- Feb 5, 2002
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If there is no God, then the universe wasn’t designed by love; it emerged from chaos. But there is a God.
Everything will be all right.
That was true on the day of the crucifixion, and it is true today — from the COVID-19 floors of hospitals to the unemployment lines.
Everyone somehow knows that everything will be all right.
“Everything will be all right” — “andrà tutto bene” — is what Italians from their balconies proclaimed at night early on in the COVID-19 crisis.
It is what New Yorkers scrawled on a rock on the banks of the Hudson River near Brooklyn Bridge.
An 86-year-old grandmother of 19 at St. Joseph’s Senior Home in Woodbridge, New Jersey, said it and lived. Many others remember it as the last words of the ones they have lost.
They lit the Rio de Janeiro Christ the Redeemer with that message. Signs appearing from Atlanta, Georgia, to Chicago proclaim it.
It was the message Sarah Willie, a St. Louis nurse living in a donated RV because half her staff has tested positive for COVID-19, had to say to the world: “Everything will be OK, everything will be OK.”
You hear it all over the world: “Ça va bien aller,” “Todo va a estar bien,” “alles wird gut” — and Father Sergio Argüello Vences says, it is what Our Lady tells us over and over again as we pray the Rosary.
“Everything will be all right.”
Wherever you find tragedy — even unfixable tragedy — you find one person saying to another, “Don’t worry. It will be all right.”
It’s true: Everything will be all right
Everything will be all right.
That was true on the day of the crucifixion, and it is true today — from the COVID-19 floors of hospitals to the unemployment lines.
Everyone somehow knows that everything will be all right.
“Everything will be all right” — “andrà tutto bene” — is what Italians from their balconies proclaimed at night early on in the COVID-19 crisis.
It is what New Yorkers scrawled on a rock on the banks of the Hudson River near Brooklyn Bridge.
An 86-year-old grandmother of 19 at St. Joseph’s Senior Home in Woodbridge, New Jersey, said it and lived. Many others remember it as the last words of the ones they have lost.
They lit the Rio de Janeiro Christ the Redeemer with that message. Signs appearing from Atlanta, Georgia, to Chicago proclaim it.
It was the message Sarah Willie, a St. Louis nurse living in a donated RV because half her staff has tested positive for COVID-19, had to say to the world: “Everything will be OK, everything will be OK.”
You hear it all over the world: “Ça va bien aller,” “Todo va a estar bien,” “alles wird gut” — and Father Sergio Argüello Vences says, it is what Our Lady tells us over and over again as we pray the Rosary.
“Everything will be all right.”
Wherever you find tragedy — even unfixable tragedy — you find one person saying to another, “Don’t worry. It will be all right.”
It’s true: Everything will be all right