Pope Francis, already hailed for progressive views about homosexuality and the origins of the universe, has contradicted his predecessor and conservative Catholic teaching by suggesting that animals may go to heaven when they die.
According to Italian media reports, Francis made the comments during an appearance in St. Peter鈥檚 Square, when trying to console a little boy who had told him that his dog had died.
鈥淥ne day, we will see our animals again in the eternity of Christ,鈥 the reports quote Francis as telling the child. 鈥淧aradise is open to all of God鈥檚 creatures.鈥
The comments were clearly made in private conversation with the child and were not meant as a papal decree.
And yet they are the latest in a string of more progressive statements from a Pope who has adopted a man-of-the-people persona.
In October, Francis delivered a speech in which he said the theories of evolution and the Big Bang are real and God did not wave a 鈥渕agic wand鈥 to create the universe.
And earlier this year, he asked, 鈥淲ho am I to judge?鈥 when discussing homosexuality.
As for his most recent comments, it鈥檚 perhaps no coincidence that Francis chose his papal name in honour of St. Francis of Assisi, who not only left a life of wealth and excess to devote himself to a life of poverty and preaching, but also regularly preached to animals.
St. Francis of Assisi is now known as the patron saint of ecologists for his love of animals and nature.
Francis鈥檚 predecessors were divided on the issue.
Pope Benedict rejected the notion that animals might go to heaven in a sermon, suggesting that when they die it merely signals the end of their life on earth.
However, Pope John Paul II before him suggested that animals do have souls and are 鈥渁s near to God as men are.鈥