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                |  Monday,
                  May 27, 2002
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                |  | Pope blesses the
          World Wide WebLuke Baker
  POPE
          John Paul is putting his faith in the Internet. In his weekly address
          at St Peter's Square, the 81-year-old Pontiff said: "I've
          decided, therefore, to propose a big new theme for this year: 'The
          Internet - a new forum for proclaiming the Gospel'."
 The leader of the
          world's Roman Catholics didn't say how much he practices what he
          preaches -for instance, whether he surfs the World Wide Web. He
          doesn't have his own e-mail address. But the Vatican does
          have an active Web. site (www.vatican.va), the Pope sent his first
          message over the Internet last year, and there's talk he is searching
          for a patron saint for Internet users. "Recent progress
          in communications and information have presented the Church with
          unheard-of possibilities for evangelism," he said. "We shouldn't be
          afraid to put to sea in the vast ocean of information," he went
          on. "If we do so, the good news can reach the hearts of the men
          and women of the new millennium." In the past, the Pope
          has said the Web should be regulated to stop depravity in cyberspace.
          On Sunday, he gave it his unwavering blessing. "We have to
          become part of this modern and ever more finely woven web of
          communication with realism and confidence, convinced that, if it is
          used competently and with due responsibility, it can offer a sound
          opportunity for the dissemination of the word of the Lord." Taken together, the
          Pope's latest thoughts were a big step forward from January, when in
          his last comments on the Internet he emphasised its potential for
          harm, going so far as to say it could demean human dignity. "Despite its
          enormous potential for good, some of the degrading and damaging ways
          the Internet can be used are already obvious to all," he said at
          the time. Those comments raised
          the hackles of Internet die-hards who are generally against any form
          of censorship and any view that cyberspace should in any way be
          policed for content. The Roman Catholic
          Church has traditionally adapted to discoveries through the ages, from
          the Renaissance to the invention of printing presses and the
          Industrial Revolution. The Vatican has extensive media
          interests, with its own publishing house, a radio station, missionary
          news agency, television channel and newspaper.
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