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Pope calls for transformation in the way we communicate


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Screenshot

Source: Vatican Media

Pope Francis has released his annual Message World Day of Social Communications today - calling for a transformation in the way we communicate.

He writes: "In a world characterized by disinformation and polarization, as a few centres of power control an unprecedented mass of data and information," it is ever more urgent, to "disarm communication" and purify it of aggression.

The Pope notes that "Too often today, communication generates not hope, but fear and despair, prejudice and resentment, fanaticism, and even hatred."

Lamenting the fact that communication often simplifies reality to provoke instinctive reactions, using words as weapons and spreading false or distorted information, he warns that such practices create division and prevent the possibility of building genuine hope.

"All conflicts start when individual faces melt away and disappear'. We must not surrender to this mindset."

The Pope highlights several troubling trends in modern communication, including a tendency towards competition and domination that prevails in many forums.

"From television talk shows to verbal attacks on social media, there is a risk that the paradigm of competition, opposition, the will to dominate and possess, and the manipulation of public opinion will prevail," he writes. "Identifying an 'enemy' to lash out against appears indispensable as a way of asserting ourselves."

This approach, the Holy Father says, erodes community and undermines the common good.

Warning against the "programmed dispersion of attention" caused by digital systems that prioritize market-driven profiling, he explains that this phenomenon fragments interests, weakens social bonds, and hampers our ability to listen and empathize. The result, he says, is a society increasingly isolated, incapable of collaborative action, and urgently in need of hope.

Hope, the Pope continues, referencing the Gospel message and the current Jubilee Year, is not an easy virtue but a "risk that must be taken."

Drawing on the words of French author and WWI soldier, Georges Bernanos, who called hope "a hidden virtue, tenacious and patient," he points out that for Christians, hope is essential and transformative.

As Pope Benedict XVI notes in his encyclical Spe Salvi, "The one who has hope lives differently; the one who hopes has been granted the gift of a new life."

Thus, Pope Francis urges Christian communicators to "always be ready to make their defence to anyone who demands from them an accounting for the hope that is in them, yet do it with gentleness and reverence" (1 Pet 3:15-16).

By embodying gentleness, closeness, and respect, communication, he continues, can foster openness and friendship rather than defensiveness and anger.

"I dream of a communication capable of making us fellow travellers," Pope Francis writes, describing an approach that walks alongside others, especially in moments of struggle.

Such communication, he adds, should focus on beauty and hope, generating empathy and commitment even in seemingly desperate situations.

"Communication should focus on beauty and hope, generating empathy and commitment even in seemingly desperate situations."

Reiterating his belief in the need for a culture of care, the Pope calls for "stories steeped in hope" that inspire trust and solidarity.

He points to the "slender but resistant flower" of hope found in unexpected places-from parents praying for their children's safe return from conflict zones to "the hope of those children who somehow manage to play, laugh, and believe in life even amid the debris of war and in the impoverished streets of favelas."

In this Jubilee Year, in which we are all called to become pilgrims of hope, Pope Francis draws his message to a close by urging communicators to "spread hope, even when it is difficult."

"The Jubilee reminds us that those who are peacemakers 'will be called children of God'" he says, adding that "in this way it inspires hope, points us to the need for attentive, gentle, and reflective communication, capable of pointing out paths of dialogue."

Encouraging communicators to "discover and make known the many stories of goodness hidden in the folds of the news," the Pope reiterates his call to "seek out such seeds of hope and make them known. It helps our world to be a little less deaf to the cry of the poor, a little less indifferent, a little less closed in on itself: May you always find those glimmers of goodness that inspire us to hope."

"This kind of communication can help to build communion, to make us feel less alone, to rediscover the importance of walking together."

Read the full Message HERE

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