This
statement has been issued by Pope John Paul II in connection with
WORLD COMMUNICATIONS DAY, May 27, 1989
"THE CHURCH MUST LEARN TO COPE WITH COMPUTER CULTURE"
by Pope John Paul II
In one of her Eucharistic Prayers, the Church addresses God in these words: "You
formed man in your own likeness and set him over all creatures."[1]
For man and woman thus created and commissioned by God, the ordinary working day has great
and wonderful significance. People's ideas, activities and undertakings -- however
commonplace they may be -- are used by the Creator to renew the world, to lead it to
salvation, to make it a more perfect instrument of divine glory.
Almost 25 years ago, the fathers of the Second Vatican Council, reflecting on the Church
in the modern world, declared that men and women, serving their families and the community
in their ordinary occupations, were entitled to look upon their work as "a
prolongation of the work of the Creator ... and as their personal contribution to the
fulfillment in history of the divine plan."[2]
As the council fathers looked to the future and tried to discern the context in which the
Church would be called upon to carry out her mission, they could clearly see that the
progress of technology was already "transforming the face of the earth" and even
reaching out to conquer space.[3]
They recognized that developments in communications technology, in particular, were likely
to set off chain reactions with unforeseen consequences. Far from suggesting that
the Church should stand aloof or try to isolate herself from the mainstream of these
events, the council fathers saw the Church as being in the very midst of human progress,
sharing the experiences of the rest of humanity, seeking to understand them and to
interpret them in the light of faith. It was for God's faithful people to make creative
use of the new discoveries and technologies for the benefit of humanity and the
fulfillment of God's plan for the world.
This recognition of rapid change and this openness to new developments have proved timely
in the years that followed, for the pace of changes and development has continued to
accelerate.
Today, for example, one no longer thinks or speaks of social communications as mere
instruments or technologies. Rather they are now seen as part of a still unfolding culture
whose full implications are as yet imperfectly understood and whose potentialities remain
for the moment only partially exploited.
Here we find the basis for our reflections on this 24th World Communications Day. With
each day that passes, the vision of earlier years becomes ever more a reality. It was a
vision which foresaw the possibility of real dialogue between widely separated peoples, of
a worldwide sharing of ideas and aspirations, of growth in mutual knowl-
edge and understanding, of a strengthening of brotherhood across many hitherto
insurmountable barriers.[4]
With the advent of computer telecommunications and what are known as computer
participation systems, the Church is offered further means for fulfilling her mission.
Methods of facilitating communication and dialogue among her own members can strengthen
the bonds of unity between them. Immediate access to information makes it possible for her
to deepen her dialogue with the contemporary world.
In the new "computer culture" the Church can more readily inform the world of
her beliefs and explain the reasons for her stance on any given issue or event.
She can hear more clearly the voice of public opinion and enter into continuous discussion
with the world around her, thus involving herself more immediately in the common search
for solutions to humanity's many pressing problems.[5]
It is clear that the Church must also avail herself of the new resources provided by human
exploration in computer and satellite technology for her ever pressing task of
evangelization. Her most vital and urgent message has to do with knowledge of Christ and
the way of salvation which He offers. This is something she must put before the people of
every age, inviting them to embrace the Gospel out of love, ever mindful that "truth
cannot impose itself except by virtue of its own truth, which wins over the mind with both
gentleness and power."[6]
As the wisdom and insights of past years teach us: "God has spoken to humanity
according to the culture proper to each age. Similarly the Church, which in the course of
time has existed in varying circumstances, has used the resources of different cultures in
her preaching to spread and explain the message of Christ."[7]
"The first proclamation, catechesis or the further deepening of faith cannot do
without the (means of social communication) ... the Church would feel guilty before the
Lord if she did not use these powerful means that human skill is daily rendering more
perfect. It is through them that she proclaims 'from the housetops' the message of which
she is the depository."[8]
Surely we must be grateful for the new technology which enables us to store information in
vast man-made artificial memories, thus providing wide and instant access to the knowledge
which is our human heritage, to the Church's teaching and tradition, the words of Sacred
Scripture, the counsels of the great masters of spirituality, the history and traditions
of the local churches, of religious orders and lay institutes, and to the ideas and
experiences of initiators and innovators whose insights bear constant witness to the
faithful presence in our midst of a loving Father who brings out of His treasure new
things and old.[9]
Young people especially are rapidly adapting to the computer culture and its
"language." This is surely a cause for satisfaction. Let us "trust
the young."[10] They have had the advantage of growing
up with the new developments, and it will be their duty to employ these new instruments
for a wider and more intense dialogue among all the diverse races and classes who share
this "shrinking globe."
It falls to them to search out ways in which the new systems of data conservation and
exchange can be used to assist in promoting greater universal justice, greater respect for
human rights, a healthy development for all individuals and peoples, and the freedoms
essential for a fully human life.
Whether we are young or old, let us rise to the challenge of new discoveries and
technologies by bringing to them a moral vision rooted in our religious faith, in our
respect for the human person, and our commitment to transform the world in accordance with
God's plan.
On this World Communications Day, let us pray for wisdom in using the potential of the
"computer age" to serve man's human and transcendent calling, and thus give
glory to the Father from whom all good things come.
John Paul II
Vatican City
NOTES
[1] Eucharistic Prayer IV
[2] "Gaudium et Spes," 34
[3] cf. "Gaudium et Spes," 5
[4] cf. "Communio et Progressio," 181, 182
[5] cf. "Communio et Progressio," 114 ff.
[6] "Dignitatis Humanae," 1
[7] "Gaudium et Spes," 58
[8] "Evangelii Nuntiandi," 45
[9] cf. Mt 13:52
[10] "Communio et Progressio," 70
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