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An SMS a Day Keeps the Devil Away?
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Jan 8, 8:37 am ET

By Philip Pullella

ROME (Reuters) - Give us this day our daily SMS.

Believers in today's frenetic world can now find inspiration on the run thanks to that omnipresent companion -- no, not a Guardian Angel but a cellular phone.

Italy's largest mobile phone operator, TIM, has begun a service to offer clients SMS messages with "the prayer of the day," "saint of the day" or "gospel of the day."

The four beeps that signal an incoming inspiration are the latest opportunity given to Italian Catholics to help them on the technological stairway to Heaven.

Wednesday's prayer was: "Oh Lord, make me give of myself freely without expecting anything in return."

But even prayer is not free these days. The service costs about 15 cents (15 U.S. cents) for each message -- a new twist to the concept of pennies from heaven.

Italy, one of the world's most traditional Catholic countries, has opened the door to high-tech religion.

Web sites available to Italians include "Angels online," which will tell you everything you wanted to know about the 72 angels and archangels. It also includes a section explaining "The contract with your Guardian Angel."

Then there is "Bible online" and "God Exists and he is online-Happy Web." If you were named after a saint and want to find out everything about his or her life, click on "Saints, Blesseds and Witnesses."

Compared to other institutions, the Vatican was late to go online but made a big splash when it did in 1997.

Its Internet site is powered by three host computers named after angels -- Raphael, Michael and Gabriel.

Raphael stores graphics and navigation paths, Michael protects the site from hackers and Gabriel interfaces between the other two computers and the outside world.

But Pope John Paul is probably the only world leader without a personal e-mail address. He has no personal computer in his office and still writes speeches by hand in Polish or dictates them to aides.

And no, you cannot go to confession on the Internet. The information superhighway still stops at the thick velvet curtain of the confessional box.


Articles From Reuters