Vatican City, 23 January 2015 (VIS) –
A press conference was held in the Holy See Press Office this morning
in which Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli, president of the Pontifical
Council for Social Communications, and Professor Chiara Giaccardi of
the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the Catholic University of
the Sacred Heart in Milan, Italy, presented the Holy Father's Message
for the 49th World Day of Communications, entitled “Communicating
the family: a privileged place of encounter with the gift of love”.
Archbishop Celli explained, “From
this text there emerges a positive overall message, given that the
Pope affirms that the family continues to be a great resource and not
merely a problem or an institution in crisis. As we can see, the Pope
is not interested principally in the problem between the family and
communication linked to new technologies. He instead focuses on the
most profoundly true and human dimension of communication”.
The message affirms, he continued, that
the family “has the capacity to communicate itself and to
communicate, by virtue of the bond that links its various members”,
and he noted that “a paragraph is dedicated to prayer, defined as a
fundamental form of communication that finds in the family its truest
environment of discovery and experience”.
“In this context”, he added,
forgiveness is understood “as a dynamic of communication, since
when contrition is expressed and accepted, it becomes possible to
restore and rebuild the communication which broke down”. He also
remarked that a long paragraph is devoted to the most modern media
and their influence on communication in and among families, both as a
help and a hindrance. He noted that the text clearly restates what
has already been underlined in the teachings of St. John Paul II and
Pope Benedict XVI. “But it is important to rediscover yet again
that the parents are the first educators of their children, who are
increasingly present in the digital sphere. The presence of parents
does not have a primarily technological dimension – generally
children know more than their parents in this field – but is
important on account of the wisdom they contribute”.
“It is well-known that one of the
great risks is that children or teenagers may isolate themselves in a
'virtual world', significantly reducing their necessary integration
in real everyday life and in the interrelationships of friendship.
This is not to say that the relationships of affection or friendship
that develop in the context of the web are not real. It must also be
remembered that the young – and the not so young – are called
upon to give witness to Christ in the digital world too, in the
social networks we all inhabit”.
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