Pope Francis joins Instagram

Mar 17, 2016 | Facebook marketing, Mobile, Social media

Pope Francis has continued his mission to spread the word of the Catholic Church online, this time joining social network Instragram. Over the years, the Catholic church under Pope Francis has been enthusiastic about using the internet to engage with a global audience. The Vatican has announced that the Pope will launch his own Instagram […]

Pope Francis has continued his mission to spread the word of the Catholic Church online, this time joining social network Instragram.


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Over the years, the Catholic church under Pope Francis has been enthusiastic about using the internet to engage with a global audience.
The Vatican has announced that the Pope will launch his own Instagram account, “Franciscus,” on March 19th.
The date for the pontiff’s debut on the celebrity-dominated social medium was chosen by the 79-year-old himself as it marks the third anniversary of his inauguration as the leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.
The move represents the latest plank of a Vatican social media strategy designed to ensure Francis’s message reaches a maximum number of believers and non-believers across the world with particular focus on the younger generation.
Francis is already a major player on Twitter. Under the @Pontifex handle he tweets in nine languages, including Latin, with the English account followed by nearly nine million people and the Spanish one by more than 11 million.
The move to join Instagram has been anticipated for some time as it is now bigger and faster-growing than Twitter with some 400 million users worldwide.
Kevin Systrom, Instagram’s CEO and co-founder, met the pontiff at the Vatican last month, later revealing they had discussed “the power of images to unite people across different cultures and languages.”
In a post on his own Instagram account, Systrom also said: “It was by far one of the most memorable experiences of my life!”
Francis joined the Twittersphere four days after his March 2013 election with what has become his trademark appeal to believers to “pray for me.”
The central importance of prayer has been a recurring theme of the tweets that have followed, at a rate of a little under one a day.

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