Pope Francis prayed for tens of thousands of COVID-19 victims in an unprecedented live-stream Easter Sunday message delivered from a hauntingly empty Vatican to a world under lockdown.
The 83-year-old pontiff spoke softly at a ceremony attended by just a handful of priests and a small choir that was spaced out across the expansive marble floor of Saint Peter's Basilica.
For many, this is an Easter of solitude lived amid the sorrow and hardship that the pandemic is causing, from physical suffering to economic difficulties, Francis said.
The pandemic raging outside the Vatican's locked gates has killed more than 110,000 people and left billions confined to their homes.
Most of the world's 1.3 billion Catholics were in forced confinement as the pope spoke, and few of the world's churches were open on Christianity's holiest day. In his homily, the pope called for a global ceasefire and debt relief for the poorest countries.
His message was live-streamed for the first time - a bow to technology in the face of a new illness that has transformed society and altered the way religion is observed.
Around globe, others followed his advice and found creative solutions. In Britain, the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby - the spiritual leader of Anglicans - celebrated mass with thousands of followers on a video recorded from his kitchen.
Panama Archbishop Jose Domingo Ulloa donned mask and gloves and toured the city in a popemobile used during Francis' visit to the Central American country last year.
Ulloa's cavalcade halted outside hospitals as he rose to bless the sick and those caring for them.
Rio de Janeiro priest Omar Raposo took to a helicopter to bless the Brazilian city from the sky. At Latin America's biggest Catholic sanctuary, the Basilica of Aparecida in Brazil's Sao Paulo state, Archbishop Orlando Brandes celebrated mass before an empty church and urged Brazilians to practice social distancing.
Let's stay home, let's follow our doctors' recommendations. That is an act of charity, of devotion to life, Brandes said, in a homily that was broadcast live on TV and online.
In the United States, President Donald Trump, a Presbyterian, said in an Easter message that this year's celebration comes during a somber time for our nation. Trump followed a televised service by Robert Jeffress, the leader of a Southern Baptist mega church.
While priests in Mexico celebrated mass in empty churches, some indigenous communities in the south defied the pandemic by holding traditional processions.
Earlier, in Seville, Spain, worshipers left wreaths of flowers outside the locked churches from where festive processions had normally departed.
In Jerusalem, a few priests also gathered at the Church of the Holy Sepulchral - under lockdown like the Vatican - to pray at the spot where Christians believe Jesus was crucified and resurrected on Easter.
Francis pleaded with world leaders to forget their differences and support his appeal for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world during a global health emergency of a magnitude not seen in 100 years. This is not a time for division.
Health considerations required global powers to ease crippling economic sanctions imposed against their adversaries, he said - a possible reference to those weighing on pandemic-hit Iran.
He called for a reduction, if not the forgiveness, of the debt burdening the balance sheets of the poorest nations and for European nations to show the same solidarity they did in the wake of World War II.
After the Second World War, this beloved continent was able to rise again, he said.
The European Union is presently facing an epochal challenge, on which will depend not only its future but that of the whole world.
The Argentine-born pontiff offered a special message of consolation to those ”who mourn the loss of their loved ones (but) to whom, in some cases, they were unable even to bid a final farewell.”
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