6. St. Faustina’s Way of the Cross: Station 6
St. Faustina's Way of the Cross: STATION 6
Continue with St. Faustina’s Way of the Cross, Station 6.
St. Faustina's Way of the Cross
STATION 6: Veronica Wipes the Face of Jesus
We adore You, O Christ, and we praise You (or: We adore You, O Christ, and we bless You.)
BECAUSE BY YOUR HOLY CROSS, YOU HAVE REDEEMED THE WORLD.
A Reading from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah
(Isaiah 53: 2-3)
Jesus: (celebrant reads)
Know that whatever good you do to any soul, I accept it as if you had done it to Me (1768).
St. Faustina: (all read)
I am learning how to be good from Jesus, from Him who is goodness itself, so that I may be called a [child] of the heavenly Father (669). Great love can change small things into great ones, and it is only love which lends value to our actions (303).
All Read:
Lord Jesus, my Master, grant that my eyes, my hands, my lips, and my heart may always be merciful. Transform me into mercy.
Celebrant Reads:
You, who suffered wounds for us,
All Read:
Christ Jesus, have mercy on us.
Stabat Mater
Bruised, derided, cursed, defiled,
She beheld her tender Child,
All with bloody scourges rent.
Click for STATION 7
Stations of the Cross List
The Way of the Cross stations with reflections by St. Faustina are linked here, except for Station 6.
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CREDITS
The LOGO image of Our Lady of Grace is original artwork by Martin Lariviere in 2009. We have the artist’s permission (my son). It is our exclusive trademark logo image.
A beautifully photographed sky by Donald Tong inspired the website’s colour scheme. Cropped portions of it are the background for the footer Bible verse. He shared it as a free download on pexels.com.
Raphael painted The Sistine Madonna circa (1513-1514). We made circular cut-outs from the original image.
Mattia Preti painted Saint Veronica with the Veil circa 1655 to 1660.
We chose a Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo painting of one of the falls of Jesus. It is oil on canvas and located in the Church of San Polo in Venice. He painted it circa 1745 to 1749.
Carlo Dolci painted Christ’s Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane circa 1631-1686.
Saracrl shared the close-up of the feet of our Lord from the Divine Mercy painting on Cathopic.
Credits for linked images are on their respective pages.
Our information is from general knowledge, experience, and shared internet sources. We’d like you to use it as a starting point for your research to verify facts and build a reference list.