Pope Francis today said he wasn't justifying violence when he said a friend who had cursed his mother could "expect a punch" in return.
Rather, he says he was only expressing a very human response to a provocation and that greater prudence was necessary to avoid such offense.
Francis clarified his comments about the limits of freedom of speech made last week in response to the terrorist attack against the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
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The "punch" line, and the confusion it caused, was a reflection of how Francis' informal, and sometimes unpapal, sense of humor can sometime cause confusion or get him in trouble.
In fact, moments after clarifying his Charlie Hebdo remarks, Francis told a story about a run-in he had back in the 1990s in Buenos Aires with two corrupt public officials who offered him the equivalent of USD 400,000 for his works of charity on the condition that they get some of it back as a kickback.
"And in that moment I thought, 'What should I do? Either insult them and kick them where the sun doesn't shine, or play the fool," Francis said.
He said he ended up playing the fool, but his response was further evidence that his casual speaking style is just that: casual.