Experts warn that this trip will require balancing a uniquely complicated set of humanitarian, diplomatic and religious questions. Even his own cardinal has advised the Pope to steer clear of the word Rohingya for fear of stalling his message of reconciliation before it has even begun.
Aaron Connelly, research fellow at Australia's Lowy Institute, told CNN there was little chance the Pope's visit to Myanmar was going to be a "generic Papal visit."
"Clearly the thing that motivated this visit was always a desire to talk about the Rohingya," he said.
"The question is ... is he going to do that in a way which is less confrontational and engages?" Connelly added. "Or is he going to say, this is outrageous, these people have a right to be in Myanmar?"
A crowd of people began to congregate downtown to greet the Pope upon his arrival despite the stifling heat and muggy weather, many singing songs and lining up hoping to view the Catholic leader. Traffic was at a near standstill.
People at a nearby teashop told CNN that they were excited for the Pope's visit before his arrival.
"Pope Francis is doing this for the good of everyone in Myanmar and the world," attorney U Way Myint said. "Whatever you want to say about the Christian leader, he has good intentions. He is a man of peace."
The Pope will likely try to deliver that message when meeting with Myanmar's leaders. He first met with Myanmar's commander-in-chief, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, Monday evening.
Connelly said the Pope needs to meet with both Suu Kyi and Min Aung Hlaing if he wants to deliver a message of compassion for the country's Rohingya, but cautioned that the strategy could backfire.
"Meeting with the military really could be perceived as providing cover for what the military is doing and suggest to the world that the Pope is willing to meet with someone like this guy, who is responsible at the very least for ethnic cleansing," he said.
'Peace, forgiveness and reconciliation'
Francis will spend three days in Myanmar before he travels to Bangladesh on Thursday, where he's expected to meet at least a small group of Rohingya refugees while in the capital Dhaka. The last pope to visit Bangladesh was Pope John Paul II in 1986.
"As the Pope said ahead of the trip, he will bring a message of peace, forgiveness and reconciliation," Vatican spokesman Greg Burke told reporters at a press briefing on Wednesday.
It will be the first visit by the head of the Catholic Church to Asia since the Pope's wildly successful visit to the Philippines and Sri Lanka in January 2015.
While Pope Francis's stance on the Rohingya crisis will likely dominate headlines, the Pope is also expected to push for greater rights for the several million members of Myanmar's Christian minority.
What's in a name?
Experts say the key question during the Pope's visit to Myanmar is how he'll choose to address the Rohingya crisis.
"This is something he hasn't shied away from the in the past," Alistair Cook, coordinator of the Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Program at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, told CNN.
Since the Catholic leader's initial announcement of his visit in July, the situation in Myanmar's Rakhine State has dramatically deteriorated.
One of the big, early indicators of Pope Francis' intentions will be whether he will say the word Rohingya, a politically charged term in Myanmar.
"The argument has always been (that) using the term 'Rohingya' immediately puts Myanmar Buddhists offside and closes their minds to further dialogue," Connelly, the Lowy Institute research fellow, said.
"They call them Bengalis to imply they are actually people from Bangladesh," Connelly said.
Experts said if Pope Francis uses the word Rohingya in any of the 11 homilies and speeches he's expected to make during the two-country tour, it would be a clear sign he is taking a firm stand on the issue.
High-profile mass
Francis will also conduct a public mass at the Kyaikkasan Grounds in Yangon on Wednesday, the most high-profile public event he'll take part in.
"There is a downside risk (to this visit), which is pretty big. If there is an open mass in Yangon and the mainstream Buddhist monks who have become increasingly hardline on this issue, if they protest it or denounce it, if they march in the street over it ... it could increase tensions quite a bit," Connelly said.
"So many people who follow this issue are saying they're worried this could be a spark which sets off much more violence."