Pope Francis: 40 million Twitter followers and
counting
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis’ Twitter account
- @pontifex –
has reached a milestone: 40 million followers in 9 languages.
The figure is significant not only in itself, but in what it represents for the
Holy Father, himself, who, like his predecessor, desires to be a Christian
witness among many on the “Digital Continent”, especially through social media.
Alessandro Gisotti spoke to the Prefect of the Secretariat for
Communication, Msgr. Dario Edoardo Viganò, who is entrusted
with the co-ordination of the Papal accounts on Twitter and Instagram.
“40 million followers means 40 million people, 40 million
hearts, minds, and passions,” said Msgr. Viganò. “It is a world, a
relationship, a community: this figure emphasizes that so many people continue
to follow, day after day, even by way of [140-character bursts], the
Pope’s Magisterium, which reaches people [It. si dipana]
in very different ways: from official speeches, to unscripted encounters, to
Twitter characters,” Msgr. Viganò said.
Asked about the Holy Father’s social media
presence more specifically, especially on Twitter and Instagram (where Pope
Francis shares photos and videos under his @franciscus handle), Msgr.
Viganò said, “The Pope takes great care of his social profiles, to
such an extent that he closely and carefully checks all the tweets, which are
then published.” He went on to say, “This concern speaks to the [Pope’s] care
for relationships. So, the Pope who calls himself a
‘grandfather,’ who claims to be far from new technologies, nevertheless
intuits that there is a world – the social media world – that is made up of
people.”
Msgr. Viganò also said, “The Church is
born when the Holy Spirit overwhelms the disciples and opens
the doors of the Upper Room and they take to the streets of the world. Today,
among these streets are the so-called social communities. That is why the Pope is
very attentive to this reality: because any relationship needs care, which is
to say cor urat, that is, ‘to warm the heart’ even through a few
letters.”
Gisotti asked whether Pope Francis can be
taken as an example of how to use social media, so that the Internet is, “a
network not of wires but of people,” as he himself wrote in his first Message for the World Day of Social
Communications? “Yes,” responded Msgr. Viganò. “This also
collects the inheritance of Pope emeritus Benedict [XVI], who has made some
very interesting speeches on the Net. I believe that the further step, the one
we might summarize as ‘from the click to the heart’, is to imagine a community
of believers, who leave traces of the allure of the Gospel of Mercy even on the
Net.”
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