Pope Francis offered
Friday a special picnic providing food and drink for hundreds of
homeless and refugees during the Catholic feast of the Epiphany at the
Vatican.
Francis hosted a mass coinciding with the Catholic
Epiphany feast, which is also known as Three Kings' Day and celebrates
the encounter between the three Magi's and the infant Jesus Christ as
recounted in the Bible, and announced the gesture as gratitude for some
300 homeless and refugees who helped him hand out religious reading
material.
The pontiff made an analogy between the gifts brought by the
three Magi's to the baby Jesus and the pamphlets handed out to around
35,000 people at St. Peter's Square.
"I thought I would give you a
little gift too. The camels are missing but I will give you the gift,"
he said. "I wish you a year of justice, forgiveness, serenity, but above
all mercy. Reading this book will help - it fits in your pocket!"
Francis, who was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio and grew up
in a modest, Italian immigrant family in Argentina, spent most of his
priesthood preaching to the poor and oppressed before becoming the first
Latin American pope in the Catholic church's history.
He ordered public
bathrooms including showers be erected in St. Peter's Square for the
homeless in 2015 and invited 1,500 homeless people out for Neapolitan
pizza following September's canonization of Mother Teresa.
Since
becoming pope after his predecessor's resignation in 2013, Francis has
pushed sweeping reforms of the Holy See.
Last month, he dedicated his
annual Christmas address
to the Vatican administration, known as the Roman Curia, to criticizing
church hardliners who resisted the changes to the bureaucracy, which
has been criticized for widespread corruption and covering up scandals.
Francis has opted for a more transparent system and has attempted to
expand the church's outreach, taking more progressive stances on
homosexuality, contraception and divorce.