Welcome to one of the
series of blogs on the Second Vatican Council. Each piece reviews one of the 16
documents produced by the Council Fathers during the extraordinary occasion in
Church history. Vatican II, which drew together the world’s bishops, opened
fifty years ago in St. Peter’s Basilica, October 11, 1962.
(Photo courtesy Catholic News Service) |
Inter Mirifica, the decree on social communications, takes its name from the first words of the document’s Latin (and official) version, which mean “among the wonderful.” It acknowledges the media’s awesome power for good or ill and heralds its potential for everything from uplifting people’s spirits through the arts to keeping them informed via news media to providing tools for religious education.
Given
the explosion of media since the document was published in 1963, the message,
though brief, was prescient. It spoke of “the press, movies, radio, television
and the like” with “the like” having come to include the internet, Twitter,
Facebook, YouTube, Pinterest and whatever other media lie on the horizon or
beyond.
Inter Mirifica spoke of a sense of morality to guide media
use. It said people have “a right” to information and said the news
communicated “should always be true and complete, within the bounds of justice
and charity” and that how news is communicated “should be proper and decent.”
The Council explained that “both in the search for news and in reporting it,
there must be full respect for the laws of morality and for the legitimate
rights and dignity of the individual.” It called on public authorities to
guarantee freedom of information, describing it as “a freedom that is totally
necessary for the welfare of contemporary society, especially when it is a
matter of freedom of the press.” The words hold meaning now as the news business
grapples with everything from wiretapping to leaks to manipulation of images.
Inter Mirifica also highlighted the role
of other communications arts such as film and drama to help people understand evil
in order to “reveal and glorify the grand dimensions of truth and goodness.” It
called for “moral restraint” in such presentations “lest they work to the harm
rather than the benefit of souls.” It offers guidance to producers as they
decide how much violence they need to illustrate conflict or how much sexual
intimacy to reveal to emphasize relationships.
The
Fathers called on church authorities to develop quality media within its own
walls. It spoke of the news media, saying, “a good press should be fostered,” involving
both church officials and laity. It urged the church to prepare “literary,
film, radio, television and other critics” to “put moral issues in their proper
light.”
Inter Mirifica called for two specific
actions at the Vatican to enhance mass communications. The first was to establish
the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, the Vatican office that subsequently
developed key Pastoral instructions, Communio et Progressio (Unity and
Advancement),1971, that emphasizes relationships with public media, and Aetatis Novae (At the Dawn of a New Era),
1992, that looks at the inherent challenges
presented by modern developments in media.
Inter Mirifica also called for an
annual World Communications Day, reminding churches to celebrate their media
locally. The Vatican has since used this occasion to address such contemporary
topics as ethics in advertising, pornography and the digital age.
Inter Mirifica posed a challenge that still faces the church
when it recognized the difficulty and costs of providing quality media, but
said this work is imperative, a matter of the soul of humanity.
“It is quite unbecoming for the Church’s children idly to permit the message of salvation to be thwarted or impeded by the technical delays or expenses, however vast, which are encountered by the very nature of the media,” the Council Fathers said. The challenge still stands before us.
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Bishop John Wester of Salt Lake City chairs the Communications
Committee of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
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