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"Blogging" Summit Hosted by Vatican
Catholic
bloggers from around the world met in Rome this month for an unprecedented
Vatican blogging "summit."
The 150 invited guests received encouragement from Vatican officials at
the meeting, which was organized by the Pontifical Council for Culture and the
Pontifical Council for Social Communications.
A County Meath-born Monsignor, who is deputy head of the Vatican's communications department, has said that the Vatican is well aware of the power of blogging in spreading the Catholic faith.
The meeting was designed as a get-acquainted session rather than an attempt to set standards for blogging. However, many speakers offered their own thoughts on the appropriate approach for Catholics engaged in blogging
Richard Rouse, an official at the culture council,
said news of the Vatican meeting already has encouraged other church officials
to begin a dialogue with local bloggers.
The Vatican meeting, he said, was not designed as
a how-to seminar, and it was not aimed at developing a code of conduct, but
rather to acknowledge the role of blogs in modern communications and to start a
dialogue between the bloggers and the Vatican.
Father Roderick Vonhogen, a Dutch priest and
author of "Katholiek Leven" ("Catholic Life"), told the
meeting that blogging "allows me to be a shepherd for people who need one,
not those who already have one" because they are active in a parish.
"If you write a blog post and no one
comments, you feel miserable ... alone and isolated," he said. The
comments let the writer and readers experience being part of a community.
But, it's only when you have established interest
and friendship that you can bring someone to faith, Father Vonhogen said.
Elizabeth Scalia, who writes "The
Anchoress," said that while the mainstream media tend to view blogs as
"little more than a means of self-promotion," the Catholic blogs
generally are real sources of "Catholic clarity."
But bloggers can't claim to be purveyors of
clarity unless they do so with charity, she said.
"Charity is one of the biggest challenges we
face," she said, because "freedom is both a gift and a source of
temptation for our egos."
Scalia said that the Catholic blogosphere is host
to too much "us and them" on both the conservative and liberal sides
of the church.
As Catholics, she said, "we have no business
fostering enemies."
"The church needs us," Scalia said.
"It needs us for evangelization. It needs us to disseminate information
and often to correct information."
"The church needs us to be where the sheep
are grazing," but at the same time, bloggers need the church and its
pastors to remind them that God's mercy reaches out to all people and that
Jesus wants his followers to be united, she said.
Archbishop Claudio Celli, president of Pontifical
Council for Social Communications, welcomed the bloggers to the Vatican and
told them the Vatican wanted to begin "a dialogue between faith and the
emerging culture" that is the blogosphere.
Rocco Palmo, author of "Whispers in the
Loggia," told the gathering that the 150 invitees represented "many
of the finest professional communicators" working for the Catholic Church,
although it is rare that any of them is paid for blogging.
The meeting, he said, is recognition of "our
contribution to the life of the church."
One of the discussion topics at the meeting was
the fact that blogging already is changing because, in many countries,
Twitter's 140-character messages are becoming a more popular form of
communication.
Another theme involved the use on blogs of
copyrighted stories and photographs taken from news sites.
Mattia Marasco, author of "WikiCulture,"
told the group that while it was right to acknowledge the source of material,
copyrights are "an old model for a new media."
Father Vonhogen said professional journalists will
have to get used to their material being taken, knowing that it amounts to free
publicity and that if they are good journalists they will survive.
"If they steal some of your content, as long
as you put out quality, you will make it," he said.
Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican
spokesman, told the bloggers that while Pope Benedict XVI "is a person who
does not Tweet or have a personal blog, he is very attentive and knows well
what is happening in the world" and supports Catholic media efforts, as
seen by his Good Friday television interview and by his book-length interview
with the German writer Peter Seewald.
"Bloggers are important" for forming and
informing church members, Father Lombardi said, but anyone who influences what
Catholics think must recognize the responsibility that brings with it.
Father Lombardi said he had to thank bloggers for
the times they acted to explain and spread church teaching and the thought of
Pope Benedict.
But he also said that the whole question of
bloggers' self-centeredness and "ego" is "one of the problems
which is worth reflecting on," because while it is a danger for all
communicators, a communicator who calls him- or herself Catholic must focus
first on serving others.
Thomas Peters, who writes "American
Papist," earned a strong round of applause when he asked Father Lombardi
to include bloggers on the list of communicators who get advanced copies of
Vatican documents; he said large secular media outlets get early copies and
often use the time to prepare stories that are not correct.
Father Lombardi said the Vatican press office
releases information and documents to all accredited journalists at the same
time, not making a distinction between major newspapers and Catholic outlets.
One effort that may help, he said, is his work to improve collaboration with
the communications offices of bishops' conferences and dioceses to ensure news
gets out quickly and accurately.

