LYON, France — Church bells tolled in mourning. Well-wishers flocked into pews. Tributes to Pope Francis poured in from around the world on Monday after the Vatican announced the pontiff's death at age 88.
The 266th pope was praised for his groundbreaking steps to honor the poor and the vulnerable; seek to end conflicts like those in the Middle East, Ukraine and Africa; protect the environment; and guide the Catholic Church toward greater tolerance of gays and lesbians, among other things. Some critics say he didn't always go far enough. Others said he went too far.
Many recalled his legacy as the first pope from Latin America, and the first Jesuit to reach the pinnacle of church hierarchy, one who stressed humility over hubris for a Church beset with scandal and indifference — and even as a soccer fan from ''futbol''-crazed Argentina.
Here's a look at some of the global reactions a day after his last public appearance on Easter Sunday to bless thousands of people in St. Peter's Square.
— U.S. Vice President JD Vance, who met with the pope on Easter Sunday before traveling to India, wrote on social media that his ''heart goes out'' to the millions of Christians who loved him, and said: ''I was happy to see him yesterday, though he was obviously very ill.''
— President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social: ''Rest in Peace Pope Francis! May God Bless him and all who loved him!''
— King Charles III praised the pope for his work on safeguarding the planet, and alluded to their multiple personal meetings — including a private visit on April 10 at the Vatican. ''We were greatly moved to have been able to visit him earlier in the month,'' the King wrote in a statement signed ''Charles R.'' It was the pope's first known meeting with a foreign dignitary after he was hospitalized for five weeks with double pneumonia.
— Church bells tolled in honor of Francis, from the recently reopened Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris to a lone bell at the St. Bartholomew Parish in Bulacan, in the Philippines, that was rung 88 times to signify ''the 88 fruitful years of our dear Pope Francis,'' the parish wrote on social media.