The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Christmas brings anxiety, optimism

- By Nicole Winfield, Michael Tarm and Peter Smith

Christmas arrived around the world Saturday amid a surge in COVID-19 infections that kept many families apart, overwhelme­d hospitals and curbed religious observance­s as the pandemic was poised to stretch into a third year.

Yet, there were homilies of hope, as vaccines and other treatments become more available.

Pope Francis used his Christmas address to pray for more vaccines to reach the poorest countries. While wealthy countries have inoculated as much as 90% of their adult population­s, 8.9% of Africa’s people are fully jabbed, making it the world’s least-vaccinated continent.

Only a few thousand well-wishers turned out for his noontime address and blessing, but even that was better than last year, when Italy’s Christmas lockdown forced Francis indoors for the annual “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the city and the world”) speech.

“Grant health to the infirm and inspire all men and women of goodwill to seek the best ways possible to overcome the current health crisis and its effects,” Francis said from the loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica. “Open hearts to ensure that necessary medical care — and vaccines in particular — are provided to those peoples who need them most.”

In the United States, many churches canceled in-person services, but for those that did have inperson worship, clerics reported smaller but significan­t attendance.

“Our hopes for a normal Christmas have been tempered by omicron this year … still filled with uncertaint­ies and threats that overshadow us,” the Rev. Ken Boller told his parishione­rs during midnight Mass at the Church of St. Francis Xavier in New York City. “Breakthrou­gh used to be a happy word for us, until it was associated with COVID. And in the midst of it all, we celebrate Christmas.”

The Rev. Alex Karloutsos, of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary Church of the Hamptons in Southampto­n, New York, said attendance at the Christmas Eve liturgy was a third less than last year’s, with “the reality of the omicron virus diminishin­g the crowd, but not the fervor of the faithful present.”

St. Patrick’s Church in Hubbard, Ohio, held Mass on Christmas Eve in a nearby high school

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