WASHINGTON – The Vatican announced this week that Pope Benedict XVI will begin tweeting under the handle @Pontifex. Though his first Tweet is not expected until Dec. 12, the English-language papal account already has more than 112,000 followers.
We are going to get a spiritual message. The pope is not going to be walking around with a Blackberry or an iPad, and no one is going to be putting words into the popes mouth, said Greg Burke, senior media adviser to the Vatican.
He will tweet what he wants to tweet, Burke added, though the leader of the worlds 1.2 billion or so Roman Catholics is expected to sign off on, rather than write, each individual tweet himself.
We applaud St. Peters successor for embracing social media, but navigating Twitter can be tough for even the holiest of noobs. Heres a bit of unsolicited advice for His Holiness:
Learn from your peers. Benedict could do worse than to study the Dalai Lamas extremely popular account as a model for how religious leaders can use Twitter. Its mostly short nuggets of Buddhist teaching with occasional commentary on current events and some non-obnoxious self-promotion.
The pope may also want to get a translation of Salman al-Odahs feed to see how the Saudi cleric has built up nearly 2 million followers or look at Twitter-loving American evangelist Joyce Meyer, who has more than 1.5 million.
Follow some people. Too many celebrities and leaders on Twitter make the mistake of using it only as a transmission system without following any other users. Benedict could start with other religious leaders, or political figures like Barack Obama and David Cameron.
Nobodys expecting Benedict to follow biologist and avowed atheist Richard Dawkins just to prove hes open-minded, but perhaps following a few slightly critical feeds such the National Catholic Reporter – which advocates ordaining female priests, for instance – could broaden his information diet a bit without angering the man upstairs.
Interact, but dont flame. Responding or retweeting followers can help give them the sense that theres a real person behind the handle. Newark Mayor Cory Booker is the master of using Twitter to communicate directly with constituents on issues as small as stray pitbulls. That level of engagement probably isnt possible for someone like Benedict, but it wouldnt hurt to periodically engage directly with the flock.
What he should avoid is the kind of angry flame wars carried out in recent months by the presidents of Rwanda, Estonia and Azerbaijan. Its not very becoming of the Holy See to start arguments over politics or points of doctrine with obnoxious journalists.
Dont sweat the parodies. The pope is a major world figure. Hes going to be mocked on Twitter. He should handle it like Mayor Michael Bloomberg, not like The New York Times.
Proofread. Trusting others to do ones tweeting can be risky. Ban Ki-moon likely wasnt too thrilled when the U.N.s official feed tweeted his support for a 1-state solution last week. Gods emissary on Earth should probably double-check to make sure his staff gets the wording right in all eight languages.