Pope Francis has said the goal of Catholics involved in Church
communications is to help the world rediscover “the beauty that is at
the heart of our existence and our journey, the beauty of faith” and the
encounter with Christ.
Speaking on Saturday to participants in the Plenary Assembly of the
Pontifical Council for Social Communications, the Pope said the Church’s
communications must be about learning how to enter into “dialogue with
the men and women of today in order to appreciate their desires, their
doubts and their hopes.”
The Pontiff said communications efforts must examine whether they are helping others to meet Christ.
He commented that many people today are reluctant to embrace a
Christianity that appears “sterile and in difficulty” while others
suffer from “a growing sense of disorientation and isolation.” The
Church must reach out to answer their needs, he said.
Referring to the internet, which was the main topic for the plenary
meeting of the Pontifical Council, Pope Francis spoke of the enormous
opportunities created by modern technology.
“The great digital continent not only involves technology but is made
up of real men and women who bring with them their hopes, their
suffering, their concerns and their pursuit of what is true, beautiful
and good.”
The fundamental challenge is not a technological one, the Pope said,
although technology makes the work possible; the real challenge is
bringing people to Christ.
A genuine encounter with Christ must be personal, he underlined, “It cannot be manipulated.”
“In these times we see a great temptation within the Church, which is
spiritual harassment: the manipulation of conscience; a theological
brainwashing which in the end leads to an encounter with Christ which is
purely nominal, not with the live person of Christ,” he warned.
He added, “In a person’s encounter with Christ, both Christ and the
person need to be involved! Not what’s wanted by the “spiritual
engineer” who wants to manipulate people. This is the challenge,” he
said.