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MESSAGE
OF POPE JOHN PAUL II
FOR WORLD COMMUNICATIONS DAY 1999
May 16
released
January 24, 1999
Dear Brothers
and Sisters,
1.
We are approaching the Great Jubilee, the two thousandth anniversary
of the Birth of Jesus Christ, the Word of God made flesh, the
celebration which will open the door to the third Christian millennium.
In this last year of preparation, the Church turns to God our
Father, contemplating the mystery of his infinite mercy.
He is the God from whom all life comes and to whom it will return;
and he is the One who journeys with us from birth to death as
our friend and companion on the way.
I have chosen
as the theme for this year's World Communications Day "Mass
media: a friendly companion for those in search of the Father".
The theme implies two questions: how might the media work
with God rather than against him? and how might the media be a
friendly companion to those searching for God's loving presence
in their lives? It also implies a statement of fact and a reason
for thanks: that the media do at times make it possible for
those who are searching for God to read in new ways both the book
of nature, which is the realm of reason, and the book of revelation,
the Bible, which is the realm of faith. Finally the theme implies
an invitation and a hope: that those responsible for the
world of social communications will be ever more committed to
help rather than hinder the search for meaning which is at the
very heart of human life.
2.
To be human is to go in search; and, as I stressed in my recent
Encyclical Letter Fides et Ratio, all human searching is
in the end a search for God: "Faith and reason are
like two wings upon which the human spirit rises to the contemplation
of truth; and God has placed in the human heart a desire to know
the truth - in a word, to know himself - so that, by knowing and
loving God, men and women may come to know the truth of themselves"
(1). The Great Jubilee will be a celebration of God who is the
goal of all human searching, a celebration of the endless mercy
which all men and women desire - even though they often find themselves
thwarted by sin which, in the expression of Saint Augustine, is
like looking for the right thing in the wrong place (cf. Confessions,
X, 38). We sin when we look for God where he cannot be found.
Therefore,
in speaking of "those who are searching for the Father",
this year's theme for World Communications Day speaks of every
man and woman. All are searching, though not all are looking
in the right place. The theme recognizes the exceptional influence
of the media in contemporary culture, and therefore the media's
special responsibility to witness to the truth about life, about
human dignity, about the true meaning of our freedom and mutual
interdependence.
3.
On the journey of human searching, the Church wishes to befriend
the media, knowing that every form of cooperation will be for
the good of everyone. Cooperation also means that we come to know
each other better. At times, relations between the Church and
the media can be marred by mutual misunderstanding which breeds
fear and distrust. It is true that Church culture and media culture
are different; indeed at certain points there is a stark contrast.
But there is no reason why differences should make friendship
and dialogue impossible. In many of the deepest friendships it
is precisely differences that encourage creativity and bridge-building.
The Church's
culture of remembrance can save the media culture of
transitory "news" from becoming a forgetfulness
which corrodes hope; and the media can help the Church to proclaim
the Gospel in all its enduring freshness in the everyday reality
of people's lives. The Church's culture of wisdom can save
the media culture of information from becoming a meaningless
accumulation of facts; and the media can help the Church's wisdom
to remain alert to the array of new knowledge now emerging. The
Church's culture of joy can save the media culture of entertainment
from becoming a soulless flight from truth and responsibility;
and the media can help the Church to understand better how to
communicate with people in a way that appeals and even delights.
These are just some examples of how closer cooperation in a spirit
of friendship and at a deeper level can help both the Church and
the media to serve the men and women of our time in their search
for meaning and fulfilment.
4.
With the recent explosion of information technology, the possibility
for communication between individuals and groups in every part
of the world has never been greater. Yet, paradoxically, the very
forces which can lead to better communication can also lead to
increasing self-centerdness and alienation. We find ourselves
therefore in a time of both threat and promise. Nobody
of good will wants the threat to prevail in a way that will lead
to still more human sorrow - least of all at the end of a century
and a millennium which have had more than their share of sorrow.
Let us look
instead with great hope to the new millennium, trusting that there
will be people in both the Church and the media prepared to cooperate
to ensure that the promise prevails over the threat, communication
over alienation. This will ensure that the world of the media
becomes a more and more friendly companion to all people, presenting
them with "news" wedded to remembrance, information
wedded to wisdom and entertainment wedded to joy. It will also
ensure a world where the Church and the media can work together
for the good of humanity. That is what is required if the power
of the media is to be not a force which destroys but a love which
creates, a love which reflects the love of God "who is Father
of all, who is over all and through all and in all" (Eph
4:6).
May all who
work in the world of social communications know the joy of divine
companionship, so that in knowing the friendship of God they may
be enabled to befriend all men and women on their journey to the
house of the Father, to whom be honor and glory, praise and thanksgiving,
with the Son and the Holy Spirit, for ever and ever.
JOANNES
PAULUS II
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With
the recent explosion of information technology, the possibility
for communication between individuals and groups in every part
of the world has never been greater. Yet, paradoxically, the very
forces which can lead to better communication can also lead to
increasing self-centerdness and alienation. We find ourselves
therefore in a time of both threat and promise.
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