We share with you the theme for 2014 World Communications Day
Message by our Holy Father Pope Francis.
The capacity to communicate is at the heart of what it
means to be human. It is in and through our communication that we are able to
meet and encounter at a meaningful level other people, express who we are, what
we think and believe, how we wish to live and, perhaps more importantly, to
come to know those with whom we are called to live. Such communication calls
for honesty, mutual respect and a commitment to learn from each other.
It requires a capacity to know how to dialogue
respectfully with the truth of others. It is often what might be perceived
initially as ‘difference’ in the other that reveals the richness of our
humanity. It is the discovery of the other that enables us to learn the truth
of who we are ourselves.
In our modern era, a new culture is developing
advanced by technology, and communication is in a sense “amplified” and
“continuous”. We are called to “rediscover, through the means of social
communication as well as by personal contact, the beauty that is at the heart
of our existence and journey, the beauty of faith and of the beauty of the
encounter with Christ.” (Address of Pope Francis to participants at the
Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, 21
September 2013). In this context, each one of us should accept the challenge to
be authentic by witnessing to values, Christian identity, cultural experiences,
expressed with a new language and shared with others.
Our ability to communicate, reflected in our
participation in the creative, communicative and unifying Trinitarian Love, is
a gift which allows us to grow in personal relationships, which are a blessing
in our lives, and to find in dialogue a response to those divisions that create
tensions within communities and between nations.
The age of globalization is making communication
possible even in the most remote parts of the world, but it is also important
“to use modern technologies and social networks in such a way as to reveal a
presence that listens, converses and encourages.” (Address of Pope Francis to
participants at the Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Council for Social
Communications, 21 September 2013), so that nobody is excluded.
The Message for World Communications Day 2014 will
explore the potential of communication, especially in a networked and connected
world, to bring people closer to each other and to co-operate in the task of
building a more just world.