Pope Francis prays for those still hit by COVID-19, urges caution elsewhere

11 Jun 2020

By The Record

Pope Francis greets the crowd as he leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on 7 June. The Holy Father urged people to not declare victory against COVID-19 but continue to be careful and follow health precautions. Photo: Vatican Media/CNS.

By Carol Glatz

Pope Francis prayed for people living in countries where COVID-19 is still causing a huge number of deaths, and he cautioned people in Italy to continue to be careful and follow health precautions.

“Be careful, do not sing ‘Victory!’ yet, do not celebrate victory too soon! It remains necessary to follow the rules in force carefully because they are rules that help us to prevent the virus from gaining ground,” he said on 7 June after reciting the Angelus prayer from the window of the Apostolic Palace.

The crowd in St Peter’s Square is pictured as Pope Francis leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking the square at the Vatican on 7 June 2020. Photo: Vatican Media/CNS.

He greeted the few hundred visitors who had assembled in St Peter’s Square, maintaining social distancing and many wearing facemasks.

Seeing people in the square, he said, was a sign that “the acute phase” of the pandemic in Italy was over, which had led to the gradual easing of restrictive measures.

Pope Francis, however, cautioned everyone to continue to be careful.

“Thanks be to God we are coming out of the epicentre stronger, but always with the rules given the authorities give us,” he added.

The Vatican Press Office had announced the evening before that the last Vatican employee who had tested positive for the coronavirus was now testing negative. A total of 12 cases were reported among Vatican employees since late-February. None of the 12 died.

He reminded people, however, that “the virus continues to claim many victims” in other countries.

“I wish to express my closeness to those populations, to the sick and their families, and to all those who care for them. With our prayer, let us be close to them.”

The pandemic is claiming large numbers of victims in the United States of America and other countries in Central, South and North America, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) on 6 June.

Some countries were also seeing “upticks” in COVID-19 cases as lockdowns eased, which meant people had to continue to follow precautions, Margaret Harris, a WHO spokesperson said from Geneva.

Pope Francis leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Sunday 7 June. The Holy Father urged people to not declare victory against COVID-19 but continue to be careful and follow health precautions. Photo: Vatican Media/CNS.

In his Angelus talk, Pope Francis talked about the importance of the day’s feast of the Most Holy Trinity – celebrating God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

The 7 June feast day “invites us to let ourselves once again be fascinated by the beauty of God; beauty, goodness and boundless truth”.

“This is faith, to welcome God-as-Love,” who gives himself in Christ, “who moves us in the Holy Spirit,” Pope Francis said.

Christian life, he continued, is letting oneself be encountered by God because “he encounters us first” and to trust in him, to search for him and to love.

The Holy Father also reminded people that the month of June was dedicated in a special way to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

“Indeed, the human and divine heart of Jesus is the wellspring where we can always draw upon God’s mercy, forgiveness, and tenderness.”

At the centre of Jesus’ every gesture and word there is love, “the love of the Father who sent his Son, the love of the Holy Spirit that is within us,” he stated.

Pope Francis urged people to practice Eucharistic adoration because they can find that love present in the Eucharist and “little by little, one’s heart will become more patient, more generous, and more merciful in imitation of the heart of Jesus.”

He also encouraged people to recite, for the month of June, a short prayer his grandmother taught him: “Jesus, let my heart resemble yours in all I do”.