'The proclamation of Christ requires a profound knowledge of the new technological culture on the part of today's teachers and evangelists'.
The Internet is neither good nor bad: 'As any instrument placed in man's hands, the Internet becomes what man himself decides.'
ROME (Zenit.org) - The Church in Europe is asking itself how well its taking advantage of the Internet to proclaim Christ, and being aided in this evaluation by representatives of projects such as Wikipedia, Facebook and YouTube.
This analysis is taking place at a four-day conference that began today in the Vatican.
Benedict XVI is the first to encourage such a self-examination, as affirmed in his message to the participants delivered by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, his secretary of state. The Holy Father urges an analysis of "this new culture and its implications for the Church's mission."
"Just as the first generations of Christians took pains to understand the pagan milieu of the Greek and Roman world so that the truth of the Gospel might touch the hearts and minds of their hearers, so too the proclamation of Christ requires a profound knowledge of the new technological culture on the part of today's teachers and evangelists," states the papal message.
The symposium is promoted by the Commission for the Media of the Council of European Bishops' Conferences (CCEE).
Internet is culture
The meeting was presented by Cardinal Josip Bozanic, archbishop of Zagreb, Croatia, and vice-president of the CCEE, who began by clarifying that the "Internet is not only a recipient that receives different cultures. The Internet is culture."
The cardinal posed urgent questions to the representatives of the European episcopate: What implications does the presence of the Internet have today for the mission of the Church? What repercussions does it have in the evangelizing endeavor of cultures and the inculturation of the faith? How has the Internet entered in the ordinary pastoral care of our dioceses and parishes?
In his clues for answers to these questions, Cardinal Bozanic acknowledged that many in the Church see the Internet "more as an instrument," and he added: "We could think this three or four years ago. Today we must see that Internet is above all a world, which some have even called the 'seventh continent.'"
For most people, especially young people, for the Web generation that has grown up on the Internet, this virtual place, the world of the new media, is becoming the main venue where their human, moral and cognitive formation takes place, the cardinal suggested.
"On the Internet," he said, "young people create their social ties and learn to live!"
According to the cardinal, the Internet is neither good nor bad: "As any instrument placed in man's hands, the Internet becomes what man himself decides."
In this context, he said, for the Church, her presence on the Internet "more than an opportunity is a necessity," as "without this presence she would not succeed in entering into dialogue with thousands of young people, primary actors in this reality, given that she would remain antiquated."
For this reason, the cardinal left these questions for consideration: "What view do others have of us? To what degree are our sites really the expression of the wealth of the Christian patrimony and successful in transmitting the Good News that the Lord has asked us to spread?
Diakonia of culture
The next speaker was Archbishop Claudio Celli, president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, who said that the Church has been slow in understanding and even slower in applying the words that John Paul II wrote in the encyclical "Redemptoris Missio" (of 1990), when the Pope acknowledged that in the Church "this Areopagus" of communication "has been somewhat neglected."
"Generally other instruments for evangelical proclamation and for Christian formation are favored, while the means of social communication are left to the initiative of individuals or small groups, and they enter the pastoral program only at the secondary level. Work in these means, however, does not only have the objective to multiply the proclamation. It is a more profound event, because evangelization itself of modern culture depends to a great extent on its influence," explained Archbishop Celli, citing the Polish Pontiff.
He also mentioned the new stimulus that Benedict XVI has given to the presence of the Church on the Internet, in particular with his address to the plenary assembly of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, so that it might exercise "a 'diakonia of culture' in the present 'digital continent,' following its ways to proclaim the Gospel, the only Word that can save man."
Archbishop Celli made a wake-up call, saying that 70% of Catholic sites have yet to take on the elements offered by Web 2.0, that is, interactive production and on occasions, community production.
Lesson of the Evangelicals
Finally, Bishop Jean-Michel di Falco Leandri of Gap and Embrun, France, president of the European ...
In Aramaic, Hebrew, Phoenician and Arabic - www is phonetically 666 and symbolically associated with shin - the 22nd letter which forms in www three score and 6 (22x3 = 66).
That doesn't mean we shouldn't be on the net - its just a machine. We better understand what we are dealing with.
Buying and selling, control of humanity will eventually lead to universally unique IDs (UUIDs) which will be attached to the internet. This will be presented as benevolent and beneficial.
Combined with these social changes like homosexual marriage etc.... we Christians will be forced into a sort of ghetto.
Refusing the mark of this internet beast - the UUID - will mean marginalization, loss of career, loss of benefits and currency.
Its a matter of time if we continue on the present course, and a matter of conscience to prepare to resist - not by being isolated, but by being in Communion with the Holy Catholic Church.
We must prepare ourselves to fear God and not man.
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