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APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO IRELAND
ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER JOHN PAUL II
TO PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS AND
MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNICATION MEDIA
Dublin
Saturday, 29 September 1979
My friends of the communications media,
During my visit to Ireland, I wish to leave a special thought for all of you,
a special word for each of you, so that in time to come you will remember: the
Pope said many things to many people during his pastoral visit to Ireland, but
this was his message to me.
That message is the second of the two great commandments of Jesus: "Love your
neighbour as yourself". That message and that mandate should have a special
meaning to you because your work makes you an honoured guest in millions of
homes throughout the world.
Wherever the sounds you transmit are heard, wherever the images you capture
are seen, wherever the words you report are read, there is your neighbour.
There is a person you must love, someone for whose total well-being you must work—and
even sometimes go without sleep and miss your meals. You are the instruments
through whom that person—and millions of others—enjoys a wider experience and is
helped to become a more effective member of the world community, a true
neighbour to others.
Your profession, by its very nature, makes you servants, willing servants, of
the community. Many of the members of that community will differ from you in
political views, in material prospects, in religious conviction or in moral
performance. As good communicators, you serve them all just the same—with love
and with truth ; indeed with a love of truth. As good communicators, you build
bridges to unite, not walls to divide. As good communicators, you work out of
the conviction that love and service of neighbour are the most important
business in your lives.
All your concern, then, will be for the community's good. You will feed it on
the truth. You will enlighten its conscience and serve as its peacemaker. You
will set before the community standards that will keep it stretching for a way
of life and a mode of behaviour worthy of its potential, worthy of human dignity.
You will inspire the community, fire its ideals, stimulate its imagination—if
necessary, taunt it—into getting the best out of itself, the human best, the
Christian best. You will neither yield to any inducement nor bend before any
threat which might seek to deflect you from total integrity in your professional
service of those who are not only your neighbours, but your brothers and sisters
in the family of God, the Father of us all.
You think of yourselves as hard-headed realists, and I am well aware of the
realities with which you must contend. Yet this is the Pope's word to you. It is
no small thing he asks, no mean challenge he leaves with you. What he challenges
you to do is to build, here in the Irish community and in the world community,
the kingdom of God, the kingdom of love and of peace.
I thank you all sincerely for the work you are doing in the coverage of this
visit. I ask you to bring my thanks and my love to your families, as I pray for
you and for them in the beautiful Irish formula : "May God hold you in the
hollow of his hand. May he keep you and your dear ones in his peace".
©
Copyright 1979 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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