The Media Message of the Immaculate Conception
Every year on the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Pope prays at the foot of the statue of Mary on Piazza di Spagna in the heart of the city of Rome.
Last year, in his address on that occasion, Pope Benedict XVI reflected upon Mary’s message for today’s urbanized world in which the media play such an important role. What can we and the media learn from Mary’s presence? Here are a couple of excerpts of the Pope’s address:
1. Do not amplify bad news; bring the world the good news as well
How great is our need of this good news! Every day, in fact, in the newspapers, on television and on the radio bad news is broadcast, repeated, amplified, so that we become used to the most terrible things and inured to them, and in a certain way poisoned, since the negative effect is never completely eliminated but accumulates day after day. The heart hardens and thoughts grow gloomy.
For this reason, the city needs Mary whose presence speaks of God, reminds us of the victory of Grace over sin and leads us to hope, even in the most difficult human situations.
2. Do not exploit people’s personal history; show every person respect
In the city invisible people live or survive who every now and then hit the front page headlines or television news and are exploited to the very last, as long as the news and images are newsworthy. This is a perverse mechanism which unfortunately few are able to resist. The city first hides them and then exposes them to public scrutiny, pitilessly or with false pity.
Instead, there is in every person the desire to be accepted as a person and considered a sacred reality, for every human history is a sacred history and demands the utmost respect.
3. Do not treat people as mere ‘spectators’; motivate people to act
The city, dear brothers and sisters, is all of us! Each one of us contributes with his life to its moral atmosphere, for better or for worse. The border between good and evil runs through every heart and none of us should feel entitled to judge others.
Rather, each one must feel duty bound to improve him or herself. The mass media always tends to make us feel like “spectators”, as if evil concerned only others and certain things could never happen to us. Instead, we are all “actors” and, for better or for worse, our behaviour has an influence on others.
4. Do not just look at the surface, look at the heart
We often complain of the pollution of the atmosphere that in some parts of the city is unbreathable. It is true. Everyone must do his or her part to make the city a cleaner place. Yet, there is another kind of contamination, less perceptible to the senses, but equally dangerous. It is the pollution of the spirit; it makes us smile less, makes our faces gloomier, less likely to greet each other or look each other in the eye…. The city has many faces but unfortunately collective dynamics can make us lose our in-depth perception of them. We perceive everything superficially. People become bodies and these bodies lose their soul, they become things, faceless objects that can be exchanged and consumed.
Mary Immaculate helps us to rediscover and defend what lies within people, for in her is a perfect transparency of the soul in the body. She is purity in person, in the sense that spirit, soul and body are fully consistent with one another and with God’s will. Our Lady teaches us to be open to God’s action and to see others as he sees them: starting with the heart. And to look at them with compassion, with love, with infinite tenderness, especially those who are lonely, despised, or exploited. “Where sin increased, grace abounded all the more”.
5. Do not focus on the negative; respond to evil by doing good
I want to pay homage publicly to all those who in silence, not with words but with deeds, strive to practice this evangelical law of love that propels the world forward. There are so many of them even here in Rome and they rarely hit the headlines. They are men and women of all ages, who have realized that it is not worth condemning, complaining or accusing; that it is better to respond to evil by doing good. This changes things; or rather it changes people, and hence improves society.
While we are busy in our daily routine, let us listen to Mary’s voice. Let us hear her silent but pressing appeal. She tells each one of us that wherever sin increases, grace may abound all the more, starting in your our own heart and in your life! And the city will be more beautiful, more Christian and more human.
Which part of the Pope’s address resonates the most with you? Let us know in the comments!







This post prompted me to re-read ‘Gaudete in Domino’, by Pope Paul VI. Looking at Joy as a Christian, and remembering to share my actions of/ memories of Joy with others. While sometimes in the media we see pictures of duress, and we need to know of those in need, we must still try and paint the pictures of \Good News\,…
Which bring me up to Pope Benedict XVI, and his writing, ‘Spe Salvi’, where he shares the idea that the \Good News\ is not just a source of sharing something unknown, but a source of sharing that will allow things to happen, and even be life changing.