Ardern said she never anticipated ever having to voice the grief of the nation and had hoped never to.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern approaches media at Parliament. Photo / Getty Images
She spoke directly to the families. "We cannot know your grief but we can walk with you at every stage."
Ardern said the police officers involved in the arrest of the suspect were heroes, but she acknowledged those who lost their lives trying to stop the gunman after he burst in to two mosques and opened fire.
She paid tribute to the first responders who worked and were still working.
"New Zealand was somewhere where they could find solace in a world full of problems," Bridges said of the immigrants and refugees who died or were injured.
It was not something that happened only to Muslims or Christchurch. It had happened to all New Zealanders, he said.
"Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars," Bridges said, quoting US civil rights leader Martin Luther King.
New Zealand First leader Winston Peters called the perpetrator of the violence a "coward".
An attack on people practising their beliefs was an attack on everyone's beliefs, Peters said.
He said New Zealand was not alone, and he had received many messages of support from Muslim countries.
The gunman's ways "were not our ways".
New Zealand's essential character would not change in the aftermath of the massacre.
Peters praised Ardern's leadership during what was a "massive test of our resolve" and MPs would follow her example.
Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson acknowledged those who had died or were injured.
"You were praying. You were in the most profound state of harmony."
"You were anchored in the collective love of your community."
"Your families have been ripped apart, your hearts broken, your wairua destroyed."
"This is your home, you should have been safe here," she said.
Davidson said the ideology that drove the attacks also wanted to harm other communities.
She told the Muslim community: "We did not protect you. We will do better."
"We need to let you know that we hear you, we get it."
Davidson said it was time to understand that words mattered.
Act leader David Seymour extended condolences to the victims, and condemnation to the perpetrator.
He said that all the bad news was in the world section of newspapers, and he wondered how New Zealand could end up in the bad news section of other countries' papers.