His Holiness Pope Francis' Issued His Message for the Communications Day Scheduled on May 2022: 'Listening is essential for dialogue'

His Holiness Pope Francis conversing with journalists - archive photo (Vatican Media)

In his Message for the World Day of Social Communications, His Holiness Pope Francis says listening is an indispensable first step in human communication, and a dimension of love.

By Christopher Wells

After focusing last year on seeing reality and conveying it to others, His Holiness Pope Francis in his 2022 Message for the World Communications Day emphasized the quality of listening, which he said “is decisive in the grammar of communication and is a condition for genuine dialogue.”

The Pope noted that people are quickly losing the ability to listen to one another, while at the same time listening is undergoing new developments, especially due to new forms of communicating. These trends demonstrate that “listening is still essential in human communication.”

Listening with the heart

The title of this year’s message, “Listening with the ear of the heart,” invites us to reflect that listening involves more than simply the sense of hearing. True listening is a foundation of genuine relationships, and is foundational to the relationship between God and humanity.

The Pope, quoting St Paul, noted that “faith comes through hearing.” In fact, he remarked, “listening corresponds to the humble style of God,” who reveals Himself by speaking, and by listening to men and women recognizes them as His partners in dialogue.

Human beings are called in turn to “tune in, to be willing to listen,” as God calls them to a covenant of love. Fundamentally, the Pope said, “listening is a dimension of love.”

A condition of good communication

In many relationships, however, true communication is lacking, as dialogues end up as competing monologues, where the two sides refuse to listen to one another. This is evident nowadays even in public life, the Pope said, where people often end up “talking past” one another.

His Holiness Pope Francis insisted, however, that “listening is the first indispensable ingredient of dialogue and good communication.”

Without listening, he said, there is no good journalism; journalists need to listen to many voices in order to ensure the “reliability and seriousness” of the information they transmit.

Listening, he continued, allows people to exercise the art of discernment, the ability “to orient ourselves in a symphony of voices.”…

This report was originally published on Asia News website. Please click here to read the full text.

Previous
Previous

Quand un patriarche appelle à la fin de «tous les égoïsmes individuels et collectifs»

Next
Next

Cardinal Zenari: Synodality and charity to heal Syria's bloody wounds