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MESSAGE
OF POPE JOHN PAUL II
FOR WORLD COMMUNICATIONS DAY 2001
May 27
released
January 24, 2001
1.
The theme which I have chosen for World Communications Day
2001 echoes the words of Jesus himself. It could not be otherwise,
for it is Christ alone whom we preach. We remember his words to
his first disciples: "What I tell you in the dark, utter
in the light; and what you hear whispered, proclaim upon the housetops"
(Mt 10:27). In the secret of our heart, we have listened
to the truth of Jesus; now we must proclaim that truth from the
housetops.
In
today's world, housetops are almost always marked by a forest
of transmitters and antennae sending and receiving messages of
every kind to and from the four corners of the earth. It is vitally
important to ensure that among these many messages the word of
God is heard. To proclaim the faith from the housetops today means
to speak Jesus' word in and through the dynamic world of communications.
2. In
all cultures and at all times - certainly in the midst of today's
global transformations - people ask the same basic questions about
the meaning of life: Who am I? Where have I come from and where
am I going? Why is there evil? What is there after this life?(cf.
Fides et Ratio, 1).And in every age the Church offers the
one ultimately satisfying answer to the deepest questions of the
human heart - Jesus Christ himself, "who fully reveals man
to himself and brings to light his high calling" (Gaudium
et spes, 22). Therefore, the voice of Christians can never
fall silent, for the Lord has entrusted to us the word of salvation
for which every human heart longs. The Gospel offers the pearl
of great price for which all are searching (cf. Mt 13:45-46).
It
follows that the Church cannot fail to be ever more deeply involved
in the burgeoning world of communications. The global communications
network is extending and growing more complex by the day, and
the media are having an increasingly visible effect on culture
and its transmission. Where once the media reported events, now
events are often shaped to meet the requirements of the media.
Thus, the relationship between reality and the media has grown
more intricate, and this is a deeply ambivalent phenomenon. On
the one hand, it can blur the distinction between truth and illusion;
but on the other, it can open up unprecedented opportunities for
making the truth more widely accessible to many more people. The
task of the Church is to ensure that it is the latter which actually
happens.
3. The
world of the media can sometimes seem indifferent and even hostile
to Christian faith and morality. This is partly because media
culture is so deeply imbued with a typically postmodern sense
that the only absolute truth is that there are no absolute truths
or that, if there were, they would be inaccessible to human reason
and therefore irrelevant. In such a view, what matters is not
the truth but "the story"; if something is newsworthy
or entertaining, the temptation to set aside considerations of
truth becomes almost irresistible. As a result, the world of the
media can sometimes seem no more friendly an environment for evangelization
than the pagan world of the Apostles' day. But just as the early
witnesses to the Good News did not retreat when faced with opposition,
neither should Christ's followers do so today. The cry of
Saint Paul echoes among us still: "Woe to me if I do not
preach the Gospel" (1 Cor 9:16).
Yet,
as much as the world of the media may at times seem at odds
with the Christian message, it also offers unique opportunities
for proclaiming the saving truth of Christ to the whole human
family. Consider, for instance, satellite telecasts of religious
ceremonies which often reach a global audience, or the positive
capacities of the Internet to carry religious information and
teaching beyond all barriers and frontiers. Such a wide audience
would have been beyond the wildest imaginings of those who preached
the Gospel before us. What is therefore needed in our time is
an active and imaginative engagement of the media by the Church.
Catholics should not be afraid to throw open the doors of social
communications to Christ, so that his Good News may be heard from
the housetops of the world!
4. It
is vital too that at the beginning of this new millennium we keep
in mind the mission ad gentes which Christ has entrusted
to the Church. An estimated two thirds of the world's six billion
people do not in any real sense know Jesus Christ; and many of
them live in countries with ancient Christian roots, where entire
groups of the baptized have lost a living sense of the faith,
or no longer consider themselves members of the Church and live
lives far removed from the Lord and his Gospel (cf. Redemptoris
missio, 33). Certainly, an effective response to this situation
involves much more than the media; but in striving to meet the
challenge Christians cannot possibly ignore the world of social
communications. Indeed, media of every kind can play an essential
role in direct evangelization and in bringing to people the truths
and values which support and enhance human dignity. The Church's
presence in the media is in fact an important aspect of the inculturation
of the Gospel demanded by the new evangelization to which the
Holy Spirit is summoning the Church throughout the world.
As
the whole Church seeks to heed the Spirit's call, Christian communicators
have "a prophetic task, a vocation: to speak out against
the false gods and idols of the day - materialism, hedonism, consumerism,
narrow nationalism..." (Ethics in Communications,
31). Above all, they have the duty and privilege to declare the
truth - the glorious truth about human life and human destiny
revealed in the Word made flesh. May Catholics involved in the
world of social communications preach the truth of Jesus ever
more boldly and joyfully from the housetops, so that all men and
women may hear about the love which is the heart of God's self-communication
in Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and today, and for ever (cf
Heb 13:8).
JOANNES PAULUS II
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Christian
communicators have 'a prophetic task, a vocation: to speak out
against the false gods and idols of the day - materialism, hedonism,
consumerism, narrow nationalism...'

See also:
Mass
media:
a friendly companion
for those in search
of the Father
and
Internet:
A New Forum for
Proclaiming the Gospel
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