Internet’s
impact on families raised at Synod
(Vatican Radio) Among the additions and modifications
recommended for the Synod’s final summary document was the impact of the
Internet on the family. The topic was raised in the Synod’s second week, during
discussions held in the various language groups, by Archbishop Paul-André
Durocher, president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.
“The discussion group thought it was important enough to propose a
modification to the document so that we (the Church) would speak about this,”
he explained in an interview with Vatican Radio.
The Archbishop of Gatineau, Quebec, who authors his own blog,
noted that the past 20 years has seen the Internet enter almost every home and
become a part of almost every person’s life.
“There are blessings that come with the Internet,” he conceded,
referring to married couples who met on Catholic dating sites and families who
use the Internet for various resources that nurture their faith and prayer
lives.
“But there are also great, great dangers,” he warned. He offered
as an example a couple he knows whose marriage ended after one of the spouses
found another partner through an online chatroom.
He also underlined the harmful effects of online pornography.
“It is having a huge impact on the way we view sexuality,” he
said. “We have to realize that pornography is a huge business that involves the
demeaning of women, that involves human trafficking.
“It is not about free expression,” he continued. “It is degrading;
it is abasing. And our children are being exposed to it continually.”
Problems presented by the Internet “are very serious issues that
we need to look at when we talk about family life today,” he stated.
Report and interview by Laura
Ieraci
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