SUSAN MILLER | USA TODAY
4:14 p.m. EDT Mar. 29, 2018
Pope gives boy with down's syndrome gleeful ride
At the beginning of the audience, the Pope's security guards lifted a young boy with Down's Syndrome from the crowd and gave him a spot in the back of the Popemobile. (March 28)
AP
Hell hath no fury like a misquoted pope — especially when it comes to, well, hell.
Three days before Easter, the Vatican tried to tamp down a firestorm over a comment attributed to Pope Francis that hell "does not exist," which would mark a historic break with teachings of the Catholic Church.
AP
Hell hath no fury like a misquoted pope — especially when it comes to, well, hell.
Three days before Easter, the Vatican tried to tamp down a firestorm over a comment attributed to Pope Francis that hell "does not exist," which would mark a historic break with teachings of the Catholic Church.
Pope Francis washes the feet of inmates during his visit to the Regina Coeli detention center where he celebrated Mass in Rome on March 29, …
VATICAN MEDIA HANDOUT, EPA-EFE
The Vatican on Thursday rebuked Eugenio Scalfari, 93, a well-known Italian journalist who is the founder of Italy’s La Repubblicanewspaper.
When asked where "bad souls" end up, according to the article in Thursday’s La Repubblica, Francis reportedly said that those who repent can be forgiven, but those who don't repent simply "disappear."
And then came the four words heard 'round the world: "Hell does not exist," the article quoted the pope as saying. "The disappearance of sinful souls exists.”
The Vatican issued a statement after the comments spread like wildfire on social media, saying the pope never granted the interview and the story was "the result of (the reporter's) reconstruction,” not a “faithful transcription of the words of the Holy Father."
Scalfari, an atheist, is known for not using tape recorders or taking notes during interviews.
More: Day after March for Our Lives, Pope Francis uses Palm Sunday sermon to urge youths to lead
More: Pope Francis is still popular, but warm feelings waning among conservatives, survey finds
The pope, meanwhile, had another revelation on Holy Thursday: He suffers from cataracts and will have surgery next year.
Francis disclosed the information after washing the feet of 12 prisoners at a Rome prison, a Holy Thursday ritual.
Francis, who uses his prison visits to boost the spirits of the incarcerated, told the inmates they must clear their eyes so they can see and spread hope.
“At my age, for example, cataracts come and you don’t see reality well," Francis, 81, said.
He urged the inmates to do a daily cleansing of their own to buoy their faith – a “cataract surgery for the soul.”
Contributing: The Associated Press
Follow Miller on Twitter @susmiller
4:14 p.m. EDT Mar. 29, 2018
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