The Bishop and the Nightclub  
Avery Dulles 

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The Catholic Church and the media
Below is an article first published in 1994 in "America" Magazine in which this 
Jesuit theologian, created a cardinal by John Paul II, treats issues at the 
centre of the conference on "Misunderstandings. The Catholic Church and the 
Media", held in the Vatican on 10 November [2011]. Having run afoul of 
newspaper reporters at various times, I am always delighted to learn that even 
bishops sometimes fall into traps. The Jesuit Peter Henrici, before he himself 
became a bishop in Switzerland, told an instructive story (a true one, I hope) 
about a European bishop arriving in New York City. He was asked by an 
aggressive reporter: "When you come to New York do you go to a night club?" The 
bishop, not wishing to give a full account of the matter, by nature asked with 
mock naivete: "Are there night clubs in New York?" He was shocked the next 
morning to read in the paper the headline, "Bishop's First Question: Are There 
Night Clubs in New York?" The headline was
 not untrue, but, like so many news stories, it failed to communicate the truth.

Communication of the truth is not an optional matter for the church. From her 
divine founder the church has a commission to spread to the whole world the 
good news of Jesus Christ, including the truth which Christ taught which he was 
and is. In every age the church has made use of the currently prevalent media — 
oral proclamation, letters, folio manuscripts, printed tracts, radio messages 
and television broadcasts. Speaking of new mass media, Pope Paul VI declared in 
1975: "The church would feel guilty before the Lord if she did not utilize 
these powerful means of communication that human skill is daily rendering more 
perfect". Pope John Paul II has frequently called attention to the immense 
power of the communications media and the importance of keeping them at the 
service of truth, justice and moral decency. It is a particular responsibility 
of the lay faithful, he says, to prevent these media from being used to 
manipulate and misinform.

The church has not been conspicuously successful in its relations with the 
press. Everybody from Archbishop William H. Keeler to Bill Moyers has been 
saying this in recent months. Some put the blame primarily on church 
bureaucrats, who are said to be incompetent in presenting the church's story. 
Others blame the journalists for their allegedly anti-Catholic bias. Neither of 
these contributing factors can be denied, but the real sources of the 
difficulty are deeper.

Marshall McLuhan coined the aphorism, "The medium is the message". Like most 
aphorisms, it is not completely true, for no medium is confined to a single 
message. But the saying calls attention to the fact that there must be a 
certain affinity between the medium and the message. Every medium is 
predisposed toward a certain type of message and resistant to messages of 
certain other types. It will tend to twist the message to suit its own 
communicative powers.

Many of the difficulties between the church and the press can be explained if 
one takes account of the nature of the church's message and the communicative 
powers of journalism. The two are, I believe, in necessary tension. Seven 
points of contrast may be mentioned.

First, the content of the church's message is the holy mystery of God's 
presence and redemptive activity in Jesus Christ. This is a mystery of faith, 
to be approached in a posture of reverent worship. The press is by nature 
investigative and, one might almost say, iconoclastic. Far from being reverent, 
it revels in exposing what is pretentious, false and scandalous. The Catholic 
Church, with its exalted claims, is a particularly tempting target.

Second, the essential message of the church is the one and eternal Gospel. 
Convinced of the permanent validity of God's revelation in Christ, the church 
seeks to maintain continuity with its own past. It cherishes stability and 
shuns innovation. The press, by contrast, lives off novelty. It thrives on the 
ephemeral and panders to the "itching ears" of its readers. In reporting 
religious news, it accents what is new and different, thus giving the 
impression that the church is in continual turmoil.

Third, the church seeks to promote unity and reconciliation, minimizing discord 
and dissent. The news media, however, specialize in disagreement and conflict 
which evidently arouse greater interest and boost circulation. A story without 
a struggle between contending parties will frequently be turned down as dull. 
If "no news is good news", it follows that good news is hardly newsworthy. 
Understandably, therefore, the press tends to give the impression that the 
church is divided into warring factions and that every point of dogma is hotly 
contested within the church itself.

Fourth, the church seeks to dispose people to receive interior grace with a 
view to eternal salvation. These spiritual blessings, however, are not 
sufficiently concrete to make good copy. The press, therefore, tends to 
overlook the spiritual side of the church's mission and to concentrate on more 
tangible phenomena. Doctrinal pronouncements of the church are of little 
interest to the popular media unless they have a bearing on the usual fare of 
the Press. Church teaching is very selectively reported, often in such a way as 
to leave the impression that the Pope is chiefly interested in sex, politics 
and power.

Fifth, the press in a democratic society tends to import democratic criteria 
into its assessment of any organization. It has great difficulty in 
appreciating a hierarchical society in which the leaders hold their authority 
not from the people but from Christ, by apostolic succession. Any effort by the 
church to control the teaching of its own members is regarded as equivalent to 
censorship of the press by the state. Journalism, therefore, has a built-in 
bias against the authoritative teaching of popes and bishops, especially where 
that teaching runs against the ethos of contemporary democratic culture. The 
disobedient priest and the dissident theologian are lionized as champions of 
freedom.

Sixth, the teaching of the church on matters of belief and moral practice is 
frequently complex and subtle. As a result of hundreds of years of acute 
theological analysis, it deals with fine points that cannot be expressed 
without technical terms. The precise distinctions of dogma and moral teaching 
demand a degree of attention that cannot be expected of the average reader. The 
press and the electronic media are hungry for stories that are short, simple 
and striking. If they report doctrinal statements at all, they slur over 
nuances and qualifications that may be crucial.

Seventh, the church aims to persuade its hearers of the truth of revelation. It 
seeks to arouse a firm commitment to its creed and to the following of Christ. 
Journalism, by contrast, intends to report facts that are accessible even to 
unbelievers and to give an account that is acceptable to people of any or no 
religious bend. The secular press cannot presuppose or assert the truth of 
revelation, especially as that revelation is interpreted in any particular 
community of faith.

For these and other reasons, which readers of this magazine can no doubt 
supply, a permanent inbuilt tension exists between the church and the popular 
media of communication. The church cannot rely primarily on secular journalism 
to communicate its message to its own members. The formation of Catholics 
normally takes place in a context of faith and worship. The ideal framework for 
such formation is the liturgy, where the celebrant is able to preach on the 
word of God. Beyond this, religious education can be conducted in the family, 
in catechetical instruction and in Catholic schools. Religious news, including 
current official teaching, is most suitably conveyed in an ecclesial 
environment rather than through the secular press.

There is clearly a place for religiously oriented journalism that tries to 
offset the natural bias of the media to which I have called attention. The 
Christian press should consciously endeavor to present the church as it 
understands itself with the emphases that flow from faith. The ecclesially 
responsible segment of the press, while trying to reach out to a broader 
public, will be on guard against the temptation to indulge in iconoclasm and to 
exploit the popular appetite for the sensational and the scandalous. While 
censorship by church authorities is not desirable, a measure of self-censorship 
on the part of editors and reporters may properly be expected.

Without prejudice to the religious press, it must be recognized that many 
Catholics learn about what is happening in their Church primarily, or in great 
part from the secular media. It is also true that the church has a 
responsibility to communicate not only with its own members but with the 
general public. The popular media of communication have a legitimate interest 
in religious news. It would be neither desirable nor possible to keep the 
Catholic Church out of the secular press.

This being the case, greater efforts must be made from both sides to bridge the 
barriers between the church and the popular media. From the side of the church 
vast improvements have been made in recent decades, but there is still a long 
way to go. It seems to be generally agreed that the church could do a much 
better job publicizing its views on controversial issues such as marriage and 
divorce, contraception, homosexuality, abortion or women's ordination. The 
doctrinal pro- nouncements of Roman authorities are often expressed in precise, 
judicial terms and issued in an authoritative tone that is disconcerting to 
people accustomed to discussion and argument. I personally believe that the 
official positions of the Catholic Church are consonant with reason and 
favorable to human dignity, but they are too easily portrayed as arbitrary and 
dehumanizing.
One example would be the "Declaration on Certain Questions Concerning Sexual 
Ethics" issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on Dec. 29, 
1975. The treatment of homosexuality in this document infuriated many of the 
gay and lesbian communities. Shortly afterward on Feb. 11, 1976, Bishop Francis 
Mugavero of Brooklyn NY, issued a pastoral letter, "Gift of Sexuality", 
commenting in a very sensitive way on the C.D.F. declaration. If that 
commentary had appeared only with the declaration itself, it would have done 
much to defuse the anger.

In recent years it has fortunately become common that sensitive documents are 
accompanied by explanatory press releases and are presented at press 
conferences and that bishops receive advance copies so that they are not caught 
off guard. The release of the Encyclical "Veritatis Splendor" last fall, both 
in Rome and in this country, provides an excellent model to be followed.
Not content to ward off negative reporting, the church may advantageously mount 
occasions at which it can show itself in a favorable light. An example would be 
the Pope's visit to the World Youth Day at Denver last year. Although the media 
showed a tendency to focus on divisive issues that were marginal to the event, 
the coverage was on the whole favorable, and deservedly so. The Pope himself, 
the bishops and the young people gave an excellent account of themselves and 
their faith.
The Catholic Church can take advantage of the great interest that it inevitably 
holds for the press. Because of its numinous ritual, its long history, its 
worldwide expansion and its insertion into the cultures of many lands, the 
church is an object of fascination to many who do not share its faith. Efforts 
should be made to see that the beautiful, edifying and spiritually inspiring 
aspects of the church are given due emphasis. The recent restoration of 
Michelangelo's frescoes for the Sistine chapel and the recent completion of the 
Catechism of the Catholic Church provide splendid opportunities for the church 
to show its best side. Perhaps more could be done to exhibit the church as a 
worldwide force for peace, love and international understanding at a time when 
whole nations are being dissolved by the forces of hatred and division.

From the standpoint of the news media, conscious efforts should be made to 
restrain the negative tendencies to which I have called attention. At times it 
may be necessary to resist the temptation to stimulate sales by spreading 
unfounded rumors or publishing slanted accounts. I recognize that the press has 
a legitimate interest in reporting bad as well as good news about the church. 
But more care must be taken to put the bad news in proper context and to give 
greater emphasis to the elements that journalism is inclined to neglect. As 
many critics have pointed out, most newspapers and magazines have no 
professionally qualified reporters in the field of religion. Such ignorance on 
the part of reporters would not be tolerated in other areas, such as politics, 
sports and business.
 
While every effort should be made to improve the handling of religious news, we 
cannot hope for total success. Christ, it is often said, was the perfect 
communicator. In him, as nowhere else, the medium and the message did coincide. 
He literally was the Gospel that he proclaimed. He communicated it without fear 
or compromise, by word and deed. But he met with misunderstanding and 
hostility. He clearly told his disciples to expect a similar reception: "If 
they persecuted me, they will persecute you". (Jn 15:20). Because the Gospel is 
alien to the world around us, it will always be, in some respects, a sign of 
contradiction. The secular press, because it belongs to this world and is 
directed towards a worldly audience, will never be the ideal organ for 
transmitting the Christian message. While relying on other media as well, the 
church must relate to the press as best it can, with full awareness that 
tensions and oppositions will persist as long as human
 history lasts.

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Taken from: L'Osservatore Romano Weekly Edition in English 16 November 2011, 
page 7
L'Osservatore Romano is the newspaper of the Holy See. The Weekly Edition in 
English is published for the US by:
The Cathedral Foundation L'Osservatore Romano English Edition 880 Park Avenue 
P.O. Box 777 Baltimore, MD 21203 Phone: (443) 263-0248 Fax: (443) 524-3155 
[email protected]

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