Vatican Releases Pope Francis' Letter to a Mother who Lost her Son “there is no evil from which God cannot bring about a greater good.”
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In her letter to the Pope, Cinzia recounted her story of loss and the pain, sorrow, and crisis of faith her and her husband experienced after their son’s death. She explained she eventually returned to her faith on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception that same year, but her husband has not.
The couple started a foundation in their son’s name and volunteer with the Red Cross, there were still questions resting heavy on Cinzia’s heart. And, at the end of her letter, she shared them with the Pope: why God did not save her son, is he is in Heaven, and is he the family’s Guardian Angel?
The pope's reply
Pope Francis started his letter to her with consoling words: “There are no words, not even comforting ones, despite the best intentions" to say to someone who has lost a child. He expressed his closeness to her and pointed out there are words to describe a wife who loses her husband, a husband who loses a wife, and a child who loses their parents. But “for a parent who loses a child, there is no word.”
Before beginning to tackle her questions, Pope Francis stated a premise: “always ask for the intercession of Mary.” He reflected on a prayer, invoking Mary, who comforts “the pain of mothers for their children who, having left home one day, never returned.”
The Pope explained that it is impossible to have all the answers “in the face of the mystery of innocent suffering” and reiterated that Mary, the Mother of God, accompanies every broken heart.
Quoting St. John Paul II, Pope Francis encouraged Cinzia and her husband to have hope because “there is no evil from which God cannot bring about a greater good.”
Source: Vatican News
Image file photo of Pope Francis with wives of Ukrainian soldiers
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