Pope Francis blesses baby Jesus
statues during Angelus
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| The blessing of the "Bambinelli" in St Peter's Square |
On the third Sunday of Advent Pope Francis blesses the
“Bambinelli” or baby Jesus statues saying, “the Nativity Scene is like a living
Gospel.”
By Vatican News
It was during the Angelus fifty years ago that St. Paul VI
first blessed the statues of the Child Jesus brought by children to St. Peter's
Square. That tradition has continued ever since on the Third Sunday of Advent,
and is fondly known as “Bambinelli Sunday.”
Bambinelli Sunday
The theme chosen by the Roman Oratory Centre for this
appointment with Pope Francis on Sunday was "It's Christmas here
too", selected for this blessing to remind everyone, young and old, that
Jesus is born in every place.
Speaking from the window of his studio in the Apostolic
Palace, the Pope greeted the children present in St Peter’s Square, telling
them he blessed the statues of the Child Jesus for their Christmas Scenes “with
all my heart.” Recalling his recent Apostolic Letter on the meaning and importance
of the Nativity Scene, he said, "the crib is like a living Gospel.
Contemplating the Christmas story is like setting out on a spiritual journey,
drawn by the humility of the God who became man in order to encounter every man
and woman.” “So great is His love for us”, quoted the Pontiff, “that He became
one of us, so that we in turn might become one with Him.”
International Eucharistic Congress
Following the recitation of the Marian Prayer, the Pope
reminded those present that in less than a year, from 13 to 20 September 2020,
the 52nd International Eucharistic Congress will be held in Budapest. For more
than a century, said the Pope, “the Eucharistic Congresses have been reminding
us that the Eucharist is at the centre of the Church's life. The theme of the
next Congress will be "All my sources are in you". We pray that
"the Eucharistic event in Budapest may foster processes of renewal in
Christian communities, so that the salvation of which the Eucharist is the
source may also be translated into a Eucharistic culture capable of inspiring
men and women of good will in the fields of charity, peace, family, care of
creation".

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