Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

AP/Press Association Images

Pope Francis: "Truly there are so many tears this Christmas"

Pope Francis’s first Christmas message has been delivered.

Updated 11.25am

POPE FRANCIS HAS condemned this year’s “brutal” religious persecution in the Middle East and has looked for peace in Nigeria, Ukraine and other world troublespots in his annual Christmas “urbi et orbi” message.

Calling also for an end to violence against “vast numbers of children”, and noting last week’s deadly attack in Pakistan, he said: “Truly there are so many tears this Christmas.”

Delivering his second Christmas blessing, the popular Argentine pontiff, visibly moved and departing from his text, said vast numbers of children “are victims of violence, made objects of trade and trafficking”.

He asked Jesus to “give comfort to the families of the children killed in Pakistan,” referring to the 149 people, including 133 schoool-children, killed in Peshawar by the Taliban.

Speaking to a large crowd massed outside Saint Peter’s Basilica, the pope urged Ukrainians to “overcome tensions, conquer hatred and violence and set out on a new journey of fraternity and reconciliation”.

He turned too to the violence wrought by Islamic State fundamentalists this year in Syria and Iraq.

“I ask him, the Saviour of the world, to look upon our brothers and sisters in Iraq and Syria, who for too long now have suffered the effects of ongoing conflict, and who, together with those belonging to other ethnic and religious groups, are suffering a brutal persecution.”

There were “too many displaced persons, exiles and refugees, adults and elderly, from this region and the whole world,” he said.

He called for peace in “the whole Middle East” and continued efforts towards “dialogue” between Israelis and Palestinians.

The pope too urged peace in Nigeria “where more blood is being shed”, as well as in Libya, South Sudan, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Reublic of the Congo.

He noted the victims of Ebola in Liberia, Sierra Leone and in Guinea and thanked those were “courageously” assisting the sick

Tenderness and warmth

In a separate address last night, the pontiff urged for “tenderness” and “warmth” after a violence-plagued year as millions of Christians began marking Christmas.

The Argentine pontiff’s brief homily was replete with Gospel references in his Christmas Eve mass, broadcast live in 3D for the first time.

“Do we have the courage to welcome with tenderness the difficulties and problems of those who are near to us?” the pope asked in Saint Peter’s Basilica, filled with some 5,000 worshippers.

“Or do we prefer impersonal solutions, perhaps effective but devoid of the warmth of the Gospel? How much the world needs tenderness today!” he said.

The leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics also called on “the arrogant, the proud… (and) those closed off to others” to meet life “with goodness, with meekness”.

On Thursday, in his second “urbi et orbi” (to the city and the world) message, the pope is expected to address the plight of Christians and other religious minorities suffering persecution in the Middle East, notably at the hands of the jihadist Islamic State (IS) group.

He is also due to touch on the war in Syria, the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, the Ebola epidemic, Islamic fundamentalist violence in northeastern Nigeria and the Ukraine conflict.

Meanwhile, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II is expected to pay tribute to the “selflessness” of medical staff and aid workers fighting the Ebola epidemic in her annual Christmas Day broadcast.

In Bethlehem on Christmas Eve hectic preparations preceded celebrations on the West Bank town’s biggest night of the year, culminating in midnight mass at the Church of the Nativity built over the spot where Christians believe the Virgin Mary gave birth to Jesus.

Scouts playing bagpipes and drums marched to the church in a procession led by Jerusalem’s Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal, the top Catholic cleric in the Holy Land.

In his homily Twal called for “peace in Jerusalem”, where violent clashes between Israelis and Palestinians rocked the city for months, and “equality and mutual respect” among all faiths.

He also asked for the rebuilding of Gaza, which was ravaged this summer during a 50-day war between Hamas and Israel in which more than 2,200 people died.

Outside the church at Manger Square, a man dressed as Santa Claus handed out sweets next to a giant green Christmas tree decorated with red, black and silver baubles — the colours of the Palestinian flag.

But for many faithful across the region, the festivities will be tinged with sadness following a year of bloodshed marked by a surge in the persecution of Christians that has drawn international condemnation.

“For many of you, the music of your Christmas hymns will also be accompanied by tears and sighs,” Pope Francis wrote in a long letter addressed to Christians in the Middle East.

Iraq’s ‘tragic situation’

Francis delivered a Christmas message via telephone to refugees displaced to Iraq’s Kurdish autonomous region.

“Dear brothers, I am close to you, very close to you in my heart,” the pope was quoted as telling the refugees by Italian press agency AGI.

“The children and the elderly are in my heart,” Francis also told the Iraqi refugees in the Ankawa camp.

In Baghdad, Chaldean Patriarch Louis Sako said about 150,000 Christians had been displaced by an offensive spearheaded by the Islamic State group, which has targeted Christians and other minorities, with dozens leaving Iraq each day.

Iraq’s displaced Christians “still live in a tragic situation and there are no quick solutions for them,” Sako told AFP.

In Syria, Christians in the war-torn city of Homs were enjoying their first Christmas in three years in the Hamidiyeh neighbourhood, with a brightly coloured tree and a manger made from rubble set up in the middle of the ruins.

“Our joy is indescribable,” said Taghrid Naanaa while picking out tree decorations at a shop in the district, which the Syrian army recaptured from rebel fighters this year.

‘Justice for Christmas’

In France, the busy Christmas period has been marred by a series of attacks, including one linked to Islamic extremism, which killed one person and left another 25 wounded.

In the United States, officials scrambled to contain renewed anger after an armed black teenager was shot dead by a white officer in a St Louis suburb late Tuesday.

On Christmas morning in Australia, church leaders reflected on several tragedies that hit the country this year, including the Sydney cafe siege, where two hostages and the gunman died, the killings of eight children in Cairns and the Malaysia Airlines MH370 and MH17 flight disasters.

In Sierra Leone, all public Christmas festivities were cancelled as a result of the Ebola crisis, with soldiers deployed over the holiday season to prevent spontaneous street celebrations, officials said.

Ahead of the midnight mass in Bethlehem, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas laid out his own Christmas wish list.

“This Christmas we deliver a very special message to the world: All I want for Christmas is justice,” he said as the Palestinians press a major diplomatic push at the United Nations to seek an end to Israel’s decades-long occupation.

© – AFP 2014

First published 7.21am

Author
View 44 comments
Close
44 Comments
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute David Thomas
    Favourite David Thomas
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 9:23 AM

    I don’t do religion but I do like this pope. He seems more down to earth and connected to people.

    248
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Liam Long
    Favourite Liam Long
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 9:50 AM

    And he does good mass…

    137
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Beano
    Favourite Beano
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 11:46 AM

    Just seems like a nice caring old man

    97
    See 7 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Oisin Murray
    Favourite Oisin Murray
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 11:59 AM

    Agree David, it’s no surprise he’s a Jesuit priest. I’m not religious but was Jesuit educated. They are what priests should be, never had I a bad word to say about Jesuits. Funny how it’s the educated ones who can practice the true virtues of religion…?!

    99
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Scott
    Favourite Alan Scott
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:18 PM

    Pope Francis the first Pope who has come down the ladder to reality and very much has connected with the ordinary people of the world. Long may he stay in his job .

    120
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Aquinas
    Favourite Thomas Aquinas
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:44 PM

    No surprise really, the Jays are into science big time and always have been. And they are also big into peace. Never met one I did not like or one who had any badness in him.

    77
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Fahey
    Favourite Paul Fahey
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:53 PM
    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Kane Abel
    Favourite Kane Abel
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:56 PM

    I agree, this newly recruited Pope is streets ahead of the previous Popes when it comes to cynically playing the PR game.

    - In public he represents himself as being slightly less small minded, homophobic, misogynistic, profiteering and hypocritical than the filth that came before him.

    Still there has to be something fundamentally wrong with him as a human being if he is happy to associate himself with that shameful cultish regime and all it stands for and all it has failed, brutalized and wronged throughout history.

    - Please for the love of Jesus never forget the many desecrated and suffering victims of the Catholic Church.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Dunne
    Favourite Paul Dunne
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:28 PM

    lovely lads indeed paul.

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Aquinas
    Favourite Thomas Aquinas
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:58 PM
    12
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ian O'Donovan
    Favourite Ian O'Donovan
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 9:01 AM

    Love his smile and his optimism. He’s got a good heart living in the Vatican, he’s going to need it..

    138
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Daithi Gazeley
    Favourite Daithi Gazeley
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 8:00 AM

    He is going to reform the church which is badly needed.his comments this morning are great.

    136
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank
    Favourite Frank
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:08 PM

    Pope Francis will reform the Catholic Church by joining it up with all the other religions of the world to create the “Great Harlet”

    “And upon her forehead was a name written, Mystery, Babylon The Great, The Mother Of Harlots And Abominations Of The Earth’. Revelation 17

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mac Ready
    Favourite Mac Ready
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:39 PM

    Seriously Frank F@ck off and take your friend Andy with you!

    66
    See 3 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank
    Favourite Frank
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 2:54 PM

    Mac Ready_ We were told pretty much the same in Catechism class at School. Except in those days we couldn’t feck off . We got a slap if you questioned anything out of the ordinary in the Churches Teachings.

    Pope Francis will get my utmost respect if he stands up and denounces that demonic tooth fairy doctrine of Transubstantiation.

    12
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Aquinas
    Favourite Thomas Aquinas
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 3:50 PM

    What is demonic about it Frank. Silly, ridiculous, nonsensical yes but Demonic?

    15
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank
    Favourite Frank
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 4:30 PM

    Thomas Aquinas _It is unblooded cannabalism.

    11
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute stephen
    Favourite stephen
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 7:28 AM

    Que, I think this man is wonderful comments.

    109
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank
    Favourite Frank
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:32 PM

    Pope Francis is only repeating what he is told to say by the Vatican.

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Rian Lynch
    Favourite Rian Lynch
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:59 PM

    F€ck off frank

    51
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Liam Long
    Favourite Liam Long
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 7:32 AM

    Up for mass…. rise and shine….

    80
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Atticus the Accuser
    Favourite Atticus the Accuser
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:00 PM

    In the spirit of good nature can the nonbelievers and the people of Faith suspend hostilities for one day?

    If your religious celebrate the holiday and if like myself you’re a nonbeliever celebrate the humanity and seeing friends and family.

    Atticus the Accuser soon will be Atticus the Stuffed.Happy Christmas everyone.

    65
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Anjelica Alison Sommer
    Favourite Anjelica Alison Sommer
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 7:36 AM

    Doesn’t he look frail & weak all of a sudden ? Saw a bit of mass on the news and thought that went very fast…….

    45
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Scott
    Favourite Alan Scott
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:21 PM

    Angelica
    Maybe some of the churches big wigs are stressing him out

    24
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Phillip O'Brien
    Favourite Phillip O'Brien
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:24 PM

    Anjelica – he showed no signs of weakness at the Urbi et Orbi this morning.

    26
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Anjelica Alison Sommer
    Favourite Anjelica Alison Sommer
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:52 PM

    Good to hear Philip. I guess he gets tired like the rest of us. Merry Christmas to you & yours.

    25
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Loremolis
    Favourite Loremolis
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 7:24 AM

    Thanks Pope, I was going to be cruel and unkind today but having heard your message I’m reconsidering matters.

    37
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Edmond J. Hickey
    Favourite Edmond J. Hickey
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 7:37 AM

    Is this a direct message to Enda and his cohorts?

    26
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Charlie Mountney
    Favourite Charlie Mountney
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:09 PM

    Merry Stuffness everybody. Because that is what Christmas has become.

    No longer about Christ, but all about stuff.

    Now please excuse me while I open my presents and see how much stuff I have got before we visit the in – laws and stuff ourselves with food and if I have the energy I will have a Stuffness stuff later on.

    Stufferty, stuff stuff stuff.

    23
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Frank
    Favourite Frank
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 3:02 PM

    St Nick being the God of Stuff

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Roche
    Favourite Paul Roche
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 11:32 PM

    Perhaps you’re confusing him with Old Nick…

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Glen
    Favourite Glen
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 8:18 AM

    Hey I call on the trolls on here too seriously up their game you guys suck…. And for some new government shills cause, well we should probably ring the ambulance for the last lot they sent…… Happy Xmas Journal

    19
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Andy Patton
    Favourite Andy Patton
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:11 PM

    Are you drunk already? Try to make sense, you inbred.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Scott
    Favourite Alan Scott
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:23 PM

    Glen go back to bed it’s not your time yet

    21
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ryan McGuckian
    Favourite Ryan McGuckian
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 11:39 AM

    Ledgend

    12
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Andy Patton
    Favourite Andy Patton
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:11 PM

    All the sheep can’t see through the PR Pope. Although they do believe any old crap they’re told, so not really surprising.

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Atticus the Accuser
    Favourite Atticus the Accuser
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:25 PM

    Andy – You will struggle to find a bigger opponent of the Vatican and organised religion than myself but to be honest your post comes across more bitter and takes away from any point you might be making.
    It also shows a little classlessness rise above it and enjoy your Christmas come back another day and continue the rants.

    48
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mac Ready
    Favourite Mac Ready
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 1:37 PM

    You are a real Troll Andy back under your bridge!

    19
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute YogiBear
    Favourite YogiBear
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 10:32 PM

    Just remember Andy that you are off this Christmas because of the Christian holiday Christmas. If you don’t believe that is fine but get back to work then and relinquish your holidays..

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute cosmological
    Favourite cosmological
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:04 PM

    Better guy than most but remember the brutality of the Christendom era – my opinion, religion at the heart of all wars, without it we’d be in Heaven.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Domhnall MacAodhagáin
    Favourite Domhnall MacAodhagáin
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:41 PM

    Hmm I don’t think so. Religion wasnt the cause of the first or second world wars for example. Saying that all religion is bad is like saying that all science is bad.

    37
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Aquinas
    Favourite Thomas Aquinas
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 12:47 PM

    It isn’t really. Most so called wars of religion harnessed the emotional and identity aspects of religion to prosecute wars to advance the interests of States and Kings. It was only really in France that there was a real religious dimension to war. NI is a prime example of a non religious war of religion.

    24
    See 2 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Fahey
    Favourite Paul Fahey
    Report
    Dec 25th 2014, 11:25 PM

    Thomas – what about the 30 years’ war? The Christian Crusades? Sudanese 2nd Civil War? The Muslim Conquests?

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas Aquinas
    Favourite Thomas Aquinas
    Report
    Dec 26th 2014, 11:56 AM

    Four wars out of the countless? As I said most so called wars of religion are not about religion. Matter of interpretation but the German aspects of the Thirty Years war were very much about territory and power with religion as an excuse. In France there was a real religious element. For the Spanish also definitely about territory and strategic position. The first and third crusades had the most religious motivation but the rest were mostly about power and prestige and to some extent securing trade routes. Even the Muslim conquests were more about territory than religion as such. I dont know enough about the second sudanese civil war to comment on it. Religion plays/ played such a large part in identity and was/ is so tied to ethinicity/ nationality that it is easy to claim a religious motivation or religious justification for war. In reality there is little war caused directly by religion – whatever that means: ritual, theology, ethics, philosophy, ideology, nationalism?- but plenty caused by power, resources, trade, territory.

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds