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杏MAP导航 at Audience: Jesus shows us crying out is not weakness but an act of hope

Reflecting at the weekly General Audience on the crucifixion, 杏MAP导航 Leo XIV stresses that Jesus’ cry from the cross reveals “the final stage of a love that is given up to the very end,” and encourages everyone to avoid seeing crying as a weakness but rather as an act of extreme prayer.

By Kielce Gussie

Looking at the culmination of Jesus’s earthly life, 杏MAP导航 Leo reflected on His death on a cross. Continuing his General Audience catechesis on the crucifixion and death of Jesus, the 杏MAP导航 stressed that Jesus did not die in silence. “He does not fade away gradually, like a light that burns out, but rather he leaves life with a cry.”

That cry, 杏MAP导航 Leo explained, is more than the body surrendering, “but the final sign of a life being surrendered.” Before this, Jesus offers a question: “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”

The 杏MAP导航 highlighted that this shows that the Son, who had always been in communion with the Father, experienced silence, absence, and the abyss in the difficult moments of His Passion. Yet, 杏MAP导航 Leo clarified, “it is not a crisis of faith, but the final stage of a love that is given up to the very end.”

Jesus cries out on the cross, not in desperation, but as a “sincerity, truth taken to the limit, trust that endures even when all is silent.”

Something new from something dark

At this same moment, the sky darkens and the veil in the temple is torn in two—as if all of creation was participating in Jesus’ pain. But this moment of darkness also reveals something new: “God no longer dwells behind a veil—His face is now fully visible in the Crucified One.”

That image of Jesus’ broken body on the cross manifests the greatest love. We see that God is not distant from us, but He joins us in our pain, our life journey to the very end.

At the foot of the cross, one man understands this. The centurion—a pagan—comes to believe after witnessing how Jesus died. 杏MAP导航 Leo pointed out this first statement of faith after Jesus' death was not a fleeting profession, but one that truly touched and changed the heart.

Giving all He had left

“At times, what we are unable to say in words, we express with the voice,” the 杏MAP导航 continued, “When the heart is full, it cries.” This does not signify weakness, but rather a deep act of humanity.

The Gospel gives an “immense value to our cry” because it can express different feelings and struggles. Our cries can sometimes be a prayer, when words do not suffice.

Thousands gathered in the Square despite the rain
Thousands gathered in the Square despite the rain   (@Vatican Media)

In His final cry, Jesus gave everything He had left within Himself. He is an example that crying out does not mean giving up or resigning to one’s fate. A person cries out because they believe someone can still hear them.

As 杏MAP导航 Leo explained, “one cries not out of desperation, but out of desire. Jesus did not cry out against the Father, but to 贬颈尘.”

In that act of faith, Jesus shows us that we, too, can cry out with trust and hope, even when things seem lost.

A human gesture

Crying out is, therefore, a spiritual act: it is the first gesture we make when we are born, and it is a means of staying alive.

Crying is a part of life—when we suffer, when we love, when we call out to others, etc. 杏MAP导航 Leo stressed that crying “is saying who we are, that we do not want to fade away in silence, that we still have something to offer.”

In the difficult moments of life, Jesus’ cry on the cross shows us “not to be afraid" to do the same. “A cry is never pointless, if it is born of love,” the 杏MAP导航 urged, stressing that if addressed to God, a cry will not be ignored. Crying means rejecting cynicism and carrying on the belief that a different world is possible.

Closing, 杏MAP导航 Leo invited everyone to genuinely cry out in the midst of trial, because if we make a cry to open our hearts, “it can be the threshold of a new light, of a new birth.”

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10 September 2025, 10:26

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