Parish Web Site
Parish Diary
Fr. Peter Daly
6/19/98
Our parish has a Web site. This amazes me.
Why does an eternal message need instant communication?
In other
professions, despite early promises, computers have not made life better or
simpler.
Way back in the early 1980s, when I was practicing law,
our law offices got their first "computer," an early IBM PC. It had only enough memory to store a few
letters and documents. We stood and stared at it at first. Nobody knew how it worked. It took ages to do a single letter.
But
one lawyer talked glowingly about the coming of the "paperless"
office. Law books, he said, would be a
thing of the past. We would now
communicate by blips on a screen.
He
retired a few years ago,
complaining of the avalanche of computer generated
paperwork. Briefs are now longer. People bury you under pleadings.
I
escaped into the seminary. You can run,
but you cannot hide.
Three years ago, at a meeting of priests, someone suggested
that each parish get a Web site on the Internet. The proposal was greeted with amused
laughter.
What, we wondered, was so urgent in parish
life that people needed to check it 24 hours a day. After all, we have a bulletin and a
telephone.
But it caught on. First in big suburban parishes. Then in downtown
"transient" parishes, with lots of tourists and conventioneers. Now, even little rural parishes like
mine. We are fishing for souls with the an Internet.
So what do we tell people on the Web?
Nothing
much they couldn't already get in our parish bulletin. In fact we put the parish bulletin on
line.
But
we can "hot link" them to other sources of information. For instance, if you want more information
on our parish RENEW program,
you can get to the national RENEW Web site at the click of a
mouse. We can also link people to the
Archdiocese and other parish Web sites.
Getting excited yet?
I have to confess I love being part of something that is
called the "world wide"
web. Kind of makes our little parish
seem important.
But,
I'm still a little uncertain about this Web business.
After the shine wears off, it will be just one more thing
that has to be kept up to date, like the weekly bulletin. And people will pay no more attention to the
Web than they do the bulletin.
On the
other hand, I think the Church needs to be where ever our people are. Today, that means "on line." There are lost sheep in cyberspace.
Moreover,
the Church needs to be on the Web to counter the juke. We should be at least as accessible to folks
as salesmen of less enduring messages. If people are in chat
rooms, Christians need to be in the
conversation.
Four hundred years ago the church
of Rome greeted the advent of the moveable type printing press with a jaundiced
eye. Too bad. Others, saw what a wonderful thing the
printing press was and
put bibles in the hands of
anyone who could read.
We ought not to make the same mistake again.
The Internet still makes me uncomfortable, but I will
certainly pass away before it does. We
are still fishers of
souls, but our boat has a silicone chip.
If
we want to catch this wave of
evangelization, we need to learn to surf the Net.