Message of the Holy Father on the Occasion
of the NINETEENTH World Day of the Sick
(11 February 2011)
‘By
his wounds you have been healed’ (
1 Pt
2:24)
Dear
Brothers and Sisters!
Every
year, on the day of the memorial of the Blessed Virgin of Lourdes,
which is celebrated on 11 February, the Church proposes the World Day
of the Sick. This event, as the venerable John Paul II wanted, becomes
a propitious occasion to reflect upon the mystery of suffering and
above all to make our communities and civil society more sensitive to
our sick brothers and sisters. If every man is our brother, much more
must the sick, the suffering and those in need of care be, at the
centre of our attention, so that none of them feels forgotten or
emarginated; indeed, ‘the true measure of humanity is essentially
determined in relationship to suffering and to the sufferer. This
holds true both for the individual and for society. A society unable
to accept its suffering members and incapable of helping to share
their suffering and to bear it inwardly through “com-passion” is a
cruel and inhuman society’ (Encyclical letter Spe salvi,
n. 38). The initiatives that will be organised in each diocese on the
occasion of this Day should be a stimulus to make care for the
suffering increasingly effective, also in view of the solemn
celebration that will take place in 2013 at the Marian sanctuary of
Altötting in Germany.
1.
I still have in my heart the moment when, during the course of the
pastoral visit to Turin, I was able to pause in reflection and prayer
before the Holy Shroud, before that suffering face, which invites us
to reflect on He who took upon himself the passion of man, of every
time and place, even our sufferings, our difficulties, our sins. How
many faithful, during the course of history, have passed in front of
that burial cloth, which enveloped the body of a crucified man, and
which completely corresponds to what the Gospels hand down to us about
the passion and death of Jesus! To contemplate it is an invitation to
reflect upon what St. Peter writes: ‘By his wounds you have been
healed’ (
1 Pt
2:24). The Son of God suffered, died, but rose again, and precisely
because of this those wounds become the sign of our redemption, of
forgiveness and reconciliation with the Father; however they also
become a test for the faith
of the disciples and our faith: every time that the Lord speaks about
his passion and death, they do not understand, they reject it, they
oppose it. For them, as for us, suffering is always charged with
mystery, difficult to accept and to bear. The two disciples of Emmaus
walk sadly because of the events that had taken place in those days in
Jerusalem, and only when the Risen One walks along the road with them
do they open up to a new vision (cf. Lk 24:13-31). Even the apostle
Thomas manifests the difficulty of believing in the way of redemptive
passion: “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands, and put
my finger in the mark of the nails and put my hand into his side, I
will not believe” (Jn 20:25). But before Christ who shows his
wounds, his response is transformed into a moving profession of faith:
“My Lord and my God!” (Jn 20:28). What was at first an
insurmountable obstacle, because it was a sign of Jesus’ apparent
failure, becomes, in the encounter with the Risen One, proof of a
victorious love: ‘Only a God who loves us to the extent of taking
upon himself our wounds and our pain, especially innocent suffering,
is worthy of faith.’ (Urbi et
Orbi Message, Easter 2007).
2.
Dear sick and suffering, it is precisely through the wounds of Christ
that we are able to see, with eyes of hope, all the evils that afflict
humanity. In rising again, the Lord did not remove suffering and evil
from the world, but he defeated them at their root. He opposed the
arrogance of Evil with the omnipotence of his Love. He has shown
us, therefore, that the way of peace and joy is Love: “Just as I
have loved you, you also should love one another” (Jn 13:34).
Christ, victor over death, is alive in our midst. And while with St.
Thomas we also say “My Lord and my God!”, let us follow our Master
in readiness to spend our lives for our brothers and sisters (cf. 1 Jn
3:16), becoming messengers of a joy that does not fear pain, the joy
of the Resurrection.
St.
Bernard observed: ‘God cannot suffer but He can suffer with’. God,
who is Truth and Love in person, wanted to suffer for us and with us;
He became man so that He could suffer with man, in a real way, in flesh and blood. To every human
suffering, therefore, there has entered One who shares suffering and
endurance; in all suffering con-solatio
is diffused, the consolation of God’s participating love so as to
make the star of hope rise (cf. Encyclical letter Spe
salvi, n. 39).
I
repeat this message to you, dear brothers and sisters, so that you may
be witnesses to it through your suffering, your lives and your faith.
3.
Looking forward to the appointment of Madrid, in August 2011, for the
World Youth Day, I would also like to address a special thought to
young people, especially those who live the experience of illness.
Often the Passion, the Cross of Jesus, generate fear because they seem
to be the negation of life. In reality, it is exactly the contrary!
The Cross is God’s ‘yes’ to mankind, the highest and most
intense expression of his love and the source from which flows eternal
life. From the pierced heart of Jesus this divine life flowed. He
alone is capable of liberating the world from evil and making his
Kingdom of justice, peace and love, to which we all aspire, grow (cf. Message
for the World Youth Day 2011, n. 3). Dear young people, learn to
‘see’ and to ‘meet’ Jesus in the Eucharist, where he is
present in a real way for us, to the point of making himself food for
our journey, but know how to recognise and serve him also in the poor,
in the sick, in our brothers and sisters who are suffering and in
difficulty, who need your help (cf. ibid., n. 4). To all you young people, both sick and healthy, I
repeat my invitation to create bridges of love and solidarity so that
nobody feels alone but near to God and part of the great family of his
children (cf. General Audience,
15 November 2006).
4.
When contemplating the wounds of Jesus our gaze turns to his most
sacred Heart, in which God’s love manifests itself in a supreme way.
The Sacred Heart is Christ crucified, with the side opened by the
lance from which flowed blood and water (cf. Jn 19:34), ‘symbol of
the sacraments of the Church, so that all men, drawn to the Heart of
the Saviour, might drink with joy from the perennial fountain of
salvation’ (Roman Missal,
Preface for the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus).
Especially you, dear sick people, feel the nearness of this Heart full
of love and draw with faith and joy from this source, praying:
‘Water of the side of Christ, wash me. Passion of Christ, strengthen
me. O good Jesus, hear my prayers. In your wounds, hide me’ (Prayer
of St. Ignatius of Loyola).
5.
At the end of this Message of mine for the next World Day of the Sick,
I would like to express my affection to each and everyone, feeling
myself a participant in the sufferings and hopes that you live every
day in union with the crucified and risen Christ, so that he gives you
peace and healing of heart. Together with him may the Virgin Mary,
whom we invoke with trust as Health of the Sick and Consoler of the Suffering, keep watch at your
side! At the foot of the Cross the prophecy of Simon was fulfilled for
her: her heart as a Mother was pierced (cf. Lk 2:35). From the depths
of her pain, a participation in that of her Son, Mary is made capable
of accepting the new mission: to become the Mother of Christ in his members. At the hour of the Cross, Jesus presents to her each of
his disciples, saying: “Behold your son” (cf. Jn 19:26-27). Her
maternal compassion for the Son becomes maternal compassion for each
one of us in our daily sufferings (cf. Homily
at Lourdes, 15 September 2008).
Dear
brothers and sisters, on this World Day of the Sick, I also invite the
authorities to invest more and more in health-care structures that
provide help and support to the suffering, above all the poorest and
most in need, and addressing my thoughts to all dioceses I send an
affectionate greeting to bishops, priests, consecrated people,
seminarians, health-care workers, volunteers and all those who
dedicate themselves with love to treating and relieving the wounds of
every sick brother and sister in hospitals or nursing homes and in
families: in the faces of the sick you should know how to see always
the Face of faces: that of Christ.
I
assure you all that I will remember you in my prayers, as I bestow
upon you my Apostolic Blessing.
From
the Vatican, 21 November 2010, the feast of Christ the King of the
Universe.
Benedictus PP XVI