Pope at Colosseum: Follow Christ's path, including the Way of the Cross, to bring peace
"Every person in authority will have to answer to God for the way they exercise their power," said the reflection for the first station, "Jesus is condemned to death."
Inspired by the life of St. Francis of Assisi, this year's meditations called for following the way of Christ, who warned, "whatever you do to another human being, especially to the small and vulnerable, you do unto me. And it is to me that you will one day give an account."
Carol Glatz
Pope Leo XIV leads the Way of the Cross at the Colosseum in Rome April 3, 2026. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
ROME (CNS) -- Life must be lived as a journey seeking to follow in Jesus' footsteps, Pope Leo XIV said after completing the Stations of the Cross at Rome's Colosseum.
"Let us make our own the prayer by which St. Francis invites us to live our lives as a journey of ever-deepening participation in the communion of love that unites the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit," he said at the conclusion of the nighttime service April 3.
It was the first time since 2022 that a pope presided in person at the candlelit ceremony; several bouts of poor health had prevented Pope Francis from attending the ceremony in his final years. It was also the first time since 1994 a pope carried the cross for all 14 stations -- something St. John Paul II had started at the beginning of his pontificate.
Pope Leo told reporters March 31 that carrying the cross for the entire route would be "an important sign because of what the pope represents -- the spiritual leader of the world today -- and because of this message that everyone wants to hear and say: that Christ still suffers."
"I, too, carry all this suffering in my prayers, and I would like to invite all people of goodwill, people of faith, all Christians, to walk together, to walk with Christ who suffered for us to give us salvation and life, and to seek how we, too, can be bearers of peace and not of hatred," he had said.
Because 2026 marks the 800th anniversary of the death of St. Francis of Assisi, Pope Leo asked Franciscan Father Francesco Patton, who served as custos of the Holy Land from 2016 to 2025, to write the meditations for this year's Good Friday service.
St. Francis always invited the faithful to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, the Franciscan priest wrote in his introduction. May walking the Way of the Cross "be more than a mere ritual or intellectual journey, but one that transforms our entire person and life."
"Every person in authority will have to answer to God for the way they exercise their power," he wrote for the first station, "Jesus is condemned to death."
People have the power to: judge; start or end a war; instill violence or peace; fuel the desire for revenge or for reconciliation; use the economy to oppress people or to liberate them from misery; trample on human dignity or to uphold it; and the power to promote and defend life, or reject and stifle it, he wrote.
But Jesus says, "whatever you do to another human being, especially to the small and vulnerable, you do unto me. And it is to me that you will one day give an account," he wrote.
True power, he wrote for the 11th station, "Jesus is nailed to the cross," is rooted in learning how to forgive "and to bear the difficulties of life in peace, because it is not love of power that conquers, but the power of love."
For the eighth station, "Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem," Father Patton wrote about the women who weep throughout history. "For centuries, they have wept for themselves and for their children, children taken away and imprisoned during protests, deported by policies devoid of compassion, shipwrecked on desperate journeys of hope, killed in war zones, and wiped out in death camps."
"Give us tears once more, Lord, lest our conscience fade into the fog of indifference and we cease to be fully human," he wrote.
For the 10th station, "Jesus is stripped of his garments," the priest wrote about the many forms of violation repeated today, such as torture, intrusive surveillance, rape and abuse. It also includes "when the entertainment industry exploits nudity for the sake of profit; when the media exposes individuals to public opinion; and even when we ourselves, through our curiosity, fail to respect the modesty, intimacy and privacy of others."
"Remind us, Lord, that each time we fail to recognize the dignity of others, our own dignity is diminished. And whenever we condone or take part in inhuman behavior toward any person, we ourselves become less human," he wrote.
At the conclusion of the Way of the Cross, Pope Leo gave his blessing and repeated a prayer written by St. Francis, asking that "God give us miserable ones the grace to do for you alone what we know you want us to do and always to desire what pleases you."
"Inwardly cleansed, interiorly enlightened and inflamed by the fire of the Holy Spirit, may we be able to follow in the footprints of your beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, and, by your grace alone, may we make our way to you," he prayed.