Jakarta Globe, January 24, 2013
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Pope Benedict XVI, center, posting his first tweet using an iPad tablet after his Wednesday general audience in Paul VI's Hall at the Vatican on Dec. 12, 2012. (Reuters Photo/Osservatore Romano) |
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Vatican
City. Pope Benedict urged Catholics on Thursday to use social networks like
Twitter and Facebook to win converts, as he launched his own smartphone app
streaming live footage of his speeches.
The
websites — often associated with endless postings of idle gossip and baby
photos — could be used as "portals of truth and faith" in an
increasingly secular age, the pontiff said in his 2013 World Communications Day
message.
"Unless
the Good News is made known also in the digital world, it may be absent in the
experience of many people," the 85-year old Pope said in the a letter
published on the Vatican's website.
The Holy
See has become an increasingly prolific user of social media since it launched
its "new evangelization" of the developed world, where some
congregations have fallen in the wake of growing secularization and damage to
the Church's reputation from a series of sex abuse scandals.
The Pope
himself reaches around 2.5 million followers through eight Twitter accounts,
including one in Latin.
Belying his
traditionalist reputation, the Pope praised connections made online which he
said could blossom into true friendships.
Online life
was not a purely virtual world but "increasingly becoming part of the very
fabric of society," he said.
Social
networks were also a practical tool that Catholics could use to organize prayer
events, the pope suggested. But he called for reasoned debate and respectful
dialogue with those with different beliefs, and cautioned against a tendency
towards "heated and divisive voices" and "sensationalism."
The
websites were creating a new "agora," he added, referring to the
gathering spaces that were the centers of public life in ancient Greek cities.
The speech
coincided with the launch of "The Pope App," a downloadable program
that streams live footage of the pontiff's speaking events and Vatican news
onto smartphones.
Pope
Benedict's embrace of new media responds to the Church's concern that it is
invisible on the Internet.
The Vatican
commissioned a study of Internet use and religion prior to the pope's Twitter
debut, which found the majority of US Catholics surveyed were unaware of any
significant Church presence online.
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