Pope Leo XIV remembers Gaza’s suffering in first Christmas homily
Pope Leo XIV presides over Christmas Day mass at St Peter’s Basilica [Picture: Gregorio Borgia/AP)
Pope Leo XIV has delivered his first Christmas Day homily, remembering the people of Gazabeing “exposed for weeks to rain, wind and cold” and saying the world’s conflicts can only be silenced through dialogue.
Leo led the Christmas Day mass from the central altar beneath the balustrade of St Peter’s Basilica, adorned with floral garlands and clusters of red poinsettias. White flowers were set at the feet of a statue of Mary, mother of Jesus, whose birth is celebrated on Christmas Day.
Recalling that God was made flesh through Jesus’s birth in a manger in Bethlehem, Leo likened God’s word to “a fragile tent among us”.
“How then can we not think of the tents in Gaza, exposed for weeks to rain, wind and cold; and of those so many other refugees and displaced persons on every continent, or of the makeshift shelters of thousands of homeless people in our own cities,” Leo said.
The pontiff also recalled the fragility of “defenceless populations, tried by so many wars”, and of “young people forced to take up arms, who on the front lines feel the senselessness of what is asked of them, and the falsehoods that fill the pompous speeches of those who send them to their deaths”.
Leo underlined that peace can emerge only through dialogue.
“There will be peace when our monologues are interrupted and, enriched by listening, we fall to our knees before the humanity of the other,” he said.
Thousands of people packed the basilica for the Pope’s first Christmas Day mass, raising their smartphones to capture images of the opening procession.
Leo later delivered the traditional Christmas message from a loggia overlooking St Peter’s Square, where the faithful gathered in steady rain.
The Urbi et Orbi blessing — Latin for “to the city and the world” — serves as a summary of the woes facing the world this year.
This Christmas season marks the winding down of the Holy Year celebrations, which will close on January 6, the Catholic Epiphany holiday marking the visit of the three wise men to the baby Jesus in Bethlehem.




