Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Increased security for Good Friday services

- By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis presided over solemn services at Rome’s Colosseum with police and soldiers on alert.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis presided over solemn Good Friday services amid heightened security at Rome’s Colosseum for the Way of the Cross procession and a new communicat­ions controvers­y at home.

Italian police, carabinier­i and soldiers were on alert, with Holy Week coinciding with a spate of arrests of suspected Islamic extremists around Italy and warnings from law enforcemen­t about the return of foreign fighters from Iraq and Syria.

At the start of the most solemn period of the Catholic Church calendar, Francis lay prostrate in front of the altar in St. Peter’s Basilica before the chant-filled Good Friday evening service got underway.

Francis later traveled to the Colosseum to preside over the procession re-enacting Christ’s crucifixio­n — the seminal event in Christiani­ty leading to Christ’s resurrecti­on celebrated on Easter Sunday.

The solemn commemorat­ions coincide with a new communicat­ions controvers­y in the Vatican over the pope’s reported assertion — at the height of Holy Week — that hell doesn’t exist.

The Vatican hasn’t denied Francis’ comments to the La Repubblica newspaper, saying only that the journalist reconstruc­ted a conversati­on.

It was the fifth time in five years that Francis has spoken to Repubblica’s founder, Eugenio Scalfari, a 93-year-old devout atheist who admits he doesn’t record or take notes during interviews.

Nearly every time a Francis interview has appeared on Repubblica’s front page, the Vatican press office has insisted the pope’s words weren’t necessaril­y accurate, without denying them outright.

That has prompted questions about why the pope continuall­y lets himself be quoted by Scalfari.

Spokesman Greg Burke didn’t respond Friday when asked whether the pope believes in the existence of hell.

Francis has in the past spoke frequently about the devil and hell.

The doubts, however, have enraged Catholic conservati­ves, who have lost patience with a pope who seems to care less about doctrine than dialogue, especially with atheists and people of other faiths.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP ?? The Vatican hasn’t denied Pope Francis’ comments to La Repubblica newspaper.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/AP The Vatican hasn’t denied Pope Francis’ comments to La Repubblica newspaper.

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