Albuquerque Journal

FINDING A BALANCE at Christmas

Abbot reminds people to tend to their spiritual sides

- BY OLIVIER UYTTEBROUC­K JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

PECOS — The new abbot at Our Lady of Guadalupe Abbey started a new Christmas tradition this year: He asked children who attend Mass here to submit gift requests.

And if all goes as planned, the Benedictin­e monks will have wrapped gifts under the abbey’s Christmas tree this morning.

“We get more and more families coming with their kids now,” said the Rev. Aidan Gore, who was named abbot here earlier this year. “I encourage people to bring their kids because it brings some life, some joy, some spirit around here.”

The Welsh-born abbot leads 11 other monks who live in a valley of astonishin­g beauty where the upper Pecos River has cut high bluffs through the Sangre de Cristo Mountains about 15 miles east of Santa Fe.

In his homily, Gore uses “A Charlie Brown Christmas” —

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis urged Christians to celebrate the birth of Jesus by thinking about the plight of today’s children, bemoaning how some must escape bombs or flee in migrant boats and how others are prevented from being born at all.

Francis celebrated a somber Christmas Eve Mass in a packed St. Peter’s Basilica, processing to the altar behind cardinals draped in golden vestments as the Sistine Chapel choir sang “Gloria” and the church bells rang out across Rome.

Francis has spent much of the year denouncing the Islamic extremist violence that has driven Christians from Mideast communitie­s that date to the time of Christ. He has also demanded Europe in particular do more to welcome refugees, saying Jesus himself was a migrant who deserved more than being born in a manger. And he has called out the wasteful ways of the wealthy when children and the poor die of hunger every day.

In his homily, Francis urged his flock to reflect on how children today aren’t always allowed to lie peacefully in a cot, loved by their parents as Jesus was, but rather “suffer the squalid mangers that devour dignity.”

Among the indignitie­s, he said, are “hiding undergroun­d to escape bombardmen­t, on the pavements of a large city, at the bottom of a boat overladen with immigrants.”

“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 added.

The Mass late Saturday was the first major event of the Christmas season, followed by Francis’ noon Urbi et Orbi (To the city and the world) blessing on Christmas Day.

In another appeal, Francis called for the faithful to not get caught up in the commercial­ization of Christmas — “when we are concerned for gifts but cold toward those who are marginaliz­ed.”

Materialis­m has “taken us hostage this Christmas,” he said. “We have to free ourselves of it!”

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Brothers Joseph Janeczko, left, and Jacob Kozel string lights on a Christmas tree at Our Lady of Guadalupe Abbey in Pecos. The monks plan to have presents under the tree for children who attend Mass on Christmas Day.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Brothers Joseph Janeczko, left, and Jacob Kozel string lights on a Christmas tree at Our Lady of Guadalupe Abbey in Pecos. The monks plan to have presents under the tree for children who attend Mass on Christmas Day.
 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis kneels as he celebrates the Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, Saturday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis kneels as he celebrates the Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, Saturday.

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