* Security heightened after Berlin market attacker killed in
Italy
* Says remember children who have no toys but forced to use
guns
* Many have put themselves, not God, at the centre of the
feast
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Pope Francis said on
Saturday that Christmas had been "taken hostage" by dazzling
materialism that puts God in the shadows and blinds many to the
needs of the hungry, the migrants and the war weary.
Francis, leading the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics
into Christmas for the fourth time since his election in 2013,
said in his Christmas Eve homily that a world often obsessed
with gifts, feasting and self-centeredness needed more humility.
"If we want to celebrate Christmas authentically, we need to
contemplate this sign: the fragile simplicity of a small
newborn, the meekness of where he lies, the tender affection of
the swaddling clothes. God is there," the Pope said at St.
Peter's Basilica.
At the solemn but joyous service, attended by some 10,000
people as well as dozens of cardinals and bishops, Pope Francis
said the many in the wealthy world had to be reminded that the
message of Christmas was humility, simplicity and mystery.
"Jesus was born rejected by some and regarded by many others
with indifference," he said.
"Today also the same indifference can exist, when Christmas
becomes a feast where the protagonists are ourselves, rather
than Jesus; when the lights of commerce cast the light of God
into the shadows; when we are concerned for gifts, but cold
toward those who are marginalized."
He then added in unscripted remarks: "This worldliness has
taken Christmas hostage. It needs to be freed."
Security was heightened for the Christmas weekend in Italy
and at the Vatican after Italian police killed the man believed
to be responsible for the Berlin market truck attack while other
European cities kept forces on high alert.
St. Peter's Square was cleared out six hours before the mass
started at the basilica so that security procedures could be put
in place for those entering the church later.
Francis, who has made defence of the poor a trademark of his
papacy, said the infant Jesus should remind everyone of those
suffering today, particularly children.
"Let us also allow ourselves to be challenged by the
children of today's world, who are not lying in a cot caressed
with the affection of a mother and father, but rather suffer the
squalid mangers that devour dignity: hiding underground to
escape bombardment, on the pavements of a large city, at the
bottom of a boat over-laden with immigrants," he said.
Outside the basilica, thousands of people who could not get
into the largest church in Christendom watched on large screens
in the chilly night.
"Let us allow ourselves to be challenged by the children who
are not allowed to be born, by those who cry because no one
satiates their hunger, by those who do have not toys in their
hands, but rather weapons," he said.
On Christmas Day, Francis will deliver his twice-yearly
"Urbi et Orbi" ("To the City and to the World") blessing and
message from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella, editing by G Crosse)
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