Pope visits a once-troubled Lisbon neighborhood and says true charity must 'get your hands dirty'
Pope Francis is drawing attention to the charitable side of the Catholic Church by visiting a once troubled and crime-plagued neighborhood of Portugal's capital
Pope Francis visited a once troubled and crime-plagued neighborhood of Portugal's capital Friday to draw attention to the charitable side of the Catholic Church and the need to protect the world's most vulnerable people with concrete gestures that āget your hands dirty.ā
The midway point in Francisā five-day visit to Portugal began with the pontiff hearing confessions of some young people who were in Lisbon for World Youth Day. The big Catholic youth festival will end Friday with a traditional Way of the Cross procession recreating Christās crucifixion.
Francis visited a community center in the city's Serafina neighborhood, which sits beneath a giant 18th century aqueduct that is a symbol of the bounty that gold from Portugalās Brazilian colony once afforded the country.
Two decades ago, drug and crime problems dogged the neighborhood, but it has largely left them behind thanks in part to efforts by church charity groups, including one that was created to provide a home for children with parents unable to care for them.
Speaking off the cuff to young people and the charity organizers, Francis said true service must be done with concrete gestures that make an impact. He thanked church groups that have āgotten your hands dirty, touching the reality and the misery of others.ā
āThere is no such thing as abstract love. It doesnāt exist,ā the pope said. He said he couldnāt come to Lisbon to celebrate World Youth Day without visiting the center because āthis is also youth, in the sense that you generate new life continually.ā
āWith your conduct, your commitment and getting your hands dirty by touching the reality and misery of others, you are giving inspiration and generating life,ā he said.
Francis has long said that true service and charity has to hurt, and that itās not enough just to give a beggar a coin on the street. He has championed the charitable side of the Catholic Church, including boosting the Vaticanās own charitable efforts by providing showers and medical care to area homeless people while also sending regular truckloads of aid to Ukraine and other places wracked by conflict or natural disasters.
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