MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
XXXII WORLD DAY OF THE SICK
11 February 2024
“It is not good that man should be alone”.
Healing the Sick by Healing Relationships
“It is not good that man should be alone” (cf.
Gen 2:18). From the beginning, God, who is love,
created us for communion and endowed us with an
innate capacity to enter into relationship with
others. Our lives, reflecting in the image of
the Trinity, are meant to attain fulfilment
through a network of relationships, friendships
and love, both given and received. We were
created to be together, not alone. Precisely
because this project of communion is so deeply
rooted in the human heart, we see the experience
of abandonment and solitude as something
frightening, painful and even inhuman. This is
all the more the case at times of vulnerability,
uncertainty and insecurity, caused often by the
onset of a serious illness.
In this regard, I think of all those who found
themselves terribly alone during the Covid-19
pandemic: the patients who could not receive
visitors, but also the many nurses, physicians
and support personnel overwhelmed by work and
enclosed in isolation wards. Naturally, we
cannot fail to recall all those persons who had
to face the hour of their death alone, assisted
by healthcare personnel, but far from their own
families.
I share too in the pain, suffering and isolation
felt by those who, because of war and its tragic
consequences, are left without support and
assistance. War is the most terrible of social
diseases, and it takes its greatest toll on
those who are most vulnerable.
At the same time, it needs to be said that even
in countries that enjoy peace and greater
resources, old age and sickness are frequently
experienced in solitude and, at times, even in
abandonment. This grim reality is mainly a
consequence of the culture of individualism that
exalts productivity at all costs, cultivates the
myth of efficiency, and proves indifferent, even
callous, when individuals no longer have the
strength needed to keep pace. It then becomes a
throwaway culture, in which “persons are no
longer seen as a paramount value to be cared for
and respected, especially when they are poor or
disabled, ‘not yet useful’ – like the unborn, or
‘no longer needed’ – like the elderly” (Fratelli
Tutti, 18). Sadly, this way of thinking also
guides certain political decisions that are not
focused on the dignity of the human person and
his or her needs, and do not always promote the
strategies and resources needed to ensure that
every human being enjoys the fundamental right
to health and access to healthcare. The
abandonment of the vulnerable and their
isolation is favoured also by the reduction of
healthcare merely to a provision of services,
without these being accompanied by a
“therapeutic covenant” between physicians,
patients and family members.
We do well to listen once more to the words of
the Bible: “It is not good for man to be alone!”
God spoke those words at the beginning of
creation and thus revealed to us the profound
meaning of his project for humanity, but at the
same time, the mortal wound of sin, which creeps
in by generating suspicions, fractures,
divisions and consequently isolation. Sin
attacks persons and all their relationships:
with God, with themselves, with others, with
creation. Such isolation causes us to miss the
meaning of our lives; it takes away the joy of
love and makes us experience an oppressive sense
of being alone at all the crucial passages of
life.
Brothers and sisters, the first form of care
needed in any illness is compassionate and
loving closeness. To care for the sick thus
means above all to care for their relationships,
all of them: with God, with others – family
members, friends, healthcare workers – , with
creation and with themselves. Can this be done?
Yes, it can be done and all of us are called to
ensure that it happens. Let us look to the icon
of the Good Samaritan (cf. Lk 10:25-37), to his
ability to slow down and draw near to another
person, to the tender love with which he cares
for the wounds of a suffering brother.
Let us remember this central truth in life: we
came into the world because someone welcomed us;
we were made for love; and we are called to
communion and fraternity. This aspect of our
lives is what sustains us, above all at times of
illness and vulnerability. It is also the first
therapy that we must all adopt in order to heal
the diseases of the society in which we live.
To those of you who experience illness, whether
temporary or chronic, I would say this: Do not
be ashamed of your longing for closeness and
tenderness! Do not conceal it, and never think
that you are a burden on others. The condition
of the sick urges all of us to step back from
the hectic pace of our lives in order to
rediscover ourselves.
At this time of epochal change, we Christians in
particular are called to adopt the
compassion-filled gaze of Jesus. Let us care for
those who suffer and are alone, perhaps
marginalized and cast aside. With the love for
one another that Christ the Lord bestows on us
in prayer, especially in the Eucharist, let us
tend the wounds of solitude and isolation. In
this way, we will cooperate in combating the
culture of individualism, indifference and
waste, and enable the growth of a culture of
tenderness and compassion.
The sick, the vulnerable and the poor are at the
heart of the Church; they must also be at the
heart of our human concern and pastoral
attention. May we never forget this! And let us
commend ourselves to Mary Most Holy, Health of
the Sick, that she may intercede for us and help
us to be artisans of closeness and fraternal
relationships.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 10 January 2024
FRANCIS
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