VATICAN CITY—The Christmas lights came on at the Vatican on Friday, sending out what Pope Francis described as a message of “light, hope and love” at the end of an extraordinary year for the Catholic Church.
As the fairy lights sparkled into life on the 25-meter fir tree on St. Peter’s Square, there was also an early unveiling of a giant nativity scene inspired by an Italian opera.
The nativity scene underlined another change of approach to one more aspect of Church life under a Pope known for putting much importance on the symbolism of the season.
“The crib and the tree touch the heart of everyone, including those who do not believe, because they speak of brotherhood, intimacy and friendship,” he said at an audience earlier in the day.
Invitation to unite
“These symbols are an invitation to unite, to come together in peace, an invitation to make space in our personal and social lives for God, who does not come with arrogance to impose his power but instead offers his all powerful love through the fragile face of a child,” Pope Francis added.
“The crib and the tree therefore carry a message of light, hope and love. They are the dear and evocative symbols of Christmas for our Christian family,” he added.
Another welcome change this year is the use for the first time of a new LED system in lighting up the famous façade and dome of St. Peter’s Basilica.
“It is much more beautiful this year,” gushed Francesco Pietrangelo, who had brought his granddaughter to the square to see the nativity. “It is much more elegant, before it was a bit rustic.” The nativity is usually not unveiled until Christmas Eve.
Pope Francis spoke as he greeted delegations from Verona, where the nativity scene was made, and Catanzaro in the southern region of Calabria, which provided the tree.
315 LED lights
The nativity scene was designed by artist Alfredo Troisi. Inspired by the comic opera, “The Elixir of Love” by Gaetano Donizetti, it features 20 adult-sized terracotta figures.
The new lighting system at St Peter’s involves the use of 315 LED lights designed to save money and reduce energy consumption.
The switch follows a similar move in October to introduce LED lighting in the Sistine Chapel, home to Michelangelo’s famous ceiling frescoes and the place where cardinals have elected new popes since the 15th century.
In line with tradition, the Pope will visit the nativity scene on Dec. 31 following a service to give thanks for the year past.
For Pope Francis, it has been an extraordinary 12 months, with his global popularity helping to bring hundreds of thousands of believers back to the church and his reforms renovating an institution battered in recent years by clerical sex abuse and financial scandals.
His influence on the global stage was spectacularly illustrated this week when he was hailed as having played a key role in facilitating a historic rapprochement between the United States and Cuba after a Cold War that lasted some 50 years.
Despite his superstar status, the Pope appears convinced that, at the age of 78, he is living on borrowed time.
On Friday, he again reiterated that he does not expect to be around for much longer, telling Italian Olympic officials he did not expect to be around for the 2024 Games.
On his way back from South Korea in August, the Pope lightheartedly remarked to reporters that he may live for only “two or three (more) years, and then I’ll be off to the house of the Father.”