His visit to Cartagena got off to a rocky start, however, when he banged his head on his popemobile, cutting his eyebrow and getting a swollen, black left eye.
Francis iced his cheekbone and received a butterfly patch to cover the cut, and he continued his popemobile tour without incident.
Francis was visiting the poor San Francisco neighborhood to dedicate new houses for the homeless before paying homage to Claver at the church that bears his name in the city's historic center.
On the eve of his visit to Cartagena, Francis celebrated Claver's feast day by praising the 17th century Spanish missionary for having "understood, as a disciple of Jesus, that he could not remain indifferent to the suffering of the most helpless and mistreated of his time, and that he had to do something to alleviate their suffering."
History's first Latin American pope has similarly insisted on ministering to society's most marginal and making them the focus of the Catholic Church's mission.
He is to pray at Claver's tomb today after laying the foundation for new residences for homeless people in Cartagena, the city famous for its UNESCO-awarded historic center but also home to slums and shanties.
Francis is likely to hold Claver up as a model for today's Catholic Church, someone who insisted on recognizing the inherent human rights of everyone.
"My brothers, the church is not a customs post," Francis said. "It wants its doors to be open."
Francis returns to Rome from Cartagena tonight, ending a five-day visit highlighted by a huge prayer of reconciliation that brought together victims of Colombia's long-running conflict and demobilized guerrillas and paramilitary fighters.
While in Colombia, Francis refrained from making any public comments about the deteriorating political and humanitarian situation next door in Venezuela, though he did meet briefly with a delegation of Venezuelan bishops.
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