On Christmas Day, Pope Francis prays for Prince of Peace to end ‘third world war’
Prince of Peace #PrinceofPeace
Pope Francis said that he was also thinking on Christmas day of the people of Haiti, “who have been suffering for a long time.”
He urged “political authorities and all people of goodwill in the Americas to attempt to calm the political and social tensions experienced by various countries.”
Pope Francis offers the Christmas “Urbi et Orbi” blessing on Dec. 25, 2022. Vatican Media
After delivering his message, the pope recited the Angelus. Putting on a dark red embroidered stole, he then gave his blessing, which carried with it the possibility of a plenary indulgence, not only for pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square but also for those who “piously follow” the ceremony remotely.
Plenary indulgences remit all temporal punishment due to sin. They must be accompanied by full detachment from sin, as well as sacramental confession, the reception of Holy Communion, and prayer for the pope’s intentions once it is possible to do so.
“Brothers and sisters, let us turn our eyes to Bethlehem, and listen to the first faint cries of the Prince of Peace. For truly Jesus is our peace. The peace that the world cannot give, the peace that God the Father has bestowed on humanity by sending his Son into the world,” Pope Francis said.
“Saint Leo the Great summed up the message of this day in a concise Latin phrase: Natalis Domini, natalis est pacis: ‘the Lord’s birth is the birth of peace’ (Serm. 26, 5). Jesus Christ is also the way of peace. By his incarnation, passion, death and resurrection, he has opened the way that leads from a world closed in on itself and oppressed by the dark shadows of enmity and war, to a world that is open and free to live in fraternity and peace. Brothers and sisters, let us follow that road!”
Courtney Mares is a Rome Correspondent for Catholic News Agency. A graduate of Harvard University, she has reported from news bureaus on three continents and was awarded the Gardner Fellowship for her work with North Korean refugees.