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Pope's Message
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
1. The Church in every age continues the work begun on the
day of Pentecost, when the Apostles, in the power of the Holy
Spirit, went forth into the streets of Jerusalem to preach
the Gospel of Jesus Christ in many tongues (cf. Acts 2:5-11).
Through the succeeding centuries, this evangelizing mission
spread to the far corners of the earth, as Christianity took
root in many places and learned to speak the diverse languages
of the world, always in obedience to Christ's command to preach
the Gospel to every nation (cf. Mt 28:19-20).
However, the history of evangelization is not just a matter
of geographic expansion, for the Church has also had to cross
many cultural thresholds, each of which called for fresh energy
and imagination in proclaiming the one Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The age of the great discoveries, the Renaissance and the
invention of printing, the Industrial Revolution and the birth
of the modern world: these, too, were threshold moments that
demanded new forms of evangelization. Now, with the communications
and information revolution in full swing, the Church stands
unmistakably at another decisive gateway. It is fitting, therefore,
that on this World Communications Day 2002 we should reflect
on the subject: "Internet: A New Forum for Proclaiming
the Gospel."
2. The Internet is certainly a new "forum" understood
in the ancient Roman sense of that public space where politics
and business were transacted, where religious duties were
fulfilled, where much of the social life of the city took
place, and where the best and the worst of human nature was
on display. It was a crowded and bustling urban space, which
both reflected the surrounding culture and created a culture
of its own. This is no less true of cyberspace, which is as
it were a new frontier opening up at the beginning of this
new millennium. Like the new frontiers of other times, this
one, too, is full of the interplay of danger and promise,
and not without the sense of adventure, which marked other
great periods of change. For the Church the new world of cyberspace
is a summons to the great adventure of using its potential
to proclaim the Gospel message. This challenge is at the heart
of what it means at the beginning of the millennium to follow
the Lord's command to "put out into the deep": Duc
in altum! (Lk 5:4).
3. The Church approaches this new medium with realism and
confidence. Like other communications media, it is a means,
not an end in itself. The Internet can offer magnificent opportunities
for evangelization, if used with competence and a clear awareness
of its strengths and weaknesses. Above all, by providing information
and stirring interest, it makes possible an initial encounter
with the Christian message, especially among the young who
increasingly turn to the world of cyberspace as a window on
the world. It is important, therefore, that the Christian
community think of very practical ways of helping those who
first make contact through the Internet, to move from the
virtual world of cyberspace to the real world of Christian
community.
At a subsequent stage, the Internet can also provide the
kind of follow-up that evangelization requires. Especially
in an unsupportive culture, Christian living calls for continuing
instruction and catechesis, and this is perhaps the area in
which the Internet can provide excellent help. There already
exist on the Net countless sources of information, documentation,
and education about the Church, her history and tradition,
her doctrine and her engagement in every field in all parts
of the world. It is clear, then, that while the Internet can
never replace that profound experience of God which only the
living, liturgical, and sacramental life of the Church can
offer, it can certainly provide a unique supplement and support
in both preparing for the encounter with Christ in community,
and sustaining the new believer in the journey of faith which
then begins.
4. There are nevertheless certain necessary, even obvious,
questions which arise in using the Internet in the cause of
evangelization. The essence of the Internet, in fact, is that
it provides an almost unending flood of information, much
of which passes in a moment. In a culture which feeds on the
ephemeral there can easily be a risk of believing that it
is facts that matter, rather than values. The Internet offers
extensive knowledge, but it does not teach values; and when
values are disregarded, our very humanity is demeaned and
man easily loses sight of his transcendent dignity. Despite
its enormous potential for good, some of the degrading and
damaging ways in which the Internet can be used are already
obvious to all, and public authorities surely have a responsibility
to guarantee that this marvellous instrument serves the common
good and does not become a source of harm.
Furthermore, the Internet radically redefines a person's psychological
relationship to time and space. Attention is riveted on what
is tangible, useful, instantly available; the stimulus for
deeper thought and reflection may be lacking. Yet human beings
have a vital need for time and inner quiet to ponder and examine
life and its mysteries, and to grow gradually into a mature
dominion of themselves and of the world around them. Understanding
and wisdom are the fruit of a contemplative eye upon the world,
and do not come from a mere accumulation of facts, no matter
how interesting. They are the result of an insight which penetrates
the deeper meaning of things in relation to one another and
to the whole of reality. Moreover, as a forum in which practically
everything is acceptable and almost nothing is lasting, the
Internet favours a relativistic way of thinking and sometimes
feeds the flight from personal responsibility and commitment.
In such a context, how are we to cultivate that wisdom which
comes not just from information but from insight, the wisdom
which understands the difference between right and wrong,
and sustains the scale of values which flows from that difference?
5. The fact that through the Internet people multiply their
contacts in ways hitherto unthinkable opens up wonderful possibilities
for spreading the Gospel. However, it is also true that electronically
mediated relationships can never take the place of the direct
human contact required for genuine evangelization. For evangelization
always depends upon the personal witness of the one sent to
evangelize (cf. Rom 10:14-15). How does the Church lead from
the kind of contact made possible by the Internet to the deeper
communication demanded by Christian proclamation? How do we
build upon the first contact and exchange of information,
which the Internet makes possible?
There is no doubt that the electronic revolution holds out
the promise of great positive breakthroughs for the developing
world; but there is also the possibility that it will in fact
aggravate existing inequalities as the information and communications
gap widens. How can we ensure that the information and communications
revolution, which has the Internet as its prime engine, will
work in favour of the globalization of human development and
solidarity, objectives closely linked to the Church's evangelizing
mission?
Finally, in these troubled times, let me ask: how can we
ensure that this wondrous instrument first conceived in the
context of military operations can now serve the cause of
peace? Can it favour that culture of dialogue, participation,
solidarity and reconciliation without which peace cannot flourish?
The Church believes it can; and to ensure that this is what
will happen, she is determined to enter this new forum, armed
with the Gospel of Christ, the Prince of Peace.
6. The Internet causes billions of images to appear on millions
of computer monitors around the planet. From this galaxy of
sight and sound will the face of Christ emerge and the voice
of Christ be heard? For it is only when his face is seen and
his voice heard that the world will know the glad tidings
of our redemption. This is the purpose of evangelization.
And this is what will make the Internet a genuinely human
space, for if there is no room for Christ, there is no room
for man. Therefore, on this World Communications Day, I dare
to summon the whole Church bravely to cross this new threshold,
to put out into the deep of the Net, so that now as in the
past the great engagement of the Gospel and culture may show
to the world "the glory of God on the face of Christ"
(2 Cor 4:6). May the Lord bless all those who work for this
aim.
From the Vatican, January 24, 2002, the Feast
of Saint Francis de Sales
IOANNES PAULUS II
[Original text: English; distributed by Vatican Press Office]
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