The
Vatican and the Internet
In this information
age, the Vatican is writing about the Internet in the life of the Church
and World. Since 1997, the Pontifical Council for Social Communications
produced the following documents:
Ethics
in Advertising (1997)
A reflection to call attention to positive contributions that advertising
can and does make; to note ethical and moral problems that advertising
can and does raise; to point to moral principles that apply to this
field.
Ethics
in Communications (2000)
In this document we are reminded that 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).
Ethics
in Internet (2002)
An opportunity to see that Today it takes no great stretch of
the imagination to envisage the earth as an interconnected globe humming
with electronic transmissionsa chattering planet nestled in the
provident silence of space. The ethical question is whether this is
contributing to authentic human development and helping individuals
and peoples to be true to their transcendent destiny.
The
Church and Internet (2002)
In this document we learn that
the Internet, which is helping
bring about revolutionary changes in commerce, education, politics,
journalism, the relationship of nation to nation and culture to culturechanges
not just in how people communicate but in how they understand their
lives.
we consider the Internet's implications for religion and
especially for the Catholic Church.
World
Communications Day, May 2002 Theme: Internet: A New Forum for Proclaiming
the Gospel
The annual message from the pope for World Communications Day focuses
on the topic of the Internet. He reminds us that online technology offers
magnificent opportunities for evangelization, especially
among young people who increasingly use the Web as a window on
the world.