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Pope urges hope amid ‘darkness’ of pandemic in Easter vigil

This year’s vigil service started earlier than usual to respect Italy’s 10pm Covid-19 curfew.

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Vatican Pope Easter Vigil

Pope Francis urged his coronavirus-weary flock to not lose hope even through the continued “dark months” of the pandemic, as he celebrated a scaled-back Easter vigil service in St Peter’s Basilica on Saturday.

Due to social-distancing, only about 200 masked people were allowed to attend the service, which marks the period between Christ’s crucifixion and his resurrection on Easter Sunday.

For the second year in a row, the Vatican cut out the traditional sacrament of baptism for a handful of adults to limit the chance of contagion.

Usually a long, late-night ritual, this year’s vigil service also started earlier than usual to respect Italy’s 10pm Covid-19 curfew.

Vatican Pope Easter Vigil
Pope Francis celebrates the Easter Vigil in a nearly empty St Peter’s Basilica (Remo Casilli/Pool photo/AP)

But the service began in the dramatic way it always does, with the pope lighting a single candle in the darkened basilica and then sharing its flame with others until the pews slowly begin to twinkle and the basilica’s lights are turned on.

In his homily, Francis said Easter offers a message of hope and new starts.

“In these dark months of the pandemic, let us listen to the risen Lord as he invites us to begin anew and never lose hope,” he said.

“It is always possible to begin anew, because there is a new life that God can awaken in us in spite of all our failures.”

Vatican Pope Easter Vigil
Cardinals and bishops attend the Easter Vigil (Remo Casilli/Pool photo/AP) 

Francis, who again eschewed a facemask, limped considerably through the service, in a sign that he is suffering through a prolonged bout of sciatica nerve pain.

On Sunday, Francis is to preside over Easter Mass before a similarly small group of faithful and deliver his traditional “Urbi et Orbi” blessing “to the city and the world”.

Usually the Easter Mass and blessing is celebrated before tens of thousands of people in a flower-decked St Peter’s Square.

But this year Francis will celebrate the service in the basilica and deliver the blessing from the altar, to prevent crowds from forming in the piazza.

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