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Catholic tourists from Rome carry a cross along the Via Dolorosa, the Way of the Cross, in the Old City of Jerusalem March 23, 2024, the eve of Palm Sunday and the start of Holy Week. (OSV News photo/Debbie Hill)

Via Crucis, 2026

April 1, 2026
By George Weigel
Syndicated Columnist
Filed Under: Commentary, The Catholic Difference

The Way of the Cross — and the third, seventh, and ninth stations in particular — has been an especially appropriate Lenten devotion this year. Every day, it seems, some new craziness erupts in the world, the country, or the Church. Every time we think we see rays of hope and possibility, we take another fall.

So it’s good to remember this Holy Week, with Hans Urs von Balthasar, that we are empowered to get up and continue the journey because Christ got up from his three falls, which were caused by a spiritual weight infinitely greater than we are ever called to bear:

“Our Lord was forced to suffer beyond human endurance. We truly understand this when we realize that in his extreme weakness he had to bear not only the burden of the cross but also of our sins — from Adam to the very last person. … We should not dwell too much on our own suffering which is nothing compared to what the Son of God suffered for us. Whenever we are able to share in a small way in Christ’s suffering, it is indeed a grace.”

Three men I am privileged to call friends embody this grace of courageous suffering. They have configured their lives to the Way of the Cross in the sure hope that Calvary is the gateway to Easter and the New Life in which we are enfolded in the divine love. Let me turn the balance of this Holy Week reflection over to them.
From Jimmy Lai, Catholicism’s most prominent prisoner of conscience, in a letter from the jail cell where he has spent over 1,800 days in solitary confinement:

“Why is my mood not down at all, sometimes even quite lighthearted? I guess because so many people whom I have never even met have been praying for me is the main reason. I am always in God’s presence because of their prayers, I am so thankful … I am actually most grateful to God to have put me through this suffering in order for me to get closer to His presence. What a joy and treasure for this life and next. God’s action always confounds us but turns out to be marvelous for us.”

From Bishop Erik Varden, OCSO, in his recent presidential address to the Nordic Bishops Conference:

“The world is caught up in a maelstrom of violence, fear, duplicity, and sheer madness. Yet over this chaos the Spirit hovers, not menacingly, but benignly. … Where worldly tendencies marked by sin pull what is whole apart, the Spirit unites … [and] by setting right boundaries, not by compromise. Our political and cultural climate is marked by fierce polarization … even among those who call themselves believers. But the Church must follow a different path … for it is her task to let God’s peace become flesh … Christ’s peace is no transaction, no pragmatic ‘deal’. It is the fruit of an all-encompassing sacrifice brought in love, accomplished once for all on Calvary, and renewed each day at our altars. What we must do now, above all, is to let that sacrifice work … in the confidence that God, through his holy Church, is still working out the salvation of mankind. God saves us from evil. He also saves us from ourselves.”

And from Major-Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, at a recent priestly ordination in Rome:

“Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, today I come to you from a freezing yet unbroken Kyiv as a witness to the resilience and steadfastness of our people … [many of whom are] without water, without electricity, without sanitation, without even the most basic means of survival. Yet I see the face of our people. Just last Sunday, a five-year-old boy shared with me his experience of living in Kyiv. I asked him, ‘Is it cold in your home?’ He answered, ‘If I overcome the cold, Ukraine will win.’ … I can testify that this extraordinary resilience and even joy, shown by people who face death each night, does not come from human strength alone. It is a gift of the Holy Spirit. Anyone with even basic Christian sensitivity understands that these people, this nation, are the least brothers and sisters of Christ, with whom He personally identifies Himself … [And] what each of us has done for the least will become our passage to heavenly glory.”

We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world — and given us the strength to rise from our falls as we embrace your injunction in Matthew 16:24: “If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.”

Read More The Catholic Difference

The Donatist comeback

Three great Lenten themes

John Allen, nonpareil Vaticanista

Redemptor Hominis: more important than ever

The myth vs. the historical record

Remembering Angelo Gugel

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