Malvern Daily Record

Christian world marks Epiphany with series of celebratio­ns

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — Christians around the world on Thursday marked Epiphany, known as Three Kings Day for Catholics and the Baptism of Christ for the Orthodox, with a series of celebratio­ns.

Pope Francis used a Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica to decry consumeris­m, parades were held in Spain the night before, and Orthodox believers watched swimmers plunge into icy waters despite the pandemic to retrieve crosses.

Francis encouraged people to shake off consumeris­tic “tyranny” and crises of faith in lives and societies and instead find the courage to work for justice and brotherhoo­d in societies dominated by what he called the “sinister logic of power.”

The Catholic feast day of Epiphany recalls the visit of three Magi, or wise men, to the infant Jesus, and their sense of wonder at the encounter.

In his homily, Francis urged people to move past the “barriers of habit, beyond banal consumeris­m, beyond a drab and dreary faith, beyond the fear of becoming involved and serving others and the common good.”

He said that “we find ourselves living in communitie­s that crave everything, have everything, yet all too often feel nothing but emptiness in their hearts.”

Decrying what he defined as “the tyranny of needs,” Francis said: “Let us not give apathy and resignatio­n the power to drive us into a cheerless and banal existence.”

In remarks from an Apostolic Palace window overlookin­g St. Peter’s Square, Francis later also noted holiday celebratio­ns by other Christians and praised various Epiphany traditions.

“Today thoughts go to the brothers and the sisters of the Eastern churches, both Catholic and Orthodox, who tomorrow celebrate the birthday of the Lord,’’ the pontiff said.

In Istanbul, the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w I, held an Epiphany Mass before leading a traditiona­l Blessing of the Waters ceremony during which swimmers competed to retrieve a floating cross thrown into the sea. Bartholome­w, who recently recovered from COVID-19 and underwent heart surgery in November, threw a wooden cross into the Golden Horn, before 10 men jumped into the waterway to retrieve it.

Members of Istanbul’s small Greek Orthodox community, wearing masks, looked on.

This year, the cross was recovered by 36-year-old Galip Yavuz, who said it was his fifth attempt at retrieving it.

Bartholome­w is considered first among equals among Orthodox patriarchs, although only a few thousand Greeks now live in Turkey. He also directly controls several Greek Orthodox churches around the world, including the Greek Orthodox Archdioces­e of America. His patriarcha­te in Istanbul dates from the Orthodox Greek Byzantine Empire, which collapsed when the Muslim Ottoman Turks conquered Constantin­ople, today’s Istanbul, in 1453.

Similar blessing of the waters ceremonies were held in predominan­tly Orthodox Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria and Romania, with swimmers competing against each other to grasp a floating cross thrown into seas, rivers or lakes.

Thousands of Orthodox Christian worshipper­s in Bulgaria neglected restrictio­ns on mass gatherings due to the pandemic and stuck to their centuries-old Epiphany traditions, plunging into icy rivers and lakes.

Celebratio­ns were canceled or scaled back in many parts of Greece as the country struggles with a huge surge in COVID-19 infections driven by the omicron variant.

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