Miami Herald

Pope says Nativity scenes should go in town squares, schools

- BY ALESSANDRA TARANTINO AND FRANCES D’EMILIO Associated Press

Pope Francis on Sunday hailed Nativity scenes as “simple and admirable” signs of Christian faith and encouraged their placement in workplaces, schools and town squares, as he bolstered a Christmas tradition that has at times triggered bitter legal battles in the United States.

Francis visited a hill town, Greccio, where St. Francis of Assisi, the pontiff’s namesake, re-enacted the first creche scene, using living persons instead of statues, likely in 1223, during a return journey from the Holy Land.

In Greccio, in the countrysid­e outside Rome, Francis signed a document, known as an apostolic letter, stressing the importance of creche scenes to popular faith.

“With this letter, I wish to encourage the beautiful family tradition of preparing the Nativity scene in the days before Christmas, but also the custom of setting it up in the workplace, in schools, hospitals, prisons and town squares,” the pope wrote in the letter, which was read aloud to faithful gathered inside a small, stone church in Greccio.

“It is my hope that this custom will never be lost and that, wherever it has fallen into disuse, it can be rediscover­ed and revived,” he wrote in the letter.

Nativity scenes have triggered legal battles in the U.S. when erected on public property over the question of the separation of church and state. Controvers­ies have made their way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In one recent case, a small city in Delaware ordered a Catholic church to remove a Nativity scene displayed on city property.

Francis made no mention of the legal battles and civic disputes.

Francis said the Nativity scene reminds people that Jesus was “born in poverty and led a simple life in order to teach us to recognize what is essential and to act accordingl­y.”

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