Post on Facebook. Send a tweet. Less
than a month before Ash Wednesday Pope Benedict XVI has called on Catholics to
get into social media. He blesses the world of Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest and
Facebook. He calls social media the new “agora,”
the “open public square in which people share ideas, information and opinions,
and in which new relationships and forms of community can come into being.”
The
pope lauded the latest communications breakthroughs in his 47th
World Communications Day message, “Social Networks: portals of truth and faith;
new spaces for evangelization.” World Communications Day is marked in the U.S. on
May 12.
For
Pope Benedict social media is opportunity. A Lenten exercise for us may be to
help social media be worthy of the papal endorsement. We need to sanctify the
net. Here are some steps:
Go
positive to counter the negative. The Web is filled with snide and snarky
comments, so offer a counter balance. When you see meanness, an untruth or
bias, gently correct for the record.
Pray
for the nay-sayers and character assassins who hide behind anonymity. Writers
marked by mean speech reflect inner pain.
Resist
knee-jerk responses. Ask how someone on the receiving end will feel before flinging
a verbal slice and dice.
Lent
is a time for alms-giving so seek out worthy charities to which to donate.
Catholic Relief Services’ Operation Rise Bowl is one. Catholic Charities agencies
are always in need.
Share where you’ve
seen God during the day and use pics. God’s there in the kids who make us
laugh, the beauty of a flower, the images of love that touch our hearts. God’s
also there in starving children and fragile elderly begging for help.
Research
sites that help you pray. The U.S. bishops at www.usccb.org/bible offer daily readings
from Scripture with a reflection. The Irish Jesuits at www.sacredspace.ie use simple music and
reflections to draw one to contemplative ground. Share what you’ve found with
friends.
Remember
that how you say something may be even more important than what you say.
Converse
with people with whom you do not agree and seek common ground from which both
of you can move on.
Establish
you own creed for social media behavior e.g.
Don’t deal in put downs, think before you type, find something positive
to contribute to the conversation, don’t text while driving and don’t text
while someone is sharing real time with you.
Have
the strength to power down. If social media get in the way of your relationship
with God, family or friends, let yourself power down. Don’t check the computer until
you’ve said good morning to God. Let the day’s last thoughts center on thanking
God for his graces rather than a news flash from the Drudge Report.
Send
a tweet to Pope Benedict at @pontifex and download his app to your cellphone or
I-pad so you can easily check in with him for his wisdom.
Social
media can touch hearts, notes Pope Benedict in the 2013 World Communications Day
address. “When we are present to others, in any way at all, he says, “we are
called to make known the love of God to the furthest ends of the earth.”
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