THESE should go
together. The tragedy of our times is
precisely because our technological progress is not
matched by
progress in the spiritual and moral life. We need to do
everything to
put the two together.
We cannot deny
that our technological progress, which
offers us a lot of good as well as a lot of dangers,
poses new
challenges and can trigger new issues. It can awaken our
dormant good
potentials, but it can also stir up some latent
weaknesses we have
been carrying along for years without us noticing them.
Thus, almost
like all of a sudden we realize that there
are new possibilities for making business, for doing
politics, and
yes, even for doing more apostolate. But without the
matching
spiritual and moral progress, we will also realize that we
are easily
trapped into some forms of addiction to games, to
pornography, and to
all kinds of harmful distractions.
Progress in the
spiritual and moral life, in this case,
should mean more vital identification with Christ, more
docility to
the Holy Spirit, more obedience to Church teaching so
that we can
manage to be more discerning of what is genuinely true,
good and
beautiful for us and not deceived by their false and fake
versions.
This would
require a number of things. To be prudent and
discerning in the use of the new technologies, we have to
see to it
that everything has to start and end with God. Without
that as the
fundamental perspective to have, we would be exposing
ourselves to
dangers that can be so subtle and deceiving that we would
think these
dangers are benefits themselves.
There should
also be a great need for self-dominion that
is rooted on our identification with Christ. We cannot
deny that
nowadays all sorts of tactics are used to tickle and
attract our
senses, feelings, emotions, passions and imagination,
while starving
our spiritual life.
Images and
messages, memes, slogans and the so-called
‘hugot’ lines are crafted to appeal to our body while
numbing the
pristine yearnings of our soul. We are made to become
more bodily,
materially and worldly-oriented with the corresponding
drying up of
our spiritual and supernatural life with God.
There is no doubt
that the general atmosphere created by
our technological progress is that of secularization,
that of setting
aside God and our duty to relate ourselves and everything
else to him.
We somehow are made to believe that God has nothing to do
with our
heavily technological culture of today.
We need to be
wary of this danger and do something to
correct it, more than just protecting ourselves from it
or avoiding
altogether the use of our new technologies. These latter
ideas are
unrealistic. We definitely need the new technologies and
we should be
very thankful for them. But we have to use them properly.
We should
really make matching progress in our spiritual
and moral life. We need to bring God to the new technologies.
In fact,
God should be the principle, center and end of our new
technological
culture.
Without God,
there is no way but our increasingly
sophisticated technological culture to be a spoiling and
corrupting
agent. It will be a very sweet poison. Only the people
who are with
God can survive the quiet onslaught of the many dangers
the new
technologies bring. Only they can properly take advantage
of these
powerful tools.
We need to be
ready for this challenge. Thus, it is
important that we bring this issue to our prayer, begging
God to guide
us in these very tricky waters of our digital world. We
have to ask
for guidance and quick to implement the measures of
prudence that such
prayer would bring to mind.
From a
personal, individual concern, let’s make it a
social one, covering more and more people in the family,
schools,
offices, churches, etc., developing the appropriate
networks.
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