By Devin Watkins
A group of around 50 journalists from The Holy Land Review, accompanied by Fr. Francesco Patton, OFM, the Custos of the Holy Land, met the Pope for a private audience on Monday morning.
The publication of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land is celebrating its 100th anniversary, and offers news, information, and insights on life in the land of Jesus.
Pope Francis thanked the entire media group—which includes staff from the Christian Media Center and the Custody’s website and social media—for their dedication to the Church’s mission.
“The service you carry out today is in line with the communicative intuition which guided the Custos Ferdinando Diotallevi, and consists—as he wrote in the first edition of the review—in ‘making better known the Holy Land, the Land of God, the cradle of Christianity, the venerable shrines where the Redemption of the human race was fulfilled.’”
The Pope said the mission of telling the story of the Holy Land means sharing “the Fifth Gospel”, which is “the historical and geographical environment in which the Word of God was revealed and took on flesh in Jesus of Nazareth, for us and for our salvation.”
It also means telling the story of those who live there now, including Christians of various Churches and denominations, as well as Jews and Muslims.
He added that the journalists’ overall goal should be to help build a “fraternal society” in the difficult and complex social context of the Middle East.
Communication, said the Pope, must help “build community” and fraternity.
Pope Francis went on to thank the staff of The Holy Land Review for “encountering people where and how they are.”
He noted that the journalists show courage by publishing news about suffering and difficult parts of the Middle East—like Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and Gaza.
Their work, said the Pope, highlights the good being done and active resistance to the evils of war, along with stories of reconciliation, restored dignity, and the hopes and tragedies of refugees.
The Pope pointed out that first-hand, lived experience is essential to effectively communicate the place where the Word of God manifested His message of salvation.
He said the journalists are called to tell about the Holy Land “where the history and geography of salvation meet and allow us to offer a new reading of the Biblical text, especially the Gospels.
Finally, Pope Francis renewed his encouragement for the staff of The Holy Land Review.
He urged them to take wholeheartedly to all forms of media and social media to “enrich the faith of many people, even of those who lack the opportunity to make a pilgrimage to the holy places.”
Click here to read the full Address of His Holiness to the Delegation of the Custody of The Holy Land on the Centenary of the journal "La Terra Santa"