Spreading joy is a genuine form of love
Thousands of theatre and cinema actors,
television and radio personalities, circus performers, amusement
park workers, street artists and members of musical bands gathered
in St Peter's Square on Sunday, 17 December, for the Jubilee of the
Entertainment World. The Holy Father celebrated Mass for the Third
Sunday of Advent, basing his homily on the liturgy's recurring theme
of joy: "If Christian joy in its proper sense is found at a
more directly spiritual level, nevertheless it also includes the
healthy enjoyment that is good for the mind and body. Thus society
should be grateful to those who produce and present intelligent and
relaxing broadcasts and programmes.... Spreading authentic joy can
be a genuine form of social charity". Here is a translation of
the Pope's homily, which was given in Italian.
1. "Rejoice ... the Lord is at hand" (Phil
4:4, 5).
Today, the Third Sunday of Advent, is marked by joy:
the joy of those awaiting the One who "is at hand",
the God-with-us, foretold by the prophets. It is the "great
joy" of Christmas
which we have a foretaste of today; a joy which "will be
for all people", because the Saviour came and will come again
to visit us from on high, like the rising sun (cf. Lk 1:78).
It is the joy of Christians,
pilgrims in the world, who await with hope the glorious return
of the One who, to come to our aid, emptied himself of his divine
glory. It is the joy of this Holy Year, which commemorates
the two millennia since the time when the Son of God, Light from
Light, shone upon humanity's history with the radiance of his
presence.
In this perspective, the words of the prophet
Zephaniah, which we have just heard in the first reading, become
particularly eloquent: "Sing aloud, O daughter of Zion; shout,
O Israel! Rejoice and exult with all your heart, O daughter of
Jerusalem! The Lord has taken away the judgements against you, he
has cast out your enemies" (Zep 3:14-15): this is the
"year of the Lord's favour", which heals us from sin and
its wounds!
Full of joy because the Lord has come among us
2. The prophet's consoling message echoes with
great intensity in our assembly: "The Lord your God is in
your midst, a warrior who gives victory; he will rejoice over you
with gladness, he will renew you in his love" (Zep 3:17).
It is he who came and it is he whom we
await. The Jubilee Year invites us to fix our gaze on him,
especially during this Advent of the Year 2000. The Lord, "a
warrior who gives victory", is also presented to you
today, dear brothers and sisters who in various ways work in the
entertainment world. I welcome you in his name and
cordially greet you. I express my affectionate gratitude for the
kind words addressed to me by Archbishop John Patrick Foley,
President of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, and
by your two representatives. I extend my greetings to colleagues and
friends who have been unable to attend.
3. Last Sunday, Luke's Gospel presented to us John
the Baptist, who proclaimed on the banks of the Jordan the
Messiah's imminent coming. Today the liturgy lets us hear the
continuation of this Gospel passage: the Baptist explains to the
crowds how in practice to prepare the way of the Lord. He
tells the various categories of people who ask him: "What
then shall we do?" (Lk 3:10, 12, 14), what must be
done to prepare themselves to welcome the Messiah.
This Gospel passage, in a certain sense, reminds
us of the Jubilee meetings for the various social or professional
categories. It also reminds us of you, dear brothers and
sisters: by your Jubilee pilgrimage it is as though you too have
come to ask: "What must we do?". The first answer that
the word of God gives you is an invitation to rediscover joy. Is
not the Jubilee—a term connected with
"jubilation"—an exhortation to be
full of joy, because the Lord has come to dwell among us and has
given us his love?
However, this joy that flows from divine grace is
not a superficial or fleeting happiness. It is a deep joy,
rooted in the heart, which can imbue the believer's entire life. A
joy that can coexist with difficulties, trials, even—however
paradoxical this may seem—with pain and
death. It is the joy of Christmas and Easter, the gift of the
incarnate Son of God, who died and rose again; a joy that no one can
take from those who are one with him in faith and works (cf. Jn
16:22-23).
Many of you, dear friends, work to entertain
the public in creating and producing shows that are meant to
offer an opportunity for healthy relaxation and amusement. If
Christian joy in its proper sense is found at a more directly
spiritual level, nevertheless it also includes the healthy
enjoyment that is good for the mind and body. Thus society
should be grateful to those who produce and present intelligent and
relaxing broadcasts and programmes which are entertaining without
being alienating, humorous but not vulgar. Spreading authentic joy
can be a genuine form of social charity.
Be constantly aware of your responsibility to the public
4. The Church, then, like John the Baptist, has a
specific message for you today, dear workers in the
entertainment world. A message which could be expressed in these
words: in your work, always remember the people who are your
audience, their rights and their legitimate expectations,
especially when it is a question of people who are still in
formation. Do not let yourselves be influenced by mere financial or
ideological interest. This is the fundamental principle of the
ethics of social communications, which each of you is called to
apply to his own area of activity. In this regard, the Pontifical
Council for Social Communications published a specific document last
June: Ethics in Social Communications, on which I invite you
to reflect.
Particularly those among you who are better known
to the public must be constantly aware of their responsibility.
People look at you, dear friends, with fondness and interest. Always
be positive and consistent models for them, capable of instilling
trust, optimism and hope.
In order to carry out this demanding mission, the
Lord comes to your aid and you can have recourse to him by listening
to his word and praying. Yes, dear friends, you who work with
images, gestures and sounds; in other words, you work with the
exterior. For this very reason you must be men and women with
a strong interiority and be capable of recollection. God dwells
with in us, more inward than our innermost self, as Augustine
pointed out. If you know how to converse with him, you will be
better able to communicate with your neighbour. If you have a keen
awareness of the good, the true and the beautiful, your creative
production, even the simplest, will have good aesthetic and moral
quality.
5. The Church is close to you and counts on
you! She expects you to instill in cinema, television, radio,
the theatre, circuses and every form of entertainment that Gospel
"leaven" which enables every human reality to develop its
positive potential to the maximum.
It is impossible to think of a new evangelization
that does not involve your world, the world of entertainment,
which is so important in forming minds and habits. I am thinking of
the many initiatives which present the Bible message and the very
rich heritage of the Christian tradition in the language of
forms, sounds and images through the theatre, cinema and television.
I am also thinking of those works and programmes that are not
explicitly religious but are still capable of speaking to peoples'
hearts, prompting them to wonder, to question and to reflect,
6. Dear brothers and sisters! Providence has
wanted your Jubilee to be celebrated a few days before Christmas,
certainly the feast most often portrayed in your field of work
at all levels, from the mass media to the living cribs. May today's
meeting help us to enter into harmony with the true Christmas
spirit, which is very different from the worldly spirit that makes
it a commercial opportunity.
Let Mary, Mother of the Incarnate Word, guide you
on your journey of preparation for this solemnity. She silently
awaits the fullfilment of the divine promises and teaches us that to
bring peace and joy to the world, we must first welcome into our
heart the Prince of Peace and source of joy, Jesus Christ. For
this to happen, we must be converted to his love and be ready to do
his will.
I hope, dear friends of the entertainment world,
that you too will have this comforting experience. In the most
varied languages, you will then be messengers of joy, of that
joy which Christ gives to all humanity at Christmas.
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