
VATICAN (CNS): Media outlets that identify as Catholic must live “in a spirit of communion” with the pope, especially at a time of “overly dramatic debates, also within the Church, which do not even spare the person and the magisterium of the pontiff,” Pietro Cardinal Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, told Michael Warsaw, the CEO of EWTN, and the Europe-based employees of its television, radio and print media on October 19.
“Communion is in the DNA of communication and is fundamentally its greatest aspiration,” the cardinal said, cautioning that “a communication that instead fans the flames of polarisation or builds walls instead of breaking them down, betrays its very nature.”
Vatican News and the Vatican press office published the cardinal’s full text after ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language news service owned by EWTN, ran a story under the misleading headline, “Cardinal Pietro Parolin defines EWTN as ‘a work of God at the service of truth’.”
However, according to the actual text, the cardinal prayed that a “spirit of communion” with Pope Francis would be “the distinctive sign of your work” and that viewers and readers would be able to “recognise EWTN as a work of God at the service of the truth, ecclesial communion and the good of humanity.”
…a communication that instead fans the flames of polarisation or builds walls instead of breaking them down, betrays its very nature
Cardinal Parolin
Truth, he said, is crucial for journalists and other communicators and is an issue that has “become ever more prominent in public debate due to both the spread of the phenomenon of fake news as well as of a type of communication often based on a distorted, or false, representation of the other.”
The cardinal said that such distortions are the results of “a type of fanaticism grounded in the conviction that the truth that one believes is so absolute as to legitimise the destruction of another person” and attempt “to impose one’s own view of truth upon everyone else.”
Cardinal Parolin quoted Mother Angelica, the late founder of EWTN, who said, “It is our duty to speak the truth, and each person can either assume or not assume this duty. But the truth must above all be within us.”
The cardinal said, “The truth does not belong to us; we serve the truth, and we can serve it only in love and in unity. We are its custodians, not its owners.”
Cardinal Parolin also quoted Pope Francis’ message in 2020 to the Catholic Media Association about how Catholic communicators must promote communion, especially “in an age marked by conflicts and polarisation from which the Catholic community itself is not immune.”
He said, “A large international news network, like EWTN, that invokes the gospel message, is therefore called to promote understanding between people, dialogue between communities and the search for places and opportunities that create contact between distant worlds, sometimes in conflict with each other.”
The cardinal said that media, especially those calling themselves Catholic, “must strive not to spread hate, but rather to promote a non-hostile communication.”