Media Theoretician: Editorial journalism supports "radical anti-Clericalism"
Bonn (kath.net/idea) Prof. Norbert Bolz (Berlin) has leveled sharp criticisms of an ecclesiastical "superconformity to the modern". This is the case especially for the Protestant Church. "That is the accomodation, which is merciless and knows no boundaries -- which kills the Church", said the Protestant to a colloquium about the Christian media presene in Germany on the 1st of May in Bonn. The Catholic Institute for Social Science in Walberg was invited.
As an example of ecclesiastical accomodation Bolz described the straining after "political correctness". As the Professor continued, there is in the place of the impenetrability of living conditions in the globalized world, an "ever greater necessity for absoluteness." There is an opportunity for Christianity in that. A problem therefore, that one can only get the complexity of the Christian belief through the media with great difficulty. In television programs or in newspapers, "in which dependent clauses are almost never used", it is difficult for the Church to be done justice by the media.
Christianity with its good news is "principally uninteresting" for the media, since they are interested in bad news. For that reason Christianity is said to have "nothing new to say". Bolz also criticized even a "pronounced editorial jounralism" in Germany, which supports a "radical anti-Clericalism" and prescribe for the Church how it should proceed in the modern world.
Read original...at Kath.net...
"In television programs or in newspapers, "in which dependent clauses are almost never used", it is difficult for the Church to be done justice by the media."
ReplyDeleteI do believe that the Germans invented and patented the "dependent clause" resulting in long and involved sentences, with the "nicht" only coming as the last word.
I've always wondered what that does to the thought process if you have to listen to 15 or 20 words/ideas that you might agree with and then find a "nicht" as the last word.