March 12, 2013: Over 35,000 people have signed up for PopeAlarm.com, a service of
the Fellowship of Catholic University students that sends out a free text and e-mail
alert when the next Pope is elected.
“The reaction has been fantastic and overwhelming,”
Kevin Cotter, FOCUS web director, told Catholic News Agency on Monday. “It’s been
great to be at the forefront of Catholic new media and getting the word out there.”
Demand
for the service has been high since its launch on Saturday March 9. As of Monday morning,
over 35,000 people had registered for the service. The PopeAlarm.com website received
over 140,000 page views. “It’s really exploded and caught on fire,” Cotter said. “There’s
a lot of social media traction.”
FOCUS staff will use the service to notify
registered users when white smoke appears from the chimney above the Sistine Chapel,
the traditional signal that the next Pope has been elected. Cotter was inspired to
launch the site because he could not find any service to alert him when the white
smoke is first seen. He said the 2013 conclave marks the first time a papal election
has taken place with this technology.
The web director noted that the success
of PopeAlarm.com and an unrelated initiative called Adopt-a-Cardinal shows that Catholics
are “very excited” about praying for the next Pope, about knowing who he is and about
supporting him.
Cotter said that secular media sometimes has a “downtrodden
view” of Catholics relative to the papacy that ignores many Catholics.
“We’re
very enthusiastic about the Church,” he said. “There are a lot of Catholics out there
that have a real optimism.” “The Church is made for greatness,” he added. “We don’t
always live up to that greatness, but we aspire to it and we want to be led to further
greatness to continue the work of John Paul II and Benedict XVI.”
FOCUS is
attempting to expand service to meet demand in the U.S. and Canada.
The service
presently requires a U.S. or Canadian phone number. Cotter told CNA that FOCUS is
working to respond to the many international requests for a PopeAlarm site that can
handle text messaging in other countries.
PopeAlarm will also announce the
papal election through its Twitter account “@popealarm.”