Pope calls for peace in holiday message (AP) Updated: 2005-12-26 08:55
Pope Benedict XVI marked his first Christmas as pope Sunday, calling for
concrete actions to back up "signs of hope" in the Middle East and urging peace
in Darfur, Sudan and the Korean peninsula.
Thousands of cheering tourists and pilgrims braved a chilly downpour to hear
Benedict's message, delivered from the same balcony of St. Peter's Basilica
where he uttered his first public words as pope.
Benedict continued the tradition of Pope John Paul II by using the "Urbi et
Orbi" message �� Latin for "to the city and to the world" �� to review conditions
around the world and lament violence and poverty. Like John Paul, he delighted
the crowd with Christmas greetings in more than 30 languages.
Pope Benedict XVI arrives to lead the midnight
mass in Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, December 25,
2005.[Reuters] | His brief appearance after
celebrating his first Midnight Mass inside St. Peter's was broadcast by 111
television networks around the world, about half of them live.
Wearing shimmering gold vestments and a golden miter, Benedict told the crowd
that God's love strengthened all of humanity.
"A united humanity will be able to confront the troubling problems of the
present time: from the menace of terrorism to the humiliating poverty in which
millions of human beings live, from the proliferation of weapons to the
pandemics and the environmental destruction which threatens the future of our
planet," he said in Italian.
In the Middle East, he prayed that God "grant courage to people of good will
in the Holy Land, in Iraq, in Lebanon, where signs of hope, which are not
lacking, need to be confirmed by actions inspired by fairness and wisdom."
He singled out the Darfur conflict in Africa in urging strength for all those
working for peace, development and the prevention of conflicts. He urged
protection "of the most elementary rights of those experiencing tragic
humanitarian crises."
Pope Benedict XVI touches a girl's forehead
during midnight mass, which he led, in Saint Peter's Basilica at the
Vatican, December 25, 2005. [Reuters] | He asked God to favor continued dialogue on the Korean peninsula and
elsewhere in Asia "so that by the settlement of dangerous disputes, consistent
and peaceful conclusions can be reached in a spirit of friendship."
And he called for the people of Latin America to live in peace and harmony.
At the start of his message, Benedict recalled the "immense" progress that
had been made in recent centuries in technology and science.
"But the men and women in our technical age risk becoming victims of their
own intellectual and technical achievements, ending up in spiritual barrenness
and emptiness of heart," he said.
To combat such a void, he urged the faithful to open their minds and hearts
to Jesus Christ.
"Without the light of Christ, the light of reason is not sufficient to
enlighten humanity and the world," he said.
Benedict has one other major public holiday appearance Monday, when he is to
deliver a noontime prayer. Then he takes a break before presiding over an
evening prayer service on New Year's Eve and celebrating Mass on New Year's Day,
which the Catholic Church marks as World Peace Day.
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