Pope: communication becomes
effective only when it is witness
Pope Francis addressing the Dicastery for Communication (Vatican Media) |
When Pope Francis met some 500 members, consultors,
officials and employees of the Vatican Dicastery for Communication on Monday,
he chose to talk to them off the cuff. However, he handed a copy of his
prepared remarks to the Prefect of the Dicastery, Paolo Rufini, offering it “as
a source of reflection”.
By Robin Gomes
For the Church, communication is a mission which becomes
truly effective when it becomes a witness, which is a participation in life in
communion with one another given to by the Spirit, that leads us to discover
that we are in communion one of another, members one of another.
Pope Francis made the point in the prepared text of
his discourse to the Dicastery on the occasion of its Plenary Assembly
which has its theme, “We are members one of another” (Eph 4:25).
As part of the reform of the Roman Curia, the Pope
established the Dicastery in June 2015 as the Secretariat for Communication,
bringing under it 9 Vatican media entities, including Vatican Radio. The
Pope changed the name to the Dicastery for Communication in June 2018.
Reform, change, future, past
Pope Francis noted that his meeting with the Dicastery was
taking place for the first time since the start of the reform 4 years
ago. Reforms, he said, are “almost always laborious”, with some
“particularly difficult stretches” and “misunderstandings”, but he said he was
happy “to see that the process is going forward with foresight and
prudence.”
However, for the Church, the Pope said, communication is a
mission and no investment is too high to spread the Word of God.
In this task, the Pope said, one must have the courage to
change, never to feel there is no further to go, nor to be discouraged, and to
abandon false securities and embrace the challenge of the future.
To move ahead, he stressed, is not to extinguish the memory
of the past, but to keep its fire burning.
“May the memory of all that has already been done, and the
awareness of a shared effort, fill you with the strength to go forward on this
path.”
Unity and witness
In the face of the huge challenges in the field of
communication with exponential growth, Christians as communicators, the
Pope said, are called to be united, as members one of another, in order be able
to respond, ever better, to the demands of the Church's mission.
The Pope said that communication in the Church must be
characterized by the principle of participation and sharing.
Communication is truly effective only when it becomes witness, that is, a
participation in life which is given to us by the Spirit and that leads us to
discover that we are in communion one with another, members one of
another. As Christians, he said, we are called to manifest that communion
which marks our identity as believers.
The Pope thanked Vatican’s journalists and media people who,
he said, keep pace with his commitments, working behind the scenes, putting all
their professionalism and creativity, their passion and discretion into their
work, at the service of the Church.
Thanking them for helping him speak in almost 40 languages,
on paper, radio, television networks, websites and the social media, the Holy
Father called it a “Pentecostal miracle”.
Please read the translation of the Pope’s prepared
remarks by Vatican News:
Dear Cardinals,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I am pleased to welcome you and I thank the Prefect, Dr.
Paolo Ruffini, who is presiding over the plenary assembly for the first time,
for the words he has addressed to me on behalf of you all. Some of your faces
are familiar, because you accompany me in my daily work and on my apostolic
journeys. I know, however, that there are many other people who also go about
their working life according to the pace of the Pope's commitments. But they do
so “behind the scenes”, putting all their professionalism and creativity, their
passion and discretion into their work, at the service of the Church.
I am happy to be able to meet you all together today and
thank you for what you do! Thanks to your work many people are encouraged in
their journeys of faith and many are invited to search for and encounter the
Lord. Thanks to your work the Pope speaks almost forty languages - it is a true
"Pentecostal miracle"! Thanks to you the Magisterium of the Pope and
of the Church is read on paper, listened to on the radio, seen on television networks
and on websites and shared through social media, in an increasingly whirlwind
digital world.
It is the first time that I have met you all together
since the beginning of the process, four years ago, to incorporate in a new
Dicastery of the Roman Curia, all the realities that, in different ways, deal
with communications (cf. Motu Proprio The current context of communications, 27
June 2015).
Reforms are almost always laborious, and so is the one
concerning Vatican media. There may have been some particularly difficult
stretches on this path, there may have been some misunderstandings, but I am
happy to see that the process is going forward with foresight and prudence. I
am aware of the effort you have made to make the best use of the resources
entrusted to you and contain unproductive costs.
For the Church, communication is a mission. No investment
is too high to spread the Word of God. At the same time, every talent must be
well used, made to bear fruit. This too is a measurement of the credibility of
our message.
Moreover, to remain faithful to the gift received, one
must have the courage to change, to never feel there is no further to go, nor
to be discouraged. You must always be ready to put yourselves on the line,
abandon false securities and embrace the challenge of the future. To move ahead
is not to extinguish the memory of the past, it’s to keep its fire burning.
I have seen the work you have done. I see it every day.
For this reason, today I would like to thank God, together with you, for the
strength that He has given you and that He gives us. May the memory of all that
has already been done, and the awareness of a shared effort, fill you with the
strength to go forward on this path.
In reality, our strength alone is not enough. St Paul VI
highlighted this 55 years ago when he addressed the members of the first
plenary assembly of what was then called the Pontifical Commission for Social
Communications. He recognized how limited our strength is in the face of this
immense field of communication. But it is precisely because of this - he said -
that it is necessary “to think of another order of forces, another way of
judging things; an order and a way, that we must learn at the school of the
Lord. […] Faith must sustain the smallness of our humble efforts [...]. The
more we become instruments in the hands of God, the more we become small and
generous, all the more probable it will be that our efficiency will increase”.
(Teachings II [1964], 563).
We know that since then, the challenges in this field
have grown exponentially and our forces are never enough. The challenge to
which you are called, as Christians and as communicators, is truly a huge one.
And precisely for this reason it is beautiful.
I am therefore pleased that the theme chosen for this
Assembly is “We are members one of another” (Eph 4:25). Your strength lies in
unity, in being members one of another. Only in this way will we be able to
respond, ever better, to the demands of the Church's mission.
In my Message for this year's World Communications Day,
which bears the same title, I wrote that “A community is that much stronger if
it is cohesive and supportive", the more "it pursues common
objectives”. “The metaphor of the body and the members leads us to reflect on
our identity, which is based on communion and on “otherness”. As Christians we
all recognize ourselves as members of the one body of whose head is Christ,”
and “we are called to manifest that communion which marks our identity as
believers. Faith itself, in fact, is a relationship, an encounter; and under
the impetus of God’s love, we can communicate, welcome and understand the gift
of the other and respond to it”.
Communication in the Church must be characterized by this
principle of participation and sharing. Communication is truly effective only
when it becomes witness, that is, a participation in life which is given to us
by the Spirit and that leads us to discover that we are in communion one of
another, members one of another.
Saint John Paul II wrote in his Apostolic Letter The
rapid development: “Communication both within the Church community, and between
the Church and the world at large, requires openness and a new approach towards
facing questions regarding the world of media. […] This is one of the areas in
which collaboration between the lay faithful and Pastors is most needed, as the
Council appropriately emphasized.” “A great many wonderful things are to be
hoped for from this familiar dialogue between the laity and their spiritual
leaders, [...] In this way, the whole Church, strengthened by each one of its members,
may more effectively fulfil its mission for the life of the world " (Lumen
Gentium, 37). (n. 12).
This is why I encourage you to continue, in your daily
work, to be more and more of a team, nurturing this collaboration between lay
faithful, religious and priests of many countries and of many languages, which
is very good for the Church. May the very style of your work bear witness to
communion.
I also encourage you, beyond the work of this plenary
assembly, to seek all possible ways to strengthen your network with local
Churches with ingenuity and creativity. I encourage you to favour the formation
of digital environments in which to communicate, not only to connect.
I know that this Dicastery has recently adopted concrete
tools to promote circular communication between the local Churches and the
Dicastery itself, at the service of all. I know that you have new projects,
which will certainly not lack the support of the Pope. Through your work you
participate in service to the unity of the Church and to the coordination of
communication of the whole Roman Curia. We must walk together. We must know how
to interpret and give orientation to our time. May ecclesial communication
truly be the expression of a single “body”.
To each of you thank you, thank you also to your families
and communities. I ask you, please, to pray for me, and from my heart I bless
you.
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