Francis leads rosary to pray for pandemic’s end from Vatican Gardens, Lourdes

04 Jun 2020

By The Record

Pope Francis delivers his blessing after leading the recitation of the rosary during a prayer service at the Lourdes grotto in the Vatican Gardens on 30 May 2020. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

By Cindy Wooden

Together with a religious sister who survived COVID-19 and a woman who lost her mother to the deadly virus, Pope Francis led the recitation of rosary by asking Mary to intercede to save the world from the pandemic.

More than 100 people joined Pope Francis on 30 May for the early evening prayer in the Vatican Gardens at a replica of the grotto in Lourdes, France.

More than 50 Marian shrines around the world, including Lourdes and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, were connected by satellite.

Pope Francis leads the recitation of the rosary during a prayer service at the Lourdes grotto in the Vatican Gardens on 30 May 2020. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

Pope Francis did not make remarks or offer a meditation during the service. Instead, he opened and closed the evening with the prayers he had asked Catholics to pray during the month of May, a month traditionally dedicated to Mary.

He began by entrusting everyone to Mary under the title “Health of the Sick”.

Chairs in the little square in front of the grotto were set five feet apart, and most people wore a facemask.

A brief rainstorm, which ended about an hour before the rosary began, seemed to energise the parakeets and other birds in the garden; they accompanied the prayer with their song and zipped back and forth over the little congregation.

A person directly affected by the virus – including COVID-19 survivors Giovanni De Cerce and Sister Zelia Andrighetti, superior general of the Daughters of St Camillus – led each decade of the rosary.

Tea Pompeo, who is mourning her mother, represented those who lost a loved one during the pandemic. And Federica Polinari and Manuele Bartoli, with newborn Lacopo, represented families who had welcomed a new life into the world during the lockdown.

People attend the recitation of the rosary led by Pope Francis in the Vatican Gardens of Lourdes on 30 May 2020. Photo: Paul Haring/CNS.

Two doctors, a nurse, a pharmacist, a hospital chaplain, a television journalist, and a civil protection volunteer also represented their peers.

A short reading from Scripture preceded the proclamation of the five glorious mysteries of the rosary: the resurrection of Jesus, his ascension into Heaven, the descent of the Holy Spirit, Mary’s assumption into Heaven, and the crowning of Mary as queen of Heaven and Earth.

Closing the rosary with the second prayer he wrote for Catholics this year, Pope Francis repeated the ancient and traditional prayer to Mary: “Sub tuum praesidium” (or “We fly to your protection, O Holy Mother of God”).

“In the present tragic situation, when the whole world is prey to suffering and anxiety, we fly to you, mother of God and our mother, and seek refuge under your protection,” the Holy Father recited.

Pope Francis invoked Mary’s comfort for those who are distraught or are in mourning, for the sick and their loved ones who cannot be with them for fear of spreading the coronavirus further.

“Fill with hope those who are troubled by the uncertainty of the future and the consequences for the economy and employment,” he prayed.

The Holy Father remembered front-line workers, government leaders who must find the best ways to protect their people and scientists working to find a cure and a vaccine.

“Beloved mother,” he added, “help us realise that we are all members of one great family and to recognise the bond that unites us, so that, in a spirit of fraternity and solidarity, we can help to alleviate countless situations of poverty and need.”

“Make us strong in faith, persevering in service, constant in prayer,” Pope Francis prayed.