Pope Francis’s online flock has doubled from 2.5 million to 5.0
million Twitter followers in just seven weeks — nearly half the time it
took his predecessor Benedict XVI to build up his following.
The account @pontifex — the word “pope” in Latin — has tweets in nine
languages including English, Spanish, Arabic and Latin.
They are
snippets of religious instruction rather than insights into the
pontiff’s daily life.
The number on all nine accounts put together went over five million for the first time on Thursday.
The
comments on the tweets left by followers are often irreverent and
chatty, with one user asking the pope on Thursday: “How you settling
in?”
Benedict launched the account on December 12 after encouraging
Catholic Church leaders to use social media to reach a wider and more
youthful audience.
The Vatican has said the tweets are approved by the pope although not
actually written by him and are sent from a single computer to avoid
hacking.
Francis’ latest tweet on Thursday reads: “God loves us. We must not
be afraid to love him.” His first tweet a few days after his election
read: “I thank you from my heart and I ask you to continue to pray for
me.”
The pope has shown a tradition-breaking style in his first few weeks
in office and has said he wants the Church to be closer to ordinary
people.
The number of followers on the Spanish-language account of Latin
America’s first pope has risen particularly sharply to 1.6 million,
although the Argentinian was still trailing in Portuguese with 188,000
followers.