Communication is part of God’s plan for us and an essential
way to experience fellowship. Made in the image and likeness
of our Creator, we are able to express and share all that is
true, good, and beautiful. We are able to describe our own
experiences and the world around us, and thus to create
historical memory and the understanding of events. But when
we yield to our own pride and selfishness, we can also distort
the way we use our ability to communicate. This can be seen
from the earliest times, in the biblical stories of Cain and
Abel and the Tower of Babel (cf. Gen 4:4-16; 11:1-9). The
capacity to twist the truth is symptomatic of our condition,
both as individuals and communities. On the other hand,
when we are faithful to God’s plan, communication becomes
an effective expression of our responsible search for truth and
our pursuit of goodness.
In today’s fast-changing world of communications and digital
systems, we are witnessing the spread of what has come to be
known as “fake news”. This calls for reflection, which is why I
have decided to return in this World Communications Day
Message to the issue of truth, which was raised time and time
again by my predecessors, beginning with Pope Paul VI, whose
1972 Message took as its theme: “Social Communications at
the Service of Truth”. In this way, I would like to contribute
to our shared commitment to stemming the spread of fake
news and to rediscovering the dignity of journalism and the
personal responsibility of journalists to communicate the
truth.
Best wishes
Pope Francis
Pope