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Roses and thorns:
Pope lays achievements, concerns at feet of Mary
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
ROME (CNS) -- Laying a basket of white roses at the foot of a statue of
Mary, Pope Benedict XVI said Catholics can lay everything at the feet of
their heavenly mother.
"Symbolically, these roses can express everything beautiful and good that we
have done during the year," the pope said during his visit to the center of
Rome Dec. 8 for the traditional ceremony alongside the statue of the
Immaculate Conception near the Spanish Steps.
"But, as the saying goes, 'Every rose has its thorn,' and the stems of these
stupendous white roses are not lacking thorns, which represent the
difficulties, sufferings and ills that have marked and still mark the lives
of people and of our community," the pope said.
Under brilliantly sunny skies, bundled up against a crisp chill, thousands
of Romans and tourists jammed the square around the Spanish Steps to see the
pope and pray with him.
Offering the roses to Mary, the pope also entrusted to her his special
prayers for children, particularly those who are sick, disadvantaged or
suffering because of family problems.
He prayed for elderly people living alone, for the sick, for immigrants
struggling to build a new life in a new country, for families who barely
make ends meet and especially for people who recently have lost their jobs.
"Mary, teach us to be in solidarity with those who are in difficulty, to
bridge the increasingly vast social disparities; help us cultivate a
livelier sense of the common good," Pope Benedict prayed.
The pope said the beauty of Mary, conceived without sin, "assures us that
the victory of love is possible; in fact, it is certain. It assures us that
grace is stronger than sin and therefore it is possible to be redeemed from
any form of slavery."
The example of Mary's life helps Christians believe in goodness,
graciousness, service, nonviolence and the power of truth, he said.
"She encourages us to remain wakeful, not to give in to the temptation of
easy escapes, but to face reality with all its problems with courage and
responsibility," Pope Benedict said.
The pope said that, looking up at Mary, Christians experience the same
sensation a child has when looking up at his or her mother "and, seeing her
smile, forgets every fear and pain."
"Turning our gaze to Mary, we recognize in her the smile of God, the
immaculate reflection of divine light, and we find new hope even in the
midst of the problems and dramas of our world," Pope Benedict said.
Earlier in the day, the pope recited the Angelus with visitors gathered in
St. Peter's Square.
He said the feast of the Immaculate Conception reminds Catholics of two
basic church teachings: the existence of original sin and the fact that,
through Christ, God has redeemed those who believe.
The pope also noted that Dec. 8 marked the end of the yearlong celebrations
of the 150th anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Lourdes, who
identified herself to St. Bernadette Soubirous as "the Immaculate
Conception."
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0806144.htm
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