Home
Catholic News
Seasonal
Saints
Special Reports
Movies
Social Media
Shopping
Donate
Catholic News
Top Catholic News
Electing a New Pope
Pope Benedict XVI
Economic Justice
War and Peace
Health Care
Middle East
Politics
Saints in the News
Bioethics
Evolution/Creationism
Respect Life
Vocations
Ecology
Religious Intolerance
Immigration
Interfaith Relations
Sexual Abuse
Death Penalty
Homosexuality
Seasonal Features
Lent
Easter/Pentecost
St. Patrick's Day
Earth Day
Mother's Day
Father's Day
Back to School
St. Nicholas
St. Francis
Halloween
All Saints Day
Thanksgiving
Advent
Christmas to Epiphany
Christian Unity Week
Valentine's Day
Saints
Saint of the Day
Mary
St. Francis
St. Clare
St. Anthony
St. Patrick
Mother Teresa
Patron Saints
Saints by Date
Saints by Name
Saints in the News
FAQs
Special Reports
Pope John Paul II
Middle East Christians
Food, Family, Faith
Sacraments
Pope Benedict's US Visit
Movies
New Movies
On Faith and Media
Movies by title
Shopping
Audiobooks
Books
Buy at Audible
E-cards
ACO iPhone App
Saint of the Day iPhone App
Magazine Subscription
Parish Handouts
Video
Share:
Daily Features
St. Anthony Messenger
Books
Catholic e-Greetings
Parish Newsletters/Services
E-Newsletters
Shopping
Media Productions
Living Your Faith
Update Your Faith
Español
Contact Us
About Us
Donate
Advertise
Site Map
Daily Features
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Daily Catholic Question
Top Catholic News
Catholic Community Speaks
St. Anthony Messenger
Current Issue
Archive
Subscribe
Books
Catalog
Franciscan Media Books
Servant Books
Submit Proposal
Writer's Guidelines
Parish Newsletters/Services
Catholic Update
Every Day Catholic
Bringing Home the Word
Homily Helps
Faith Formation Update
I Believe
E-Newsletters
Saint of the Day
Minute Meditations
Catholic Greetings
Franciscan Media E-News
Friar Jack's E-spirations
Catholic SAMPler
AmericanCatholic Connections
Faith Formation Update
Media Productions
American Catholic Radio
Online Event
Sunday Soundbites
Lenten Radio Retreats
Advent Radio Retreats
Sharing the Word
Living Your Faith
Post Prayer Requests
Once Catholic
Pledge Peace
Update Your Faith
Sunday Supplements
Catholic Church FAQs
Rosary
Sacraments
Sacramentals
Stations of the Cross
Saints FAQs
Pet Blessings
Contact Us
Directory
Permissions
Privacy Policy
Submit Proposal
Writers' Guidelines
Employment
Website Resources
advertisement
advertisement
top catholic news
View Comments
Catholic Blogosphere: Promoting Charity, Truth Online
By
Cindy Wooden
Source:
Catholic News Service
Published:
Monday, November 02, 2009
Email
|
Print
|
Size:
A
A
|
VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Communications technology keeps changing, but the need to deliver a message with truth and charity is never obsolete, said Italian Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli.
As president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Archbishop Celli presided over a four-day meeting of cardinals, bishops and Catholic media professionals to discuss—mainly in small groups—new pastoral guidelines for church communications.
A recurring theme during the meeting Oct. 26-29 was what constitutes Catholic communications and what, if anything, can be done about those who use the word Catholic to describe themselves while using all sorts of nasty adjectives to describe anyone who doesn't agree with them.
Archbishop Celli said he didn't think a Catholic bloggers' "code of conduct" would accomplish much, especially when what is really needed is a reflection on what it means to communicate.
Upright, ethical communication is a natural result of a sincere desire to share the truth about God, about faith and about the dignity of the human person, he said.
The archbishop said that what Pope Benedict XVI has said about solidarity and development aid goes for communications as well: "Charity needs truth and truth needs charity."
"Anyone speaking publicly as a Catholic has to have those ethical values that are part of a serious, honest form of communication," Archbishop Celli said.
"In the past, the church's educational efforts included helping people decide what they should or should not watch. Now it must also help them decide what they should or should not produce" and put on the Internet, he said.
Carl A. Anderson, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus and a consultant to Archbishop Celli's council, said, "If Catholics cannot deal with each other with civility, how can we expect others to?"
"We make certain claims about what kind of community we are; we have set the standards high and we must try really, really hard to live up to that," Anderson said.
He said Pope Benedict is an example of a good Catholic communicator: "He seeks clarity and definition while demonstrating charity and respect for others."
Talking about the Catholic blogosphere, Los Angeles Cardinal Roger M. Mahony said, "I have been appalled by some of the things I've seen; of course, I've been the object of some of them."
Being Christian, he said, means treating others like Jesus treated people: reaching out to all and exercising extreme caution when making judgments.
"One of the side effects of the new technology that frightens me a bit is that people can hide behind a fake facade and then start shooting cannons at other people," the cardinal said.
One of the pontifical council's consultants, Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, the head of Canada's Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation, said the Internet and blogs have brought about a "radicalization of rhetoric," even among Catholics.
The Web site of Salt and Light Television, he said, sometimes receives hundreds of comments on a story.
"Many we don't publish because of the filth and some we've turned over to the police" because of the threats they contain, he said.
Asked to address the council about Catholic media in North America, Father Rosica said, "On the Internet there is no accountability, no code of ethics and no responsibility for one's words and actions."
So many Web sites and bloggers who call themselves Catholics focus so much on negative stories and messages that increasingly "Christians are known as the people who are against everything," he said.
Cardinal Mahony said the sharp and often uncharitable divisions among Catholics seen on the Internet was particularly pronounced during the 2008 U.S. presidential election campaign.
And, he said, the campaign was not exactly a high point for unity among the U.S. bishops either.
During the campaign, Cardinal Mahony said, "I sensed a dangerous shift away from unity in faith and faith practice to differing opinions on this party or the other party, which I think is a very, very dangerous path to go down."
Some people could get "the impression that some bishops are very much in favor of one political party over the other, which should not be," he said. He added that when it comes to applying the Gospel to social questions bishops should be models for the Catholic faithful on how to hold a civil discussion, online or offline.
"You don't have dialogue when people anonymously throw out their hatreds, their prejudices, their biases and always—in every case—end up attacking people," the cardinal said.
More on The Church and Cyberspace >>
More Top Catholic News >>
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
blog comments powered by
Disqus
MORE NEWS SECTIONS
Top Catholic News
Bioethics and the Catholic Church
Christians in the Middle East
Death Penalty
Ecology and Faith
Economic Justice
Electing a New Pope
Franciscans
Haiti Earthquake 2010
Homosexuality, Gay Marriage and the Catholic Church
Lent/Easter
Marriage
Politics and The Church
Pope Benedict XVI
Religious Intolerance
Respect Life
Saints in the News
The Church and Immigration
The Church and Interfaith Relations
The Church and Sexual Abuse
The Church, Evolution and Creation
Vocations
War and Peace
Year for Priests