Pope Benedict XVI is gearing up to accept millions of new followers — in the virtual world, at least. The holiest man in the Catholic Church will soon be tweeting, the Vatican revealed last week.
The spiritual leader of 1.1 billion Catholics is due to join Twitter
as soon as the end of the year, a Vatican spokesperson told the Associated Press on Friday.
“It’s doubtful Benedict himself will wrestle down his encyclicals,
apostolic exhortations and other papal pronouncements into 140-character
bites,” the news agency explained.
The 85-year old pope doesn’t normally use a computer and will most
likely simply sign off on tweets written for him. Many details,
including the crucial curiosity surrounding the Holy Father’s handle,
are still shrouded in mystery. The handle @PopeBenedict
seems to include relevant information about the pope, including his
coat of arms, and notes that “@PopeBenedict hasn’t tweeted yet.” But
Twitter is rife with such fake accounts, and this one remains
unconfirmed by the social network.
And certainly many questions have arisen with this collision of the
religious and technological worlds. Does papal infallibility extend to
tweets? Are his re-tweets, by default, endorsements?
The pope has previously warned of the dangers of becoming too
engrossed in the online world. “Entering cyberspace can be a sign of an
authentic search for personal encounters with others,” the Pope wrote in
a message last year,
“provided that attention is paid to avoiding dangers such as enclosing
oneself in a sort of parallel existence, or excessive exposure to the
virtual world.”
Benedict XVI also warned that truth can’t be measured in followers.
“We must be aware that the truth which we long to share does not derive
its worth from its ‘popularity’ or from the amount of attention it
receives,” he wrote. The Holy Father has sent his first and so
far history’s only pontifical tweet last year when he launched the
Vatican’s news information portal.
But it’s clear that when Benedict launches his own handle, he’s in for a
rapid surge of followers eager to tune into his 140-character
spirituality.
On Facebook, the pope’s most popular fan page has attracted almost 38,000 ‘Likes’, dwarfing Iran’s spiritual and temporal leader Grand Ayatollah al-Khamenei‘s fan base of 10,340 and the 710 people keeping virtual tabs on the new Coptic pope Tawadros II.
Yet, Benedict XVI has no official, sanctioned page of his own on the
social network and his Facebook popularity is no match to the Iraqi
Shi’ite Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani (44,000 likes) and the Tibetan
spiritual leader in exile, the 14th Dalai Lama (4.5 million likes). His Holiness, evidently seeking to be the religious world’s social media head honcho, also has 4.5 million followers on Twitter.
In June, the New York Times
reported that the followings of religious leaders on Twitter in the
U.S. had even surprised those managing the social network. Tweets by
Christian author Joyce Meyer, televangelist Joel Osteen or the Dalai Lama were retweeted more often than those of pop-culture icons Lady Gaga or Justin Bieber.
The Vatican had set up its first website in 1995. Its YouTube channel was first announced in a press conference in 2009. It also launched the online platform Pope2you linking to an iPhone application and its YouTube channel. Unlike the Dalai Lama, Benedict hasn’t yet moved on to Pinterest.
The Google+ account for
Pope Benedict XVI is in all likelihood an impostor’s — or at the very
least, a placeholder. “Pope hasn’t shared anything with you,” the
profile reads. Perhaps a turn to Google’s social network will come after
his Twitter transition.
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