals remembered at the Mass were: Cardinals Carlo Furno,
former grand master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem; Julio Terrazas
Sandoval of Santa Cruz, Bolivia; Georges Cottier, former theologian of the
papal household; Giovanni Coppa, a former nuncio; Loris Capovilla, former
personal secretary to St. John XXIII; Silvano Piovanelli of Florence, Italy;
and Franciszek Macharski of Krakow, Poland.
The five bishops from mainland China named in the Mass
booklet were: Bishops Thomas Zeng Jingmu of Yujiang; Thomas Zhang Huaixin of
Anyang; Vincent Huang Shoucheng of Mindong; Vincent Zhu Weifang of Wenzhou; and
Anthony Xu Jiwei of Taizhou.
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