MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER FRANCIS
FOR THE INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PERSONS WITH
DISABILITIES
“You are my friends” (Jn 15:14)
Dear brothers and sisters!
As we celebrate your International Day, I would
like to speak directly to all of you who live
with any condition of disability, to tell you
that the Church loves you and needs each of you
for the fulfilment of her mission at the service
of the Gospel.
Jesus, our friend
Jesus is our friend! That is what he told his
disciples at the Last Supper (cf. Jn 15:14). His
words also speak to us; they shed light on the
mystery of our close relationship to him as
members of his Church. “Friendship with Jesus
cannot be broken. He never leaves us, even
though at times it appears that he keeps silent.
When we need him, he makes himself known to us;
he remains at our side wherever we go” (Christus
Vivit, 154). We Christians have received a gift:
access to the heart of Jesus and friendship with
him. It is a privilege and a blessing, and it
becomes our vocation: we are called to be
friends of Jesus!
Having Jesus as a friend is an immense
consolation. It can turn each of us into a
grateful and joyful disciple, one capable of
showing that our frailties are no obstacle to
living and proclaiming the Gospel. In fact, a
trusting and personal friendship with Jesus can
serve as the spiritual key to accepting the
limitations that all of us have, and thus to be
at peace with them. This in turn can lead to a
joy that “fills hearts and lives” ( Evangelii
Gaudium, 1), since, as a great exegete has
written, friendship with Jesus is “a spark that
kindles the fire of enthusiasm”. [1]
The Church is your home
Baptism makes each one of us a full-fledged
member of the Church community, so that all of
us, without exclusion or discrimination, can
say: “I am Church!” The Church is truly your
home! We, all of us together, are Church,
because Jesus chose to be our friend. The Church
– and this is something we need to learn more
and more in the synodal process we have begun –
“is not a community of people who are perfect,
but a community of disciples on a journey, who
follow the Lord because they know they are
sinners and in need of his forgiveness” (
Catechesis, 13 April 2016). In this people
which, guided by God’s word, advances amid the
events of history, “everyone has a part to play;
no one is a mere extra” ( Address to the
Faithful of Rome, 18 September 2021). For this
reason, each of you is also called to make his
or her own contribution to the synodal journey.
I am convinced that, if it truly becomes “a
participative and inclusive ecclesial process”
[2], the Church community will be genuinely
enriched.
Sad to say, even today many of you “are treated
as foreign bodies in society”; you can “feel
that [you] exist without belonging and without
participating” and that “much still prevents
[you] from being fully enfranchised” (Fratelli
Tutti, 98). Discrimination continues to be all
too present at various levels of society; it
feeds on prejudice, ignorance and a culture that
finds it hard to appreciate the inestimable
value of each person. In particular, the
continuing tendency to regard disabilities –
which are the result of the interaction between
social barriers and each person's limitations –
as if they were a kind of disease, contributes
to keeping your lives separate and stigmatizing
you.
As far as the Church’s life is concerned, “the
worst form of discrimination… is the lack of
spiritual care” (Evangelii Gaudium, 200).
Sometimes, as certain of you have unfortunately
experienced, this has taken the form of denying
access to the sacraments. The Church’s
magisterium is very clear in this area, and
recently the Directory for Catechesis stated
explicitly that “no one can deny the sacraments
to persons with disabilities” (No. 272). When we
experience such discrimination, it is precisely
our friendship with Jesus, that all of us have
received as an undeserved gift, which redeems us
and enables us to perceive differences as a
treasure. For Jesus does not call us servants,
women and men of lesser dignity, but friends:
confidants worthy of knowing all that he has
received from the Father (cf. Jn 15:15).
In times of hardship
Jesus’ friendship protects us in moments of
difficulty. I am well aware that the Covid-19
pandemic, from which we are struggling to
emerge, continues to have grave repercussions on
many of your lives. I think, for example, of
your being forced to stay at home for long
periods of time; the difficulty experienced by
many students with disabilities in accessing
aids to distance learning; the lengthy
interruption of social care services in a good
number of countries; and many other hardships
that you have had to face. Above all, I think of
those of you who live in residential facilities
and the pain of forced separation from your
loved ones. In those places, the virus hit hard
and, despite the dedication of caretakers, it
has taken all too many lives. Know that the Pope
and the Church are especially close to you, with
love and affection!
The Church stands beside those of you who are
still struggling with the Coronavirus. As
always, she insists that everyone be provided
with treatment, and that disabilities not
prevent access to the best care available. In
this regard, some Episcopal Conferences, such as
that of England and Wales [3], and the United
States, [4] have already intervened to demand
respect for the right of everyone, without
discrimination, to medical care.
The Gospel is for everyone
Our vocation arises from our friendship with the
Lord. He has chosen us to bear much fruit, fruit
that will remain (cf. Jn 15:16). As the true
vine, he wants every branch, in union with him,
to bear fruit. Yes, Jesus wants us to attain
“the happiness for which we were created. He
wants us to be saints and not to settle for a
bland and mediocre existence” (Gaudete et
Exsultate, 1).
The Gospel is also for you! Its message is
addressed to everyone; it is a word of
consolation and, at the same time, a summons to
conversion. The Second Vatican Council, in
speaking of the universal call to holiness,
teaches that “all the faithful of Christ of
whatever rank or status, are called to the
fullness of the Christian life and to the
perfection of charity… In order that the
faithful may reach this perfection, they must
use their strength accordingly as they have
received it, as a gift from Christ… They must
devote themselves with all their being to the
glory of God and the service of their neighbor”
(Lumen Gentium, 40).
The Gospels show that whenever persons with
disabilities met Jesus, their lives changed
profoundly, and they became his witnesses. Such
was the case, for example, of the man blind from
birth who, after being healed by Jesus, boldly
declared to everyone that Jesus was a prophet
(cf. Jn 9:17). Many others joyfully proclaimed
what the Lord had done for them.
I know that some of you live in situations that
are not easy. I would like to speak personally
to each of you, and I ask that, if necessary,
your family members or those closest to you read
my words to you, or convey my appeal. I ask you
to pray. The Lord listens attentively to the
prayers of those who trust in him. No one should
say: “I don’t know how to pray”, because, as the
Apostle says, “the Spirit comes to the aid of
our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as
we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes with
inexpressible groanings” (Rom 8:26). In the
Gospels, Jesus always listens to those who turn
to him, however haltingly, even with a small
sign (cf. Lk 8:44) or a cry for help (cf. Mk
10:47). Prayer is a mission, a mission
accessible to everyone, and I would like to
entrust that mission in a particular way to you.
There is no one so frail that he or she cannot
pray, worship the Lord, give glory to his holy
Name and intercede for the salvation of the
world. In the sight of the Almighty, we come to
realize that we are all equal.
Dear brothers and sisters, today your prayers
are more urgently needed than ever before. Saint
Teresa of Avilawrote that “at times of
difficulty, God’s friends need to be strong in
order to support those who are weak”. [5] This
time of pandemic has clearly shown us that we
are all weak and vulnerable: “We have realized
that we are all on the same boat, fragile and
disoriented, but at the same time important and
needed; all of us are called to row together”.
[6] The primary way to do so is precisely by
praying. This is something each of us can do;
and even if, like Moses, we will have need of
support (cf. Ex 17:10), we are confident that
the Lord will hear our plea.
To all of you I send my prayerful greetings and
good wishes. May the Lord bless you, and may Our
Lady watch over you always.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 20 November 2021
Francis
[1] Rudolf Schnackenburg, Amicizia con Gesù,
Brescia 2007, p. 68. [ The Friend We Have in
Jesus, Westminster John Knox Press, 1997]
[2] Synod of bishops, Preparatory Document. For
a Synodal Church: Communion, Participation and
Mission, No. 2.
[3] Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales,
Coronavirus and Access to Treatment, 20 April
2020.
[4] USCCB - Public Affairs Office, Statement on
Rationing Protocols by Health Care Professionals
in Response to COVID-19, 3 April 2020.
[5] Autobiography, 15, 5.
[6] Extraordinary Moment of Prayer during the
Pandemic, 27 March 2020.
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