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Ethics in Communications
Pontifical Council for
Social Communications
June 4, 2000
Document Type: Other
Ecclesial Pronouncements
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Introduction
1. Great good and great evil come from
the use people make of the media of social communication. Although
it typically is saidand we often shall say herethat
"media" do this or that, these are not blind forces of nature beyond
human control. For even though acts of communicating often do have
unintended consequences, nevertheless, people choose whether to
use the media for good or evil ends, in a good or evil way.
These choices, central to the ethical
question, are made not only by those who receive communicationviewers,
listeners, readersbut especially by those who control the
instruments of social communication and determine their structures,
policies and content. They include public officials and corporate
executives, members of governing boards, owners, publishers and
station managers, editors, news directors, producers, writers, correspondents
and others. For them, the ethical question is particularly acute:
Are the media being used for good or evil?
2. The impact of social communication
can hardly be exaggerated. Here people come into contact with other
people and with events, form their opinions and values. Not only
do they transmit and receive information and ideas through these
instruments, but often they experience living itself as an experience
of media (cf. Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Aetatis
Novae, 2).
Technological change rapidly is making
the media of communication even more pervasive and powerful. "The
advent of the information society is a real cultural revolution"
(Pontifical Council for Culture, Toward a Pastoral Approach to
Culture, 9); and the twentieth century's dazzling innovations
may have been only a prologue to what this new century will bring.
The range and diversity of media accessible
to people in well-to-do countries already are astonishing: books
and periodicals, television and radio, films and videos, audio recordings,
electronic communication transmitted over the airwaves, over cable
and satellite, via the Internet. The contents of this vast outpouring
range from hard news to pure entertainment, prayer to pornography,
contemplation to violence. Depending on how they use media, people
can grow in sympathy and compassion or become isolated in a narcissistic,
self-referential world of stimuli with near-narcotic effects. Not
even those who shun the media can avoid contact with others who
are deeply influenced by them.
3. Along with these reasons, the Church
has reasons of her own for being interested in the means of social
communication. Viewed in the light of faith, the history of human
communication can be seen as a long journey from Babel, site and
symbol of communication's collapse (cf. Gn 11:48),
to Pentecost and the gift of tongues (cf. Acts 2:511)communication
restored by the power of the Spirit sent by the Son. Sent forth
into the world to announce the good news (cf. Mt 28:1920;
Mk 16:15), the Church has the mission of proclaiming the
Gospel until the end of time. Today, she knows, that requires using
media (cf. Vatican Council II, Inter Mirifica, 3; Pope Paul
VI, Evangelii Nuntiandi, 45; Pope John Paul II, Redemptoris
Missio, 37; Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Communio
et Progressio, 126134, Aetatis Novae, 11).
The Church also knows herself to be
a communio, a communion of persons and Eucharistic communities,
"rooted in and mirroring the intimate communion of the Trinity"
(Aetatis Novae, 10; cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, Some Aspects of the Church Understood As Communion).
Indeed, all human communication is grounded in the communication
among Father, Son and Spirit. But more than that, Trinitarian communion
reaches out to humankind: the Son is the Word, eternally "spoken"
by the Father; and in and through Jesus Christ, Son and Word made
flesh, God communicates himself and his salvation to women and men.
"In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the
prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son" (Heb
1:12). Communication in and by the Church finds its starting
point in the communion of love among the divine Persons and their
communication with us.
4. The Church's approach to the means
of social communication is fundamentally positive, encouraging.
She does not simply stand in judgment and condemn; rather, she considers
these instruments to be not only products of human genius but also
great gifts of God and true signs of the times (cf. Inter Mirifica,
1; Evangelii Nuntiandi, 45; Redemptoris Missio, 37).
She desires to support those who are professionally involved in
communication by setting out positive principles to assist them
in their work, while fostering a dialogue in which all interested
partiestoday, that means nearly everyonecan participate.
These purposes underlie the present document.
We say again: the media do nothing
by themselves; they are instruments, tools, used as people choose
to use them. In reflecting upon the means of social communication,
we must face honestly the "most essential" question raised by technological
progress: whether, as a result of it, the human person "is becoming
truly better, that is to say more mature spiritually, more aware
of the dignity of his humanity, more responsible, more open to others,
especially the neediest and the weakest, and readier to give and
to aid all" (Pope John Paul II, Redemptor Hominis, 15).
We take it for granted that the vast
majority of people involved in social communication in any capacity
are conscientious individuals who want to do the right thing. Public
officials, policy makers and corporate executives desire to respect
and promote the public interest as they understand it. Readers and
listeners and viewers want to use their time well for personal growth
and development so that they can lead happier, more productive lives.
Parents are anxious that what enters their homes through media be
in their children's interests. Most professional communicators desire
to use their talents to serve the human family, and are troubled
by the growing economic and ideological pressures present in many
sectors of the media to lower ethical standards.
The contents of the countless choices
made by all these people concerning the media are different from
group to group and individual to individual, but the choices all
have ethical weight and are subject to ethical evaluation. To choose
rightly, those choosing need to "know the principles of the moral
order and apply them faithfully" (Inter Mirifica, 4).
5. The Church brings several things
to this conversation. She brings a long tradition of moral wisdom,
rooted in divine revelation and human reflection (cf. Pope John
Paul II, Fides et Ratio, 3648). Part of this is a substantial
and growing body of social teaching, whose theological orientation
is an important corrective to "the 'atheistic' solution, which deprives
man of one of his basic dimensions, namely the spiritual one, and
to permissive and consumerist solutions, which under various pretexts
seek to convince man that he is free from every law and from God
himself" (Pope John Paul II, Centesimus Annus, 55). More
than simply passing judgment, this tradition offers itself in service
to the media. For example, "the Church's culture of wisdom can save
the media culture of information from becoming a meaningless accumulation
of facts" (Pope John Paul II, Message for the 33rd World Communications
Day, 1999).
The Church also brings something else
to the conversation. Her special contribution to human affairs,
including the world of social communication, is "precisely her vision
of the dignity of the person revealed in all its fullness in the
mystery of the incarnate Word" (Centesimus Annus, 47) In
the words of the Second Vatican Council, "Christ the Lord, Christ
the new Adam, in the very revelation of the mystery of the Father
and of his love, fully reveals man to himself and brings to light
his most high calling" (Gaudium et Spes, 22).
II. Social Communication That Serves
the Human Person
6. Following the Council's Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes
(cf. nos. 3031), the Pastoral Instruction on Social Communications
Communio et Progressio makes it clear that the media are
called to serve human dignity by helping people live well and function
as persons in community. Media do this by encouraging men and women
to be conscious of their dignity, enter into the thoughts and feelings
of others, cultivate a sense of mutual responsibility, and grow
in personal freedom, in respect for others' freedom, and in the
capacity for dialogue.
Social communication has immense power
to promote human happiness and fulfillment. Without pretending to
do more than give an overview, we note here, as we have done elsewhere
(cf. Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Ethics in
Advertising, 48), some economic, political, cultural,
educational and religious benefits.
7. Economic. The market is not
a norm of morality or a source of moral value, and market economics
can be abused, but the market can serve the person (cf. Centesimus
Annus, 34), and media play an indispensable role in a market
economy. Social communication supports business and commerce, helps
spur economic growth, employment and prosperity, encourages improvements
in the quality of existing goods and services and the development
of new ones, fosters responsible competition that serves the public
interest, and enables people to make informed choices by telling
them about the availability and features of products.
In short, today's complex national
and international economic systems could not function without the
media. Remove them, and crucial economic structures would collapse,
with great harm to countless people and to society.
8. Political. Social communication
benefits society by facilitating informed citizen participation
in the political process. The media draw people together for the
pursuit of shared purposes and goals, thus helping to form and sustain
authentic political communities.
Media are indispensable in today's
democratic societies. They supply information about issues and events,
officeholders and candidates for office. They enable leaders to
communicate quickly and directly with the public about urgent matters.
They are important instruments of accountability, turning the spotlight
on incompetence, corruption and abuses of trust, while also calling
attention to instances of competence, public-spiritedness and devotion
to duty.
9. Cultural. The means of social
communication offer people access to literature, drama, music and
art otherwise unavailable to them, and so promote human development
in respect to knowledge and wisdom and beauty. We speak not only
of presentations of classic works and the fruits of scholarship,
but also of wholesome popular entertainment and useful information
that draw families together, help people solve everyday problems,
raise the spirits of the sick, shut-ins and the elderly, and relieve
the tedium of life.
Media also make it possible for ethnic
groups to cherish and celebrate their cultural traditions, share
them with others, and transmit them to new generations. In particular,
they introduce children and young people to their cultural heritage.
Communicators, like artists, serve the common good by preserving
and enriching the cultural heritage of nations and peoples (cf.
Pope John Paul II, Letter to Artists, 4).
10. Educational. The media are
important tools of education in many contexts, from school to workplace,
and at many stages in life. Preschoolers being introduced to the
rudiments of reading and mathematics, young people seeking vocational
training or degrees, elderly persons pursuing new learning in their
latter yearsthese and many others have access via these means
to a rich and growing panoply of educational resources.
Media are standard instructional tools
in many classrooms. And beyond the classroom walls, the instruments
of communication, including the Internet, conquer barriers of distance
and isolation, bringing learning opportunities to villagers in remote
areas, cloistered religious, the homebound, prisoners and many others.
11. Religious. Many people's
religious lives are greatly enriched through the media. They carry
news and information about religious events, ideas and personalities;
they serve as vehicles for evangelization and catechesis. Day in
and day out, they provide inspiration, encouragement and opportunities
for worship to persons confined to their homes or to institutions.
Sometimes, too, media contribute to
people's spiritual enrichment in extraordinary ways. For example,
huge audiences around the world view and, in a sense, participate
in important events in the life of the Church that are regularly
telecast via satellite from Rome. And over the years, media have
brought the words and images of the Holy Father's pastoral visits
to countless millions.
12. In all these settingseconomic,
political, cultural, educational, religiousas well as others,
the media can be used to build and sustain human community. And
indeed all communication ought to be open to community among persons.
"In order to become brothers and sisters,
it is necessary to know one another. To do this, it is...important
to communicate more extensively and more deeply" (Congregation for
Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life,
Fraternal Life in Community, 29). Communication that serves
genuine community is "more than the expression of ideas and the
indication of emotion. At its most profound level, it is the giving
of self in love" (Communio et Progressio, 11).
Communication like this seeks the well-being
and fulfillment of community members in respect to the common good
of all. But consultation and dialogue are needed to discern this
common good. Therefore it is imperative for the parties to social
communication to engage in such dialogue and submit themselves to
the truth about what is good. This is how the media can meet their
obligation to "witness to the truth about life, about human dignity,
about the true meaning of our freedom and mutual interdependence"
(Pope John Paul II, Message for the 33rd World Communications
Day, 1999).
III. Social Communication That Violates
the Good of the Person
13. The media also can be used to block
community and injure the integral good of persons: by alienating
people or marginalizing and isolating them; drawing them into perverse
communities organized around false, destructive values; fostering
hostility and conflict, demonizing others and creating a mentality
of "us" against "them"; presenting what is base and degrading in
a glamorous light, while ignoring or belittling what uplifts and
ennobles; spreading misinformation and disinformation, fostering
trivialization and banality. Stereotypingbased on race and
ethnicity, sex, age and other factors, including religionis
distressingly common in media. Often, too, social communication
overlooks what is genuinely new and important, including the good
news of the Gospel, and concentrates on the fashionable or faddish.
Abuses exist in each of the areas just
mentioned.
14. Economic. The media sometimes
are used to build and sustain economic systems that serve acquisitiveness
and greed. Neoliberalism is a case in point: "Based on a purely
economic conception of man," it "considers profit and the law of
the market as its only parameters, to the detriment of the dignity
of and the respect due to individuals and peoples" (Pope John Paul
II, Ecclesia in America, 156). In such circumstances, means
of communication that ought to benefit all are exploited for the
advantage of the few.
The process of globalization "can create
unusual opportunities for greater prosperity" (Centesimus Annus,
58); but side by side with it, and even as part of it, some nations
and peoples suffer exploitation and marginalization, falling further
and further behind in the struggle for development. These expanding
pockets of privation in the midst of plenty are seedbeds of envy,
resentment, tension and conflict. This underlines the need for "effective
international agencies which will oversee and direct the economy
to the common good" (Centesimus Annus, 58).
Faced with grave injustices, it is
not enough for communicators simply to say that their job is to
report things as they are. That undoubtedly is their job. But some
instances of human suffering are largely ignored by media even as
others are reported, and insofar as this reflects a decision by
communicators, it reflects indefensible selectivity. Even more fundamentally,
communication structures and policies and the allocation of technology
are factors helping to make some people "information rich" and others
"information poor" at a time when prosperity, and even survival,
depend on information.
In such ways, then, media often contribute
to the injustices and imbalances that give rise to suffering they
report. "It is necessary to break down the barriers and monopolies
which leave so many countries on the margins of development, and
to provide all individuals and nations with the basic conditions
which will enable them to share in development" (Centesimus Annus,
35). Communications and information technology, along with training
in its use, is one such basic condition.
15. Political. Unscrupulous
politicians use media for demagoguery and deception in support of
unjust policies and oppressive regimes. They misrepresent opponents
and systematically distort and suppress the truth by propaganda
and "spin." Rather than drawing people together, media then serve
to drive them apart, creating tensions and suspicions that set the
stage for conflict.
Even in countries with democratic systems,
it is all too common for political leaders to manipulate public
opinion through the media instead of fostering informed participation
in the political process. The conventions of democracy are observed,
but techniques borrowed from advertising and public relations are
deployed on behalf of policies that exploit particular groups and
violate fundamental rights, including the right to life (cf. Pope
John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, 70).
Often, too, the media popularize the
ethical relativism and utilitarianism that underlie today's culture
of death. They participate in the contemporary "conspiracy against
life" by "lending credit to that culture which presents recourse
to contraception, sterilization, abortion and even euthanasia as
a mark of progress and a victory of freedom, while depicting as
enemies of freedom and progress those positions which are unreservedly
pro-life" (Evangelium Vitae, 17).
16. Cultural. Critics frequently
decry the superficiality and bad taste of media, and although they
are not obliged to be somber and dull, they should not be tawdry
and demeaning either. It is no excuse to say the media reflect popular
standards, for they also powerfully influence popular standards
and so have a serious duty to uplift, not degrade, them.
The problem takes various forms. Instead
of explaining complex matters carefully and truthfully, news media
avoid or oversimplify them. Entertainment media feature presentations
of a corrupting, dehumanizing kind, including exploitative treatments
of sexuality and violence. It is grossly irresponsible to ignore
or dismiss the fact that "pornography and sadistic violence debase
sexuality, corrode human relationships, exploit individualsespecially
women and young people, undermine marriage and family life, foster
anti-social behavior and weaken the moral fiber of society itself"
(Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Pornography and
Violence in the Communications Media: A Pastoral Response, 10).
On the international level, cultural
domination imposed through the means of social communication also
is a serious, growing problem. Traditional cultural expressions
are virtually excluded from access to popular media in some places
and face extinction; meanwhile the values of affluent, secularized
societies increasingly supplant the traditional values of societies
less wealthy and powerful. In considering these matters, particular
attention should go to providing children and young people with
media presentations that put them in living contact with their cultural
heritage.
Communication across cultural lines
is desirable. Societies can and should learn from one another. But
transcultural communication should not be at the expense of the
less powerful. Today "even the least widespread cultures are no
longer isolated. They benefit from an increase in contacts, but
they also suffer from the pressures of a powerful trend toward uniformity"
(Toward a Pastoral Approach to Culture, 33). That so much
communication now flows in one direction onlyfrom developed
nations to the developing and the poorraises serious ethical
questions. Have the rich nothing to learn from the poor? Are the
powerful deaf to the voices of the weak?
17. Educational. Instead of
promoting learning, media can distract people and cause them to
waste time. Children and young people are especially harmed in this
way, but adults also suffer from exposure to banal, trashy presentations.
Among the causes of this abuse of trust by communicators is greed
that puts profits before persons.
Sometimes, too, media are used as tools
of indoctrination, with the aim of controlling what people know
and denying them access to information the authorities do not want
them to have. This is a perversion of genuine education, which seeks
to expand people's knowledge and skills and help them pursue worthy
purposes, not narrow their horizons and harness their energies in
the service of ideology.
18. Religious. In the relationship
between the means of social communication and religion there are
temptations on both sides.
On the side of the media, these include
ignoring or marginalizing religious ideas and experience; treating
religion with incomprehension, perhaps even contempt, as an object
of curiosity that does not merit serious attention; promoting religious
fads at the expense of traditional faith; treating legitimate religious
groups with hostility; weighing religion and religious experience
by secular standards of what is appropriate, and favoring religious
views that conform to secular tastes over those that do not; trying
to imprison transcendence within the confines of rationalism and
skepticism. Today's media often mirror the postmodern state of a
human spirit "locked within the confines of its own immanence without
reference of any kind to the transcendent" (Fides et Ratio,
81).
The temptations on the side of religion
include taking an exclusively judgmental and negative view of media;
failing to understand that reasonable standards of good media practice,
such as objectivity and even-handedness, may preclude special treatment
for religion's institutional interests; presenting religious messages
in an emotional, manipulative style, as if they were products competing
in a glutted marketplace; using media as instruments for control
and domination; practicing unnecessary secrecy and otherwise offending
against truth; downplaying the Gospel's demand for conversion, repentance
and amendment of life, while substituting a bland religiosity that
asks little of people; encouraging fundamentalism, fanaticism and
religious exclusivism that foment disdain and hostility toward others.
19. In short, the media can be used
for good or for evil--it is a matter of choice. "It can never be
forgotten that communication through the media is not a utilitarian
exercise intended simply to motivate, persuade or sell. Still less
is it a vehicle for ideology. The media can at times reduce human
beings to units of consumption or competing interest groups, or
manipulate viewers, readers and listeners as mere ciphers from whom
some advantage is sought, whether product sales or political support,
and these things destroy community. It is the task of communication
to bring people together and enrich their lives, not isolate and
exploit them. The means of social communication, properly used,
can help to create and sustain a human community based on justice
and charity, and, in so far as they do that, they will be signs
of hope" (Pope John Paul II, Message for the 32nd World Communications
Day, 1998).
IV. Relevant Ethical Principles
20. Ethical principles and norms relevant
in other fields also apply to social communication. Principles of
social ethics like solidarity, subsidiarity, justice, equity and
accountability in the use of public resources and the performance
of roles of public trust are always applicable. Communication must
always be truthful, since truth is essential to individual liberty
and to authentic community among persons.
Ethics in social communication is concerned
not just with what appears on cinema and television screens, on
radio broadcasts, on the printed page and the Internet, but with
a great deal else besides. The ethical dimension relates not just
to the content of communication (the message) and the process of
communication (how the communicating is done), but to fundamental
structural and systemic issues, often involving large questions
of policy bearing upon the distribution of sophisticated technology
and product (who shall be information rich and who shall be information
poor?). These questions point to other questions with economic and
political implications for ownership and control. At least in open
societies with market economies, the largest ethical question of
all may be how to balance profit against service to the public interest
understood according to an inclusive conception of the common good.
Even to reasonable people of good will,
it is not always immediately clear how to apply ethical principles
and norms to particular cases; reflection, discussion and dialogue
are needed. We offer what follows with the hope of encouraging such
reflection and dialogueamong communication policy makers,
professional communicators, ethicists and moralists, recipients
of communication, and others concerned.
21. In all three areasmessage,
process, structural and systemic issuesthe fundamental ethical
principle is this: the human person and the human community are
the end and measure of the use of the media of social communication;
communication should be by persons to persons for the integral development
of persons.
Integral development requires a sufficiency
of material goods and products, but it also requires attention to
the "inner dimension" (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 29; cf.
46). Everyone deserves the opportunity to grow and flourish in respect
to the full range of physical, intellectual, emotional, moral and
spiritual goods. Individuals have irreducible dignity and importance,
and may never be sacrificed to collective interests.
22. A second principle is complementary
to the first: the good of persons cannot be realized apart from
the common good of the communities to which they belong. This common
good should be understood in inclusive terms, as the sum total of
worthy shared purposes to whose pursuit community members jointly
commit themselves and which the community exists to serve.
, while social communication rightly
looks to the needs and interests of particular groups, it should
not do so in a way that sets one group against anotherfor
example, in the name of class conflict, exaggerated nationalism,
racial supremacy, ethnic cleansing and the like. The virtue of solidarity,
"a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common
good" (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 38), ought to govern all
areas of social lifeeconomic, political, cultural, religious.
Communicators and communication policy
makers must serve the real needs and interests both of individuals
and of groups, at all levels and of all kinds. There is a pressing
need for equity at the international level, where the maldistribution
of material goods between North and South is exacerbated by a maldistribution
of communication resources and information technology, upon which
productivity and prosperity greatly depend. Similar problems also
exist within wealthy countries, "where the constant transformation
of the methods of production and consumption devalues certain acquired
skills and professional expertise" and "those who fail to keep up
with the times can easily be marginalized" (Centesimus Annus,
33).
Clearly, then, there is a need for
broad participation in making decisions not only about the messages
and processes of social communication but also about systemic issues
and the allocation of resources. The decision makers have a serious
moral duty to recognize the needs and interests of those who are
particularly vulnerablethe poor, the elderly and unborn, children
and youth, the oppressed and marginalized, women and minorities,
the sick and disabledas well as families and religious groups.
Today especially, the international community and international
communications interests should take a generous and inclusive approach
to nations and regions where what the means of social communication
door fail to dobears a share of the blame for the perpetuation
of evils like poverty, illiteracy, political repression and violations
of human rights, intergroup and interreligious conflicts and the
suppression of indigenous cultures.
23. Even so, we continue to believe
that "the solution to problems arising from unregulated commercialization
and privatization does not lie in state control of media but in
more regulation according to criteria of public service and in greater
public accountability. It should be noted in this connection that,
although the legal and political frameworks within which media operate
in some countries are currently changing strikingly for the better,
elsewhere government intervention remains an instrument of oppression
and exclusion" (Aetatis Novae, 5).
The presumption should always be in
favor of freedom of expression, for "when people follow their natural
inclination to exchange ideas and declare their opinions, they are
not merely making use of a right. They are also performing a social
duty" (Communio et Progressio, 45). Still, considered from
an ethical perspective, this presumption is not an absolute, indefeasible
norm. There are obvious instancesfor example, libel and slander,
messages that seek to foster hatred and conflict among individuals
and groups, obscenity and pornography, the morbid depiction of violencewhere
no right to communicate exists. Plainly, too, free expression should
always observe principles like truth, fairness and respect for privacy.
Professional communicators should be
actively involved in developing and enforcing ethical codes of behavior
for their profession, in cooperation with public representatives.
Religious bodies and other groups likewise deserve to be part of
this continuing effort.
24. Another relevant principle, already
mentioned, concerns public participation in making decisions about
communications policy. At all levels, this participation should
be organized, systematic and genuinely representative, not skewed
in favor of particular groups. This principle applies even, and
perhaps especially, where media are privately owned and operated
for profit.
In the interests of public participation,
communicators "must seek to communicate with people, and not just
speak to them. This involves learning about people's needs, being
aware of their struggles and presenting all forms of communication
with the sensitivity that human dignity requires" (Pope John Paul
II, Address to Communications Specialists, Los Angeles, September
15, 1987).
Circulation, broadcast ratings and
"box office," along with market research, are sometimes said to
be the best indicators of public sentimentin fact, the only
ones necessary for the law of the market to operate. No doubt the
market's voice can be heard in these ways. But decisions about media
content and policy should not be left only to the market and to
economic factorsprofitssince these cannot be counted
on to safeguard either the public interest as a whole or, especially,
the legitimate interests of minorities.
To some extent, this objection may
be answered by the concept of the "niche," according to which particular
periodicals, programs, stations and channels are directed to particular
audiences. The approach is legitimate, up to a point. But diversification
and specializationorganizing media to correspond to audiences
broken down into ever-smaller units based largely on economic factors
and patterns of consumptionshould not be carried too far.
Media of social communication must remain an "Areopagus" (cf. Redemptoris
Missio, 37)a forum for exchanging ideas and information,
drawing individuals and groups together, fostering solidarity and
peace. The Internet in particular raises concerns about some of
the "radically new consequences it brings: a loss of the intrinsic
value of items of information, an undifferentiated uniformity in
messages that are reduced to pure information, a lack of responsible
feedback and a certain discouragement of interpersonal relationships"
(Toward a Pastoral Approach to Culture, 9).
25. Professional communicators are
not the only ones with ethical duties. Audiencesrecipientshave
obligations too. Communicators attempting to meet their responsibilities
deserve audiences conscientious about theirs.
The first duty of recipients of social
communication is to be discerning and selective. They should inform
themselves about mediatheir structures, mode of operation,
contentsand make responsible choices, according to ethically
sound criteria, about what to read or watch or listen to. Today
everybody needs some form of continuing media education, whether
by personal study or participation in an organized program or both.
More than just teaching about techniques, media education helps
people form standards of good taste and truthful moral judgment,
an aspect of conscience formation.
Through her schools and formation programs
the Church should provide media education of this kind (cf. Aetatis
Novae, 28; Communio et Progressio, 107). Directed originally
to institutes of consecrated life, the following words have a broader
application: "A community, aware of the influence of the media,
should learn to use them for personal and community growth, with
the evangelical clarity and inner freedom of those who have learned
to know Christ (cf. Gal 4:1723). The media propose,
and often impose, a mentality and model of life in constant contrast
with the Gospel. In this connection, in many areas one hears of
the desire for deeper formation in receiving and using the media,
both critically and fruitfully" (Congregation for Institutes of
Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Fraternal Life
in Community, 34).
Similarly, parents have a serious duty
to help their children learn how to evaluate and use the media,
by forming their consciences correctly and developing their critical
faculties (cf. Familiaris Consortio, 76). For their children's
sake, as well as their own, parents must learn and practice the
skills of discerning viewers and listeners and readers, acting as
models of prudent use of media in the home. According to their age
and circumstances, children and young people should be open to formation
regarding media, resisting the easy path of uncritical passivity,
peer pressure and commercial exploitation. Familiesparents
and children togetherwill find it helpful to come together
in groups to study and discuss the problems and opportunities created
by social communication.
26. Besides promoting media education,
the institutions, agencies and programs of the Church have other
important responsibilities in regard to social communication. First
and foremost, the Church's practice of communication should be exemplary,
reflecting the highest standards of truthfulness, accountability,
sensitivity to human rights, and other relevant principles and norms.
Beyond that, the Church's own media should be committed to communicating
the fullness of the truth about the meaning of human life and history,
especially as it is contained in God's revealed word and expressed
by the teaching of the Magisterium. Pastors should encourage use
of media to spread the Gospel (cf. Code of Canon Law, Canon
822.1).
Those who represent the Church must
be honest and straightforward in their relations with journalists.
Even though the questions they ask are "sometimes embarrassing or
disappointing, especially when they in no way correspond to the
message we have to get across," one must bear in mind that "these
disconcerting questions are often asked by most of our contemporaries"
(Toward a Pastoral Approach to Culture, 34). For the Church
to speak credibly to people today, those who speak for her have
to give credible, truthful answers to these seemingly awkward questions.
Catholics, like other citizens, have
the right of free expression, including the right of access to the
media for this purpose. The right of expression includes expressing
opinions about the good of the Church, with due regard for the integrity
of faith and morals, respect for the pastors, and consideration
for the common good and the dignity of persons (cf. Canon 212.3;
Canon 227). No one, however, has a right to speak for the Church,
or imply he or she does, unless properly designated, and personal
opinions should not be presented as the Church's teaching (cf. Canon
227).
The Church would be well served if
more of those who hold offices and perform functions in her name
received communication training. This is true not only of seminarians,
persons in formation in religious communities and young lay Catholics,
but Church personnel generally. Provided the media are "neutral,
open and honest," they offer well-prepared Christians "a frontline
missionary role" and it is important that the latter be "well-trained
and supported." Pastors also should offer their people guidance
regarding media and their sometimes discordant and even destructive
messages (cf. Canon 822.2, 3).
Similar considerations apply to internal
communication in the Church. A two-way flow of information and views
between pastors and faithful, freedom of expression sensitive to
the well-being of the community and to the role of the Magisterium
in fostering it, and responsible public opinion all are important
expressions of "the fundamental right of dialogue and information
within the Church" (Aetatis Novae, 10; cf. Communio et
Progressio, 20).
The right of expression must be exercised
with deference to revealed truth and the Church's teaching, and
with respect for others' ecclesial rights (cf. Canon 212.1, 2, 3,
Canon 220). Like other communities and institutions, the Church
sometimes needsin fact, is sometimes obligedto practice
secrecy and confidentiality. But this should not be for the sake
of manipulation and control. Within the communion of faith, "holders
of office, who are invested with a sacred power, are in fact dedicated
to promoting the interests of their brethren, so that all who belong
to the People of God, and are consequently endowed with true Christian
dignity, may through their free and well-ordered efforts toward
a common good, attain to salvation" (Lumen Gentium, 18).
Right practice in communication is one of the ways of realizing
this vision.
V. Conclusion
27. As the third millennium of the
Christian era begins, humankind is well along in creating a global
network for the instantaneous transmission of information, ideas
and value judgments in science, commerce, education, entertainment,
politics, the arts, religion and every other field.
This network already is directly accessible
to many people in their homes, schools and workplacesindeed,
wherever they may be. It is commonplace to view events, from sports
to wars, happening in real time on the other side of the planet.
People can tap directly into quantities of data beyond the reach
of many scholars and students just a short time ago. An individual
can ascend to heights of human genius and virtue, or plunge to the
depths of human degradation, while sitting alone at a keyboard and
screen. Communication technology constantly achieves new breakthroughs,
with enormous potential for good and ill. As interactivity increases,
the distinction between communicators and recipients blurs. Continuing
research is needed into the impact, and especially the ethical implications,
of new and emerging media.
28. But despite their immense power,
the means of communication are, and will remain, only mediathat
is to say: instruments, tools, available for both good and evil
uses. The choice is ours. The media do not call for a new ethic;
they call for the application of established principles to new circumstances.
And this is a task in which everyone has a role to play. Ethics
in the media is not the business only of specialists, whether they
be specialists in social communication or specialists in moral philosophy;
rather, the reflection and dialogue that this document seeks to
encourage and assist must be broad and inclusive.
29. Social communication can join people
in communities of sympathy and shared interest. Will these communities
be informed by justice, decency and respect for human rights; will
they be committed to the common good? Or will they be selfish and
inward-looking, committed to the benefit of particular groupseconomic,
racial, political, even religiousat others' expense? Will
new technology serve all nations and peoples, while respecting the
cultural traditions of each, or will it be a tool to enrich the
rich and empower the powerful? We have to choose.
The means of communication also can
be used to separate and isolate. More and more, technology allows
people to assemble packages of information and services uniquely
designed for them. There are real advantages in that, but it raises
an inescapable question: Will the audience of the future be a multitude
of audiences of one? While the new technology can enhance individual
autonomy, it has other, less desirable implications. Instead of
being a global community, might the "web" of the future turn out
to be a vast, fragmented network of isolated individualshuman
bees in their cellsinteracting with data instead of with one
another? What would become of solidaritywhat would become
of lovein a world like that?
In the best of circumstances, human
communication has serious limitations, is more or less imperfect
and in danger of failing. It is hard for people consistently to
communicate honestly with one another, in a way that does no harm
and serves the best interests of all. In the world of media, moreover,
the inherent difficulties of communicating often are magnified by
ideology, by the desire for profit and political control, by rivalries
and conflicts between groups, and by other social ills. Today's
media vastly increase the outreach of social communicationits
quantity, its speed; they do not make the reaching out of mind to
mind and heart to heart any less fragile, less sensitive, less prone
to fail.
30. As we have said, the special contributions
which the Church brings to the discussion of these matters are a
vision of human persons and their incomparable dignity and inviolable
rights, and a vision of human community whose members are joined
by the virtue of solidarity in pursuit of the common good of all.
The need for these two visions is especially pressing "at a time
when we are faced with the patent inadequacy of perspectives in
which the ephemeral is affirmed as a value and the possibility of
discovering the real meaning of life is cast into doubt"; lacking
them, "many people
stumble through life to the very edge
of the abyss without knowing where they are going" (Fides et
Ratio, 6).
In the face of this crisis, the Church
stands forth as an "expert in humanity" whose expertise "leads her
necessarily to extend her religious mission to the various fields"
of human endeavor (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 41; cf. Pope
Paul VI, Populorum Progressio, 13). She may not keep the
truth about the human person and the human community to herself;
she must share it freely, always aware that people can say no to
the truthand to her.
Attempting to foster and support high
ethical standards in the use of the means of social communication,
the Church seeks dialogue and collaboration with others: with public
officials, who have a particular duty to protect and promote the
common good of the political community; with men and women from
the world of culture and the arts; with scholars and teachers engaged
in forming the communicators and audiences of the future; with members
of other churches and religious groups, who share her desire that
media be used for the glory of God and the service of the human
race (cf. Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Criteria
for Ecumenical and Interreligious Cooperation in Communications);
and especially with professional communicatorswriters, editors,
reporters, correspondents, performers, producers, technical personneltogether
with owners, administrators and policy makers in this field.
31. Along with its limitations, human
communication has in it something of God's creative activity. "With
loving regard, the divine Artist passes on to the human artist"and,
we might say, to the communicator as well"a spark of his own
surpassing wisdom, calling him to share in his creative power";
in coming to understand this, artists and communicators "come to
a full understanding of themselves, their vocation and their mission"
(Letter to Artists, 1).
The Christian communicator in particular
has a prophetic task, a vocation: to speak out against the false
gods and idols of the daymaterialism, hedonism, consumerism,
narrow nationalism, and the restholding up for all to see
a body of moral truth based on human dignity and rights, the preferential
option for the poor, the universal destination of goods, love of
enemies, and unconditional respect for all human life from conception
to natural death, and seeking the more perfect realization of the
kingdom in this world while remaining aware that, at the end of
time, Jesus will restore all things and return them to the Father
(cf. 1 Cor 15:24).
32. While these reflections are addressed
to all persons of good will, not just Catholics, it is appropriate,
in bringing them to a close, to speak of Jesus as a model for communicators.
"In these last days" God the Father "has spoken to us by a Son"
(Heb 1:2), and this Son communicates to us now and always
the Father's love and the ultimate meaning of our lives.
"While he was on earth Christ revealed
himself as the perfect communicator. Through his incarnation, he
utterly identified himself with those who were to receive his communication,
and he gave his message not only in words but in the whole manner
of his life. He spoke from within, that is to say, from out of the
press of his people. He preached the divine message without fear
or compromise. He adjusted to his people's way of talking and to
their patterns of thought. And he spoke out of the predicament of
their time" (Communio et Progressio, 11).
Throughout Jesus' public life crowds
flocked to hear him preach and teach (cf. Mt 8:1, 18; Mk
2:2, 4:1; Lk 5:1, etc.), and he taught them "as one who
had authority" (Mt 7:29; cf. Mk 1:22; Lk 4:32).
He told them about the Father and at the same time referred them
to himself, explaining, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life"
(Jn 14:6) and "he who has seen me has seen the Father" (Jn
14:9). He did not waste time on idle speech or on vindicating
himself, not even when he was accused and condemned (cf. Mt 26:63,
27:1214; Mk 15:5, 15:61). For his "food" was to do
the will of the Father who sent him (Jn 4:34), and all he
said and did was spoken and done in reference to that.
Often Jesus' teaching took the form
of parables and vivid stories expressing profound truths in simple,
everyday terms. Not only his words but his deeds, especially his
miracles, were acts of communication, pointing to his identity and
manifesting the power of God (cf. Evangelii Nuntiandi, 12).
In his communications he showed respect for his listeners, sympathy
for their situation and needs, compassion for their suffering (e.g.,
Lk 7:13), and resolute determination to tell them what they
needed to hear, in a way that would command their attention and
help them receive the message, without coercion or compromise, deception
or manipulation. He invited others to open their minds and hearts
to him, knowing this was how they would be drawn to him and his
Father (e.g., Jn 3:115, 4:726).
Jesus taught that communication is
a moral act: "For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.
The good man out of his good treasure brings forth good, and the
evil man out of his evil treasure brings forth evil. I tell you,
on the day of judgment men will render an account for every careless
word they utter, for by your words you will be justified, and by
your words you will be condemned" (Mt 12:3437). He
cautioned sternly against scandalizing the "little ones," and warned
that for one who did, "it would be better...if a great millstone
were hung round his neck and he were thrown into the sea" (Mk
9:42; cf. Mt 18:6, Lk 17:2). He was altogether
candid, a man of whom it could be said that "no guile was found
on his lips"; and further: "When he was reviled, he did not revile
in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but he trusted
to him who judges justly" (1 Pt 2:2223). He insisted
on candor and truthfulness in others, while condemning hypocrisy,
dishonestyany kind of communication that was bent and perverse:
"Let what you say be simply 'Yes' or 'No'; anything more than this
comes from evil" (Mt 5:37).
33. Jesus is the model and the standard
of our communicating. For those involved in social communication,
whether as policy makers or professional communicators or recipients
or in any other role, the conclusion is clear: "Therefore, putting
away falsehood, let everyone speak the truth with his neighbor,
for we are members one of another
. Let no evil talk come out
of your mouths, but only such as is good for edifying, as fits the
occasion, that it may impart grace to those who hear" (Eph 4:25,
29). Serving the human person, building up human community grounded
in solidarity, justice and love, and speaking the truth about human
life and its final fulfillment in God were, are, and will remain
at the heart of ethics in the media.
Vatican City, June 4, 2000, World Communications
Day, Jubilee of Journalists.
John P. Foley
President
Pierfranco Pastore
Secretary
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