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d) Moral and Religious Benefits of
Advertising
8.
In many cases, too, benevolent social
institutions, including those of a religious nature, use advertising to
communicate their messages — messages of faith, of patriotism, of tolerance,
compassion and neighborly service, of charity toward the needy, messages
concerning health and education, constructive and helpful messages that educate
and motivate people in a variety of beneficial ways.
For the Church, involvement in media-related
activities, including advertising, is today a necessary part of a comprehensive
pastoral strategy.10 This includes both the Church's own media — Catholic press
and publishing, television and radio broadcasting, film and audiovisual
production, and the rest — and also her participation in secular media. The
media "can and should be instruments in the Church's program of
re-evangelization and new evangelization in the contemporary world."11
While much remains to be done, many positive efforts of this kind already are
underway. With reference to advertising itself, Pope Paul VI once said that it
is desirable that Catholic institutions "follow with constant attention
the development of the modern techniques of advertising and... know how to make
opportune use of them in order to spread the Gospel message in a manner which
answers the expectations and needs of contemporary man."12
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