In recent times, a new wave of insight about the nature of humanity has taken the centre stage of intellectual and scientific discourse. Ever since the first photographs of our world were beamed back to the Earth from outer space, many people agreed that a new era in human history dawned, and for the first time we could see planet Earth, extraordinarily beautiful in its vibrant colours, yet hanging isolated in a massive unending sea of black universe. From that esteemed moment, humanity saw the truth of what it was, what it is and what it will continue to be: “one robust but fragile community; inextricably bound together, and unalterably responsible for the future of ourselves and the planet.” By the fiat of that great event, humanity was compelled by truth to abandon the narrow perspectives of its thinking and action in warm embrace of the ideal that we are all members of one global human family.
This is the reason why Teilhard De Chardin would say that “Each element of the cosmos is positively woven from all of the others.... The universe holds together, and only one way of considering it is really possible, that is, to take it as a whole, in one piece.” We live in a global planet and we are a cosmopolitan people. Whatever affects life (positively or negatively) in one little village of the world has repercussions for the entire globe. After all, we are said to live in one global village, or more restrictedly, one global hamlet where the forces of scientific and technological change have made the transfer of information and communication a matter of the swift dynamic of split seconds. Big money and ideas exchange hands at a rate faster than the speed of light or sound. These great leaps in human civilization cannot but astound us. As such, the ideal that we are condemned to be global neighbours has become a common patrimony for all human beings.
Facebook is a relatively recent global phenomenon in the world of modern digital Information and Communication Technology and young people are often always interested in what is trendy, chicly, fashionable or in vogue. We can therefore understand why Facebook captures the attention even of the most disinterested young person. Beyond the fashionable nature of Facebook, we must truly admit that there are countless benefits it offers. This means that social utilities that connect people around the world should be welcomed as a noble gift to humanity- an expression of the wisdom, ingenuity, intelligence, inventive skill and creative vision with which the human person has been endowed by God.
Man’s genius has with God’s help produced marvellous technical inventions from creation, especially in our times. Launched in February 2004 having been invented by Mark Zuckerberg with his college roommates and fellow computer science students Eduardo Saverin, Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes, all students of Harvard University, Massachusetts in a dormitory room, originally, the website was limited to students of Harvard but was later expanded to colleges within the Boston axis. Further expansion included all university and high school students in America until it was finally permitted to anyone from 13 years and above across the world. The predecessor to Facebook was ‘facemash’ which Zuckerberg invented in 2003 while a second year student at Harvard. In Facebook, users add people as friends and send them messages, update their personal profiles, notify friends about themselves, chat with friends, and can join networks or fan clubs organized by schools, workplaces, institutions or friends. The website’s name stems from the colloquial name of books given to students at the start of the academic year by university administrations in the US with the intention of helping students to get to know each other better.
The immediate question that arises here stems from the nature of our topic: What is the connection between Facebook and theology? Can we speak of a theology of Facebook in a specifically Christian context? This quest would echo naively in the uncircumcised ears of an average religious person or a novel student of theology. However, looking introspectively there seems to be the possibility of a theology of Facebook. Ostensibly, there seems to be a great gulf between theology and the sociality of Facebook. But is that factual? Are they mutually inclusive or exclusive? These are the quandaries a typical religious mind would cogitate faced with the quest of justifying a nexus between theology and Facebook.
In this kind of atmosphere the question of what theology actually is naturally surfaces. Pope Benedict XVI raises the same question when he asks: what in fact is Theology? Has it been described adequately when it is said to be a methodically ordered reflection on the questions of religion or men’s relationship with God? No, for that takes us not a step over religious studies. Theology does not revel on the unresolved mysteries of man, for philosophy of religion and religious studies have that to contend with. According to the Pope, the path of theology is indicated in the cliché of St. Anselm: credo ut intelligam (“I believe that I may understand”) which indicates an acceptance of what is given in advance. Anthony Akinwale in his paper On What is Theology asserts that theology is ideally “a speech about God” slightly adjacent to the literal etymological roots that theology is the science of God. This speech about God is what Pope Benedict XVI explains as the advantage of what is given in advance. Hence, they both established the claim that the Word is the ultimate basis of theology; something that can never be entirely absent from the path of faith.
Drawing from the above picture, theology as expressed in the opening chapter of Dei Verbum is essentially a revelation of the face of God to his people. Hence, theology can be seen then in the perspective of God grounding a communion with man. God comes to make a reunion with Man. It is therefore a justified imitation of God when men reciprocate this gesture by showcasing the souvenir of socialization among one another. Men could be said to theologize if they participate or imitate the divine mode of operation by making social connections in the abode that they have been beautifully placed. Hence, there is a sense in which a hermeneutic of theology as communion (fraternity and solidarity) can be ascribed to that relation. As an instrument of communication and the transmission of information, Facebook links people from across diverse national, ethnic, political, social, economic, religious and cultural backgrounds. Through the Facebook utility, people establish connections and relationships of communion between themselves and others, such that we can conveniently say that theologically, this communion can be ascribed to the relationship of fraternity, solidarity and communion which binds all people transcendentally and immanently.
For us religious people, efforts must be made to get ourselves immersed in the Facebook utility. If nothing seems providential about it, the fact that the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI’s Message for the Celebration of the World Day of Communications this year (16th May 2010) makes vital recommendations about the importance of digital mode of communication for priests, pastoral ministers, young people and the whole Church in the service of the word of God suggests that we cannot altogether stand indifferent in the cultural matrices that have characteristically dominated public consciousness in recent times. Furthermore, the Vatican II Fathers have advised that it is the Church’s birthright to use and own any of these media which are necessary or useful for the formation of Christians and for pastoral activity (Inter Mirifica, p. 285).The media is a very powerful instrument of social progress and a vector for social cohesion, yet it can also be the vehicle for the spread of propaganda, for the manipulation of people and for the decline in moral standards in many areas of life. This is an area that much consideration must be given as far as catechesis of the young is concerned. When we take a careful survey of the scientific and technological revolution making their debut today, we find the young people at the heart of the ‘jet age’. Many young people today are at the centre stage of the use of the internet, the television, the computer, the newspaper and other many other media of social communication. The use of these media has positive and negative values that can either mould or destroy the lives of very many young people.
Facebook is indeed a powerful tool for the transmission of information and communication at a very fast speed. Through the chat feature and messaging system, business transactions and other transmissions can be performed at ease at a highly economical rate, with the greatest amount of flexibility and comfort. Profile Information and other posts (photos, animations, links, etc) on one’s wall page can contribute meaningfully in drafting the original outlines of a person’s biography. In a general fashion, the ideal of keeping contact with friends and establishing new ties with relations, new friends and colleagues becomes easier and beneficial. For the Christian, the Facebook utility offers a powerful tool for social communication and evangelization. When one positively uses the opportunity to share ideas on one’s Facebook wall that is accessible to a wide readership audience, he can seize upon the opportunity to stuff the reader’s mind with issues of principal concern for the Christian conscience. Beyond this, the social network utility of Facebook offers the signatory the opportunity of connecting with old and cherished friends, meeting and making new friends and subscribing to objects and properties of Christian virtues like being a fan of the Rosary, the Pope, the Blessed Virgin Mary, particular churches and a host of other fan clubs. This facility opens up new vistas of information and ideas that may not have been accessible to one were one not a subscriber. Facebook helps one to stay current and up-to-date regarding events and happenings around the world.
In the ancient philosophical era, the classic philosopher of all times, Socrates equated knowledge with virtue. With the paradigm shift precipitated by modern science, Francis Bacon the English thinker in his Classic Novum Organum equated knowledge with power. The positive judicious use of the Facebook utility can offer one the opportunity for learning, scholarship, sharing and dissemination of ideas, some sort of a cross-pollination and fertilization of ideas. With knowledge construed as virtue and power, the opportunity of a privileged access to network utilities create the receptacle for the right cultivation of a learning culture imbued with moral values that impact positively on one’s life and style. Although we cannot totally dispense with the fact that some people can count on the utility to perpetrate shoddy activities like cyber-crime, promiscuous display of pornographic literatures, fraudulent activities and unholy alliances between new found friends, the utility purposes to confer immense and invaluable benefits on all users and subscribers. Many users would accede to the fact that the utility of Facebook has linked them with numerous distinguished personalities they would ordinarily not have had the grace of meeting cheaply. Facebook can therefore be viewed with the eyes of a melting pot of peoples of different races, tribes, languages, locality, occupations, careers, creed, and social countenance!
A 13th century student song says: Gaudeamus igitur, luvenes dum sumus, (Let us be happy while we are young). I will offer you Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the former American President’s interpretation of happiness. He says: “Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort. The joy and moral stimulation of work no longer must be forgotten in the mad chase of evanescent profits. These dark days will be worth all they cost us if they teach us that our true destiny is not to be ministered unto but to minister to ourselves and to our fellow men.” The root word for ‘ministry’ or ‘minister’ is the Latin ministerium and it means service. In the final analysis, happiness consists in serving others. How does this relate to youths and Facebook?
Firstly, the progenitors of this leading social network utility are all young people who invented the facility while they were still university students. In an age when young people are given to the free reins of a highly materialist and consumerist lifestyle and the vain pursuit of the ephemeral pleasures and comfort of a transient world, the originators of Facebook remind us by the extraordinary manner of their life and invention that young people can make use of the wide margins of initiative, inventive skill and creative vision which God has endowed them with for the benefit of humanity. In Nigeria, many young people live without jobs or paid employment, and many are given to a life of crime, promiscuity, kidnapping, terrorism, militancy and other behavioural attitudes that arouse the ire of any sane society with clearly defined set of moral values. Many students lack the ability to translate the book or intellectual knowledge acquired all through college and high school into concrete practical results. This is an ontology that Facebook encourages us to challenge. We must be full of creative initiative innovative resourcefulness and zeal for positive personal and integral development. Benjamin Disraeli would say, “Nurture your minds with great and noble thoughts.”
Secondly, as young people, we must be ever conscious of the fact that Facebook is not just a place for fashion show or obscenity as is currently the case with a cross section of Nigerian users. On many people’s wall and profile pages, all one notices is a cascade of photographs, some of which are offensive to a good sense of morality because they are promiscuous, obscene and pornographic. Often times, one encounters people or read comments that are not morally encouraging because of their vulgar, bad-mannered, rude, naughty and offensive statements. To people who labour to preserve a sense of moral consciousness in all they do, such users usually give a bad image of themselves. Beyond social relevance, Facebook helps young people to promote and nurture the noble culture of reading and writing and updating oneself in all things concerned with knowledge, life and human experience. Thirdly, Facebook offers young people endless opportunities to meet new people, make new friends, and connect with old and cherished friends as well as share insights, knowledge, experiences and feelings. What this means is that we must be open to meet new people. It is not just enough to connect with old friends. Imagine how monotonous and boring life will be if all the people we meet everyday are only those we have known.
Fourthly, I want to stress the aspect of evangelization and the propagation of the Christian faith which young people are called to undertake on behalf of the Church. Young people have a special and esteemed place in the Church’s mission of evangelization, and with Facebook, the means for reaching millions of people with the message of the love of Christ is offered boundlessly. This means that promoting the spread of the Gospel is not just limited to the work of priests, religious and catechists, but also encompasses in a grand way the attitudes and interests of young people. All the members of the church should make a concerted effort to ensure that the means of communication are put at the service of the multiple forms of the apostolate without delay and as energetically as possible, where and when they are needed. (Inter Mirifica, p. 288). In a digital age as ours, it will be a painful experience that young people who are the future of the Church and the society do not take up the challenge of promoting the evangelization and catechesis of people. This can be done on one’s Facebook wall page through posting comments for Christian reflection on feast days, solemnities, special liturgical events and even biblical quotes for meditation. Signing up on Christian fan clubs is also a visible, commendable and exemplary way to promote the spread of the faith.
Lastly, we have to be careful of the time we spend Facebooking. While it is a highly recommended social network utility for all young people, we must make prudent use of our creative and productive time in engaging ourselves in activities that will ultimately be of immense benefits for us. One is often likely to meet people who are always online for greater number of hours of the day. Such occurrence leaves one wondering whether they do not have other positive areas where they can channel the exercise of their precious and leisure time. Virtue, it is said, lies in the middle. The secret to using Facebook is not addiction but moderation!
In this whole paper, what practical connections can we establish between youths and the use of Facebook? In the context of our own circumstances as youths and young people, parish groups and youth organizations can open up pages where their members will be encouraged to register their membership. This will greatly assist in the easy transmission of vital information regarding meeting, gatherings and other events to members. It can also serve as a way of notifying or inviting the general public of the events organized by the youths. Finally, I will like to encourage all those who have not yet signed up on the Facebook network to waste no time in doing so. In this age of digital communications, all those of us who are young are urged to ever more find ways of making the world a better place. The more safe and habitable the world is for all of us, the more secure our future. “There comes a time when we heed a certain call; when the world must come together as one.” Now is the time! Facebook is the answer!
“One must also bear in mind the enormous diffusion of the means of social communication. Their power transcends national boundaries, making the individual almost a citizen of the world. The media have enormous influence on the lives of the faithful, both in what they teach and in the attitudes and behaviour to which they expose the faithful. (Sacred Congregation for the Clergy, General Catechetical Directory, Ad norman decreti, 11 April 1971, 2b
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