For one Catholic bishop in Nigeria, social media and family life are
two keys for evangelization and sharing the values of the Catholic
Church.
“We need to invent new means of forming people’s consciences. We need
to form new means of confronting the agents of non-values that are
among us. We need to form new means of colonizing the media so that
people can hear the voice of the Church,” said Bishop Emmanuel Adetoyese
Badejo of Oyo.
The interview, conducted by Catholic News Agency for Africa, was released after the bishops’ conference in Nigeria last week.
Bishop Badejo is the chair of the Pan-African Episcopal Committee of
Social Communications and is director of communications for the Catholic
Secretariat of Nigeria. This year he is celebrating his 30th year as a
priest and 9th year as a bishop.
The bishop warned of sometimes inappropriate use and malicious intent
behind main stream media. Social media can divide communities, exploit,
and promote evil, he continued to say, explaining the role of the
individual to create and distribute news.
“It depends on the man who is behind the camera, nor can the pen
decide what to write, it depends on the one who is holding the pen.”
This does not mean that the Church is anti-media, he clarified. For
decades, the Church has been stressing the importance of communication,
he said, adding that social media is a positive gift with the ability to
advance a mutual benefit for all humanity.
Bishop Badejo also said that “teaching and making the voice of the
Church heard…is one of the highest responsibilities that the conference
can undertake” because it is one of the highest sources of witnessing
Christ.
“The family will remain the first environment where the child learns
to appreciate humanity. The family is the first humanizing organization.
The Church has the privilege of being the interpreter of revelation but
the family is the cradle where all that has to be prepared.”
Because the family is the first source of education, it is dangerous
to leave learning solely in the hands of media and education system.
Appreciation of humanity comes with the family, he said, but secular
media strongly opposes and weakens the family.
And while the family is natural ally to the Church, he warned, it has been weakened.
He spoke out against efforts to lead parishioners away from the
truth, and said that hypocrisy and anti-values are sometimes even
preached to the people from homilies. To fix this, he said, we must
realize “the pulpit has moved to anywhere human beings gather, or can
listen to anything.”
In earlier times, the Church was the leading voice in answers
regarding morality, Bishop Badejo said, but now people seek answers in
music and videos instead, ignoring the Church’s wisdom and contribution.
“People tend to completely ignore the effort the Church has
consistently made to affect the Nigerian society in her mission of
education,” he said. “The setting up of schools, educational institutes,
formation centers, even seminaries and formation houses are activities
of the Church that have transformed the society.”
The good work of the Church needs to be shown to the world, as does
the reality of those in poverty, the bishop said. He highlighted the
need to show the plight of those without a voice and to take a strong
stance in favor of truth and human dignity.