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Pope says bishops must be ‘most servant-like’

Francis washes feet of a dozen prisoners on Holy Thursday

By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press
Published: April 18, 2019, 6:01pm
3 Photos
Pope Francis blows inside an amphora containing holy oil during a Chrism Mass inside St. Peter’s Basilica on Thursday at the Vatican. During the Mass, the Pontiff blesses a token amount of oil that will be used to administer the sacraments for the year.
Pope Francis blows inside an amphora containing holy oil during a Chrism Mass inside St. Peter’s Basilica on Thursday at the Vatican. During the Mass, the Pontiff blesses a token amount of oil that will be used to administer the sacraments for the year. alessandra tarantino/Associated Press Photo Gallery

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis washed the feet of 12 prisoners Thursday and urged them to serve one another as brothers, as he ushered in the solemn pre-Easter rituals made more poignant this year following the devastation of Paris’ Notre Dame Cathedral.

Francis traveled to a prison in Velletri, outside Rome, for the Holy Thursday service that re-enacts the biblical story of Christ washing the feet of his disciples. The Mass opens the most solemn period in the liturgical calendar, leading up to the commemoration of Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday and resurrection on Easter.

Francis has frequently performed the Holy Thursday ceremony at prisons to reinforce his message that even the most important figures must serve the most marginal like slaves, as Jesus did in washing the feet of his disciples.

“The bishop isn’t the most important. The bishop must be the most servant-like,” Francis said.

Directing his message at the prisoners themselves, Francis urged them to not try to dominate one another, and to make the fights that break out between them a “fleeting thing.”

“The biggest must serve the smallest. He who feels biggest must be the servant,” Francis said. “May this gesture that I make help us to be more servant-like with one another, more friendly, brothers in service.”

He proceeded to wash, dry and kiss the feet of the inmates: nine Italians, and one each from Brazil, Ivory Coast and Morocco. Francis, who suffers from sciatica, needed help from his aides to stand up and kneel down before each prisoner.

The final days of Holy Week have taken on particular resonance following the fire at Notre Dame, a symbol of French Catholicism.

Francis has offered his condolences repeatedly to the French faithful, and French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that during a call to Francis after the blaze, he had invited the pontiff to visit Paris. On Wednesday, Francis fielded a call from U.S. President Donald Trump offering the sympathy of the American people over the loss, the Vatican spokesman said.

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