|
Technology at the service
of socialization
The following is the Holy
Father's Message for the 43rd World Communications Day, to be
held this year on Sunday, 21 May [2009]. The Message is dated 21
January, Feast of St. Francis de Sales, patron of journalists.
Dear Brothers and
Sisters!
In anticipation of
the forthcoming World Communications Day, I would like to
address to you some reflections on the theme chosen for this
year — New Technologies, New Relationships: Promoting a
culture of Respect, Dialogue and Friendship. The new digital
technologies are, indeed, bringing about fundamental shifts in
patterns of communication and human relationships. These changes
are particularly evident among those young people who have grown
up with the new technologies and are at home in a digital world
that often seems quite foreign to those of us who, as adults,
have had to learn to understand and appreciate the opportunities
it has to offer for communications.
In this year’s
message, I am conscious of those who constitute the so-called
digital generation and I would like to share with them, in
particular, some ideas concerning the extraordinary potential of
the new technologies, if they are used to promote human
understanding and solidarity. These technologies are truly a
gift to humanity and we must endeavour to ensure that the
benefits they offer are put at the service of all human
individuals and communities, especially those who are most
disadvantaged and vulnerable.
The accessibility
of mobile telephones and computers, combined with the global
reach and penetration of the internet, has opened up a range of
means of communication that permit the almost instantaneous
communication of words and images across enormous distances and
to some of the most isolated corners of the world; something
that would have been unthinkable for previous generations.
Young people, in
particular, have grasped the enormous capacity of the new media
to foster connectedness, communication and understanding between
individuals and communities, and they are turning to them as
means of communicating with existing friends, of meeting new
friends, of forming communities and networks, of seeking
information and news, and of sharing their ideas and opinions.
Many benefits flow from this new culture of communication:
families are able to maintain contact across great distances;
students and researchers have more immediate and easier access
to documents, sources and scientific discoveries, hence they can
work collaboratively from different locations; moreover, the
interactive nature of many of the new media facilitates more
dynamic forms of learning and communication, thereby
contributing to social progress.
While the speed
with which the new technologies have evolved in terms of their
efficiency and reliability is rightly a source of wonder, their
popularity with users should not surprise us, as they respond to
a fundamental desire of people to communicate and to relate to
each other. This desire for communication and friendship is
rooted in our very nature as human beings and cannot be
adequately understood as a response to technical innovations.
In the light of the
biblical message, it should be seen primarily as a reflection of
our participation in the communicative and unifying Love of God,
who desires to make of all humanity one family. When we find
ourselves drawn towards other people, when we want to know more
about them and make ourselves known to them, we are responding
to God’s call — a call that is imprinted in our nature as beings
created in the image and likeness of God, the God of
communication and communion.
The desire for
connectedness and the instinct for communication that are so
obvious in contemporary culture are best understood as modern
manifestations of the basic and enduring propensity of humans to
reach beyond themselves and to seek communion with others. In
reality, when we open ourselves to others, we are fulfilling our
deepest need and becoming more fully human.
Loving is, in fact,
what we are designed for by our Creator. Naturally, I am not
talking about fleeting, shallow relationships, I am talking
about the real love that is at the very heart of Jesus’ moral
teaching: "You must love the Lord your God with all your heart,
with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your
strength" and "You must love your neighbour as yourself" (cf. Mk
12:30-31). In this light, reflecting on the significance of the
new technologies, it is important to focus not just on their
undoubted capacity to foster contact between people, but on the
quality of the content that is put into circulation using these
means.
I would encourage
all people of good will who are active in the emerging
environment of digital communication to commit themselves to
promoting a culture of respect, dialogue and friendship.
Those who are
active in the production and dissemination of new media content,
therefore, should strive to respect the dignity and worth of the
human person. If the new technologies are to serve the good of
individuals and of society, all users will avoid the sharing of
words and images that are degrading of human beings, that
promote hatred and intolerance, that debase the goodness and
intimacy of human sexuality or that exploit the weak and
vulnerable.
The new
technologies have also opened the way for dialogue between
people from different countries, cultures and religions. The new
digital arena, the so-called cyberspace, allows them to
encounter and to know each other’s traditions and values. Such
encounters, if they are to be fruitful, require honest and
appropriate forms of expression together with attentive and
respectful listening. The dialogue must be rooted in a genuine
and mutual searching for truth if it is to realize its potential
to promote growth in understanding and tolerance. Life is not
just a succession of events or experiences: it is a search for
the true, the good and the beautiful. It is to this end that we
make our choices; it is for this that we exercise our freedom;
it is in this — in truth, in goodness, and in beauty — that we
find happiness and joy. We must not allow ourselves to be
deceived by those who see us merely as consumers in a market of
undifferentiated possibilities, where choice itself becomes the
good, novelty usurps beauty, and subjective experience displaces
truth.
The concept of
friendship has enjoyed a renewed prominence in the vocabulary of
the new digital social networks that have emerged in the last
few years. The concept is one of the noblest achievements of
human culture. It is in and through our friendships that we grow
and develop as humans. For this reason, true friendship has
always been seen as one of the greatest goods any human person
can experience.
We should be
careful, therefore, never to trivialize the concept or the
experience of friendship. It would be sad if our desire to
sustain and develop on-line friendships were to be at the cost
of our availability to engage with our families, our neighbours
and those we meet in the daily reality of our places of work,
education and recreation. If the desire for virtual
connectedness becomes obsessive, it may in fact function to
isolate individuals from real social interaction while also
disrupting the patterns of rest, silence and reflection that are
necessary for healthy human development.
Friendship is a
great human good, but it would be emptied of its ultimate value
if it were to be understood as an end in itself. Friends should
support and encourage each other in developing their gifts and
talents and in putting them at the service of the human
community.
In this context, it
is gratifying to note the emergence of new digital networks that
seek to promote human solidarity, peace and justice, human
rights and respect for human life and the good of creation.
These networks can facilitate forms of co-operation between
people from different geographical and cultural contexts that
enable them to deepen their common humanity and their sense of
shared responsibility for the good of all.
We must, therefore,
strive to ensure that the digital world, where such networks can
be established, is a world that is truly open to all. It would
be a tragedy for the future of humanity if the new instruments
of communication, which permit the sharing of knowledge and
information in a more rapid and effective manner, were not made
accessible to those who are already economically and socially
marginalized, or if it should contribute only to increasing the
gap separating the poor from the new networks that are
developing at the service of human socialization and
information.
I would like to
conclude this message by addressing myself, in particular, to
young Catholic believers: to encourage them to bring the witness
of their faith to the digital world.
Dear Brothers and
Sisters, I ask you to introduce into the culture of this new
environment of communications and information technology the
values on which you have built your lives. In the early life of
the Church, the great Apostles and their disciples brought the
Good News of Jesus to the Greek and Roman world. Just as, at
that time, a fruitful evangelization required that careful
attention be given to understanding the culture and customs of
those pagan peoples so that the truth of the gospel would touch
their hearts and minds, so also today, the proclamation of
Christ in the world of new technologies requires a profound
knowledge of this world if the technologies are to serve our
mission adequately.
It falls, in
particular, to young people, who have an almost spontaneous
affinity for the new means of communication, to take on the
responsibility for the evangelization of this "digital
continent". Be sure to announce the Gospel to your
contemporaries with enthusiasm. You know their fears and their
hopes, their aspirations and their disappointments: the greatest
gift you can give to them is to share with them the "Good News"
of a God who became man, who suffered, died and rose again to
save all people. Human hearts are yearning for a world where
love endures, where gifts are shared, where unity is built,
where freedom finds meaning in truth, and where identity is
found in respectful communion.
Our faith can
respond to these expectations: may you become its heralds! The
Pope accompanies you with his prayers and his blessing.
|