Bangkok Post

Pope ends trip with huge Mass

- AP

RIO DE JANEIRO: Pope Francis left Brazil late on Sunday after leading a giant beach Mass for 3 million pilgrims, ending his historic trip to reignite Catholic passion with pleas for a humbler church.

The first Latin American-born pontiff flew back to Rome hours after addressing a sea of faithful who waved flags, danced and chanted ‘‘Long live the Pope!’’ on the crescent-shaped shoreline of Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana Beach.

‘‘I depart with many happy memories which I know will nourish my prayers. Already I am beginning to miss Brazil, this great people showing so much affection and friendship,’’ the Pope said before boarding his plane.

Before ending his first trip abroad since his election in March, the head of the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics urged young believers gathered for World Youth Day, a religious event, to ‘‘go and make disciples of all nations’’.

‘‘Do not be afraid to go and to bring Christ into every area of life, to the fringes of society, even to those who seem farthest away, most indifferen­t,’’ the 76-year-old Argentine said as scores of people took a dip in the ocean.

Later, the Pope met Latin American bishops and urged them again to get out of their parishes and take the word of God directly to the region’s slums — one of the main themes of his weeklong visit.

‘‘Bishops must be pastors, close to the people, men who love poverty, men who do not think and behave like princes. Men who are not ambitious. Men capable of watching over the flock entrusted to them,’’ he said.

The Pope, who has championed a ‘‘poor church for the poor’’, practised what he preached last Thursday when he visited one of Rio’s notoriousl­y dangerous slums. The Pope voiced concern on the weekend over the ‘‘exodus’’ of Catholics to other beliefs or secularism.

Even Brazil, the world’s most populous mostly-Catholic country, has seen a drop in Catholicis­m while Evangelica­l churches have boomed. Almost 65% of Brazil’s population was Catholic in 2010, down from 92% in 1970, according to the census.

In his farewell remarks, Pope Francis revealed that during his visit to Brazil’s revered Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida he had ‘‘implored Mary to strengthen you in the Christian faith, which forms part of the noble soul of Brazil, as indeed of many other countries’’.

The Pope was able to draw huge crowds every day in Brazil, culminatin­g with the massive Mass on Copacabana which drew twice the audience that the Rolling Stones attracted in a free beach concert in 2006.

The final ceremony included staid Bible readings but also a rousing concert with a band and choir that could have been seen in one of Brazil’s many and expanding Evangelica­l churches.

‘‘World Youth Day was fantastic. Everybody is united on God’s path. Now the Pope leaves and we have to evangelise,’’ said Andressa Pusak, 25, of Brazil, who was among the throngs who had camped out on the beach before the Mass. Pope Francis announced that Krakow, Poland, the native land of late pope John Paul II, who started the World Youth Day tradition, will host the next gathering in 2016.

Presidents Dilma Rousseff of Brazil, Cristina Kirchner of Argentina and Evo Morales of Bolivia attended the Mass. The Pope used his visit to delve into political and social troubles in Brazil and elsewhere, voicing support on Saturday for young protesters ‘‘who want to be actors of change’’ and urging them to use ‘‘Christian response’’ to their concerns.

 ??  ?? Crowds wait for the arrival of Pope Francis to celebrate Mass on the Copacabana beachfront in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Sunday. The Pope wrapped up an historic trip to his home continent by urging young people to go out and spread their faith ‘to the...
Crowds wait for the arrival of Pope Francis to celebrate Mass on the Copacabana beachfront in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Sunday. The Pope wrapped up an historic trip to his home continent by urging young people to go out and spread their faith ‘to the...

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