His remarks focused on the day’s Gospel reading (cfr Mt 28:8-15). The Gospel recounts that the fearful women meet Jesus Himself as they are running away from His empty tomb. “Do not be afraid”, Jesus tells them. Then He asks them to tell His disciples to go to Galilee where He will see them.
Pope Francis that “With these words, the Risen One entrusts the women with a missionary mandate to the Apostles”. This is how Jesus rewards them, with a gesture that shows “attention and predilection”, he continued. Throughout his public life and passion, they had been faithful in showing him selfless dedication and love.
These women and the disciples were slow to believe, even though Jesus “had foretold a number of time” that He would die and rise again, the Pope said. They were not ready yet. Their faith needed “to take a qualitative step forward”. Only the Risen Jesus’s gift of the Holy Spirit could have “provoked” them to take that step, Pope Francis explained.
After that, Peter, and many others after him, have boldly proclaimed Jesus’s resurrection. That proclamation, the Pope said, “has spread everywhere” reaching every corner of the earth”. It has become “a message of hope for everyone.”
Christ, my hope is arisen!
This is why our outlook can be hopeful amidst life’s most difficult and uncertain moments of life, the Pope said. “This is the Easter message that we are called to proclaim with words, and above all through the witness of life”, he said.
Concluding his remarks before reciting the Regina Caeli, Pope Francis invoked Mary, the “silent witness” of Jesus’s death and resurrection. He asked her to help us believe in the “mystery of salvation” that, when “welcomed with faith, can change our lives”. Vatican News