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ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II
TO THE COUNCIL OF THE INTERNATIONAL
CATHOLIC UNION OF THE PRESS
Friday, 21 March 1985
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, Praised be Jesus
Christ!
It gives me great pleasure to greet the Council of the
International Catholic Union of the Press and other Catholic journalists with
this traditional Christian salutation, because this salutation expresses an
essential part of your vocation.
May Jesus Christ be praised!
May what we do, may what we say and may what we write lead to
praise of him who redeemed us, who brought the “Good News” of salvation to the
whole world.
May Jesus Christ be praised!
May he be praised particularly in the pages of those
publications which are known as Christian, because they reflect faith in Jesus,
and as Catholic, because they reflect the universality of his love and of his
dominion.
May he be praised also in the writings of all Catholic
journalists - not because the name of Jesus will be mentioned in every article
they write, but because the truth of Christ and the love of Christ will permeate
their writings which will be distinguished by accuracy, by fairness and by that
hunger and thirst for justice characteristic of those whom Jesus himself called
“blessed”.
The Catholic press already does so much to give Christian
information, formation and inspiration to millions of readers around the world,
but we must ask ourselves: how can Jesus Christ be even more effectively
praised?
Is he not praised in the life of his Church which brings not
only the light of Christ’s truth but the warmth of Christ’s love to the poor, to
the sick, to the persecuted, to the young who look for guidance and to the old
who look for solace and hope?
Is he not praised in the lives of his followers who seek to see
and to serve in every person Jesus, our Saviour and Lord?
There is thus much good news to be proclaimed: the good news of
what the Church is doing in the name of Jesus; the good news of what individual
Christians are doing for the love of Jesus.
It is written of Saint Ignatius of Loyola that his life was
changed through the reading of the life of Christ and the lives of the saints.
The good news of what the saints had done through the power of Jesus led him to
ask himself why he could not do the same in the name of Jesus - ad maiorem
Dei gloriam - for the greater glory of God.
Lives can be changed by the written word; individuals can be
converted to Christ or to ever greater union with him through knowing how he is
imitated in the lives of others.
Contemporary journalism often seeks out the hilden sinners in
society, so that their crimes may be revealed and so that society may be healed.
This service can indeed be salutary. But I would also hope that contemporary
Catholic journalism, in particular, might seek out the hidden saints - those
humble men and women who teach the young, who care for the sick, who counsel the
troubled - those hidden servants of God who truly live the Gospel. In their
lives they praise Jesus Christ; a greater knowledge of their hidden, humble and
heroic work could well lead others to praise Jesus Christ. In a world so often
divided by conflict and by hatred and so often marred by sin and selfishness,
self-sacrifice and service of others in the name of Jesus are truly newsworthy;
thy are facets of the good news of Christ which it is our privilege not only to
proclaim but also to seek out and to make known so that others may be
encouraged, inspired and even converted to faith or to fervour.
This is one small way in which we can give praise to Jesus
Christ in the work of Catholic journalism, and we can take solace in the fact
that the words we write remain. Scripta manent. When images pass from
sight and when spoken words pass from memory, the good news about Christ’s
Church and about Christians which we have the privilege to record can lead to
meditation, to reflection and to enduring praise of Jesus Christ, our Lord and
our God. In our words and in our work, praised be Jesus Christ, for ever and
ever!
© Copyright 1985 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana
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