Pope in Japan: Witness of Catholic martyrs confirms us in faith

Visiting the Monument to the Martyrs in Nagasaki, Pope Francis describes the Japanese martyrs as a living memory, and a spur to renewed evangelization in Japan.

Nov 25, 2019

By Lydia O’Kane
In his words at the Martyrs Monument in Nagasaki, Pope Francis told those gathered that he had come as a pilgrim to pray, and to confirm Catholics in Japan in the faith.

Reflecting on the images and names of those inscribed on this monument, including Saint Paulo Miki, the Pope noted that this shrine does more than speak of death.

"It also speaks of the triumph of life over death," he said.

Recalling his predecessor Saint John Paul II, the Pope said that he saw this place “not simply as the mount of the martyrs, but a true Mount of the Beatitudes."

Light of Gospel triumphs over persecution
It is here, Pope Francis underlined, that “the light of the Gospel shone forth in the love that triumphed over persecution and the sword.”

“This shrine”, he continued, “is above all a monument to Easter, for it proclaims that the last word – despite all evidence to the contrary – belongs not to death but to life.”

Witness of the martyrs
The witness of the martyrs, emphasized the Pope, “confirms us in faith and helps us to renew our dedication and commitment to missionary discipleship which strives to create a culture capable of protecting and defending all life through the daily 'martyrdom' of silent service towards all, especially those in greatest need.”

Humble visit
Pope Francis said he had come to the monument of the martyrs to pay homage to these holy men and women. 

But, he added, “I also come in humility, as one who himself, as a young Jesuit from 'the ends of the earth', found powerful inspiration in the story of the early missionaries and the Japanese martyrs.”

Martyrs: not a glorious relic but a living memory
The Pope expressed the hope that the sacrifice of these martyrs would not remain as a “glorious relic of the past… but rather as a living memory, an inspiration for the works of the apostolate and a spur to renewed evangelization in this land.”

Concluding his greeting, the Pope said that “in this place we are united with those Christians throughout the world who, in our own day, suffer martyrdom for the faith."

The witness of these modern martyrs of the 21st century "summons us to set out with courage on the path of the Beatitudes," he said.--Vatican News

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