The Pope’s sorrow over Ethiopian Copts assassinated in Libya, and for all persecuted Christians – Ongoing martyrdom
In a message sent to H.H.
 Abune
 Mathias, Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
 Church,
Pope Francis expressed “consternation and sorrow” for the countless
 events of “shocking violence perpetrated against innocent Christians in Libya”,
 following the dissemination of a video which showed the barbaric killing of 28
 Ethiopian Coptic Christians.

“I know that your
 Holiness is suffering deeply in heart and mind, in view of your faithful,
 killed for the sole reason of being followers of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
 Christ. I address my heartfelt spiritual solidarity to you, to assure you of my
 closeness in prayer amid the ongoing martyrdom being inflicted in so cruel a
 manner upon Christians in Africa, in the Middle East and in some regions of
 Asia”, Francis wrote.
“It makes no
 difference”, he continued, “whether the victims are Catholic, Copt, Orthodox or
 Protestant. Their blood is one and the same in their confession of Christ! The
 blood of our Christian brothers and sisters is a testimony which cries out to
 make itself heard by all those who still know how to distinguish between good
 and evil”. And this cry, he added, “must be heard above all by those who hold
 the fate of the peoples in their hands”
Recalling that “in this period we are filled with the
 Easter joy of the disciples to whom the women hastened to proclaim that “Christ
 has risen from the dead”, the Pontiff acknowledged that “this year, our joy,
 which never fails, is eclipsed by profound sadness”. Yet, he affirmed “we know
 that the life we live in the merciful love of God is stronger than the sorrow
 that all Christians are feeling, a sorrow shared by men and women of good will
 in all religious traditions.
During the Mass celebrated at Santa Marta on Tuesday morning, 21 April, Pope
 Francisrepeated that “today the Church
 is the Church of martyrs”, addressing a thought to “the Ethiopians assassinated
 for being Christians” and to all believers who in various parts of the world
 are victims of violence and persecution. Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, Prefect of
 the Congregation for the Eastern Churches also spoke of “martyrs”, condemning
 themost recent event of chilling
 jihadist violence.