World Day of Sick
"Compassionate health care in the service of Christ" |
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Message
of the Holy Father Benedict XVI
for the Sixteenth World Day of the
Sick
2. One cannot contemplate Mary without being attracted by Christ and one
cannot look at Christ without immediately perceiving the presence of Mary. There
is an indissoluble link between the Mother and the Son, generated in her womb by
work of the Holy Spirit, and this link we perceive, in a mysterious way, in the
Sacrament of the Eucharist, as the Fathers of the Church and theologians pointed
out from the early centuries onwards. ‘The flesh born of Mary, coming from the
Holy Spirit, is bread descended from heaven’, observed St. Hilary of
The presence of many sick pilgrims in
3. If Lourdes leads us to reflect upon the maternal love of the
Immaculate Virgin for her sick and suffering children, the next International
Eucharistic Congress will be an opportunity to worship Jesus Christ present in
the Sacrament of the altar, to entrust ourselves to him as Hope that does not
disappoint, to receive him as that medicine of immortality which heals the body
and the spirit. Jesus Christ redeemed the world through his suffering, his death
and his resurrection, and he wanted to remain with us as the ‘bread of life’
on our earthly pilgrimage. ‘The Eucharist, Gift of God for the Life of the
World’: this is the theme of the Eucharistic Congress and it emphasises how
the Eucharist is the gift that the Father makes to the world of His only Son,
incarnated and crucified. It is he who gathers us around the Eucharistic table,
provoking in his disciples loving care for the suffering and the sick, in whom
the Christian community recognises the face of its Lord. As I pointed out in the
Post-Synodal Exhortation Sacramentum
caritatis, ‘Our communities, when they celebrate
the Eucharist, must become ever more conscious that the sacrifice of Christ is
for all, and that the Eucharist thus compels all who believe in him to become
“bread that is broken” for others’ (n. 88). We are thus encouraged
to commit ourselves in the first person to helping our brethren, especially
those in difficulty, because the vocation of every Christian is truly that of
being, together with Jesus, bread that is broken for the life of the world.
4.
It thus appears clear that it is specifically from the Eucharist that pastoral
care in health must draw the necessary spiritual strength to come effectively to
man’s aid and to help him to understand the salvific value of his own
suffering. As the Servant of God John Paul II was to write in the already quoted
Apostolic Letter Salvifici doloris,
the Church sees in her suffering brothers and sisters as it were a multiple
subject of the supernatural power of Christ (cf. n. 27). Mysteriously united to
Christ, the man who suffers with love and meek self-abandonment to the will of
God becomes a living offering for the salvation of the world. My beloved
Predecessor also stated that ‘The more a person is
threatened by sin, the heavier the structures of sin which today’s world
brings with it, the greater is the eloquence which human suffering possesses in
itself. And the more the Church feels the need to have recourse to the value of
human sufferings for the salvation of the world’ (ibidem). If, therefore, at Quebec the mystery of the Eucharist, the
gift of God for the life of the world, is contemplated during the World Day of
the Sick in an ideal spiritual parallelism, not only will the actual
participation of human suffering in the salvific work of God be celebrated, but
the valuable fruits promised to those who believe can in a certain sense be
enjoyed. Thus pain, received with faith, becomes the door by which to enter the
mystery of the redemptive suffering of Jesus and to reach with him the peace and
the happiness of his Resurrection.
5. While I extend my cordial greetings to all sick people and to all
those who take care of them in various ways, I invite the diocesan and parish
communities to celebrate the next World Day of the Sick by appreciating to the
full the happy coinciding of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the
apparitions of Our Lady at Lourdes with the International Eucharistic Congress.
May it be an occasion to emphasise the importance of the Holy Mass, of the
Adoration of the Eucharist and of the cult of the Eucharist, so that chapels in
our health-care centres become a beating heart in which Jesus offers himself
unceasingly to the Father for the life of humanity! The distribution of the
Eucharist to the sick as well, done with decorum and in a spirit of prayer, is
true comfort for those who suffer, afflicted by all forms of infirmity.
May the next World Day of the Sick be, in addition, a propitious
circumstance to invoke in a special way the maternal protection of Mary over
those who are weighed down by illness; health-care workers; and workers in
pastoral care in health! I think in particular of priests involved in this
field, women and men religious, volunteers and all those who with active
dedication are concerned to serve, in body and soul, the sick and those in need.
I entrust all to Mary, the Mother of God and our Mother, the Immaculate
Conception. May she help everyone in testifying that the only valid response to
human pain and suffering is Christ, who in resurrecting defeated death and gave
us the life that knows no end. With these feelings, from my heart I impart to
everyone my special Apostolic Blessing. From
the
Benedict
XVI. |