Message of the Holy Father for the 29th World
Day of the Sick (11 February 2021), 12.01.2021
“You have but one teacher and you are
all brothers”
(Mt 23:8).
A trust-based relationship to guide care for the
sick
Dear brothers and sisters,
The celebration of the XXIX World Day of the
Sick on 11 February 2021, the liturgical
memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Lourdes,
is an opportunity to devote special attention to
the sick and to those who provide them with
assistance and care both in healthcare
institutions and within families and
communities. We think in particular of those who
have suffered, and continue to suffer, the
effects of the worldwide coronavirus pandemic.
To all, and especially to the poor and the
marginalized, I express my spiritual closeness
and assure them of the Church’s loving concern.
1. The theme of this Day is drawn from the
Gospel passage in which Jesus criticizes the
hypocrisy of those who fail to practise what
they preach (cf. Mt 23:1-12). When our faith is
reduced to empty words, unconcerned with the
lives and needs of others, the creed we profess
proves inconsistent with the life we lead. The
danger is real. That is why Jesus uses strong
language about the peril of falling into
self-idolatry. He tells us: “You have but one
teacher and you are all brothers” (v. 8).
Jesus’ criticism of those who “preach but do not
practise” (v. 3) is helpful always and
everywhere, since none of us is immune to the
grave evil of hypocrisy, which prevents us from
flourishing as children of the one Father,
called to live universal fraternity.
Before the needs of our brothers and sisters,
Jesus asks us to respond in a way completely
contrary to such hypocrisy. He asks us to stop
and listen, to establish a direct and personal
relationship with others, to feel empathy and
compassion, and to let their suffering become
our own as we seek to serve them (cf. Lk
10:30-35).
2. The experience of sickness makes us realize
our own vulnerability and our innate need of
others. It makes us feel all the more clearly
that we are creatures dependent on God. When we
are ill, fear and even bewilderment can grip our
minds and hearts; we find ourselves powerless,
since our health does not depend on our
abilities or life’s incessant worries (cf. Mt
6:27).
Sickness raises the question of life’s meaning,
which we bring before God in faith. In seeking a
new and deeper direction in our lives, we may
not find an immediate answer. Nor are our
relatives and friends always able to help us in
this demanding quest.
The biblical figure of Job is emblematic in this
regard. Job’s wife and friends do not accompany
him in his misfortune; instead, they blame him
and only aggravate his solitude and distress.
Job feels forlorn and misunderstood. Yet for all
his extreme frailty, he rejects hypocrisy and
chooses the path of honesty towards God and
others. He cries out to God so insistently that
God finally answers him and allows him to
glimpse a new horizon. He confirms that Job’s
suffering is not a punishment or a state of
separation from God, much less as sign of God’s
indifference. Job’s heart, wounded and healed,
then makes this vibrant and touching confession
to the Lord: “I had heard of you by word of
mouth, but now my eye has seen you” (42:5).
3. Sickness always has more than one face: it
has the face of all the sick, but also those who
feel ignored, excluded and prey to social
injustices that deny their fundamental rights
(cf. Fratelli Tutti, 22). The current pandemic
has exacerbated inequalities in our healthcare
systems and exposed inefficiencies in the care
of the sick. Elderly, weak and vulnerable people
are not always granted access to care, or in an
equitable manner. This is the result of
political decisions, resource management and
greater or lesser commitment on the part of
those holding positions of responsibility.
Investing resources in the care and assistance
of the sick is a priority linked to the
fundamental principle that health is a primary
common good. Yet the pandemic has also
highlighted the dedication and generosity of
healthcare personnel, volunteers, support staff,
priests, men and women religious, all of whom
have helped, treated, comforted and served so
many of the sick and their families with
professionalism, self-giving, responsibility and
love of neighbour. A silent multitude of men and
women, they chose not to look the other way but
to share the suffering of patients, whom they
saw as neighbours and members of our one human
family.
Such closeness is a precious balm that provides
support and consolation to the sick in their
suffering. As Christians, we experience that
closeness as a sign of the love of Jesus Christ,
the Good Samaritan, who draws near with
compassion to every man and woman wounded by
sin. United to Christ by the working of the Holy
Spirit, we are called to be merciful like the
Father and to love in particular our frail,
infirm and suffering brothers and sisters (cf.
Jn 13:34-35). We experience this closeness not
only as individuals but also as a community.
Indeed, fraternal love in Christ generates a
community of healing, a community that leaves no
one behind, a community that is inclusive and
welcoming, especially to those most in need.
Here I wish to mention the importance of
fraternal solidarity, which is expressed
concretely in service and can take a variety of
forms, all directed at supporting our neighbours.
“Serving means caring … for the vulnerable of
our families, our society, our people” (Homily
in Havana, 20 September 2015). In this outreach,
all are “called to set aside their own wishes
and desires, their pursuit of power, before the
concrete gaze of those who are most vulnerable…
Service always looks to their faces, touches
their flesh, senses their closeness and even, in
some cases, ‘suffers’ that closeness and tries
to help them. Service is never ideological, for
we do not serve ideas, we serve people” (ibid.).
4. If a therapy is to be effective, it must have
a relational aspect, for this enables a holistic
approach to the patient. Emphasizing this aspect
can help doctors, nurses, professionals and
volunteers to feel responsible for accompanying
patients on a path of healing grounded in a
trusting interpersonal relationship (cf. New
Charter for Health Care Workers [2016], 4). This
creates a covenant between those in need of care
and those who provide that care, a covenant
based on mutual trust and respect, openness and
availability. This will help to overcome
defensive attitudes, respect the dignity of the
sick, safeguard the professionalism of
healthcare workers and foster a good
relationship with the families of patients.
Such a relationship with the sick can find an
unfailing source of motivation and strength in
the charity of Christ, as shown by the witness
of those men and women who down the millennia
have grown in holiness through service to the
infirm. For the mystery of Christ’s death and
resurrection is the source of the love capable
of giving full meaning to the experience of
patients and caregivers alike. The Gospel
frequently makes this clear by showing that
Jesus heals not by magic but as the result of an
encounter, an interpersonal relationship, in
which God’s gift finds a response in the faith
of those who accept it. As Jesus often repeats:
“Your faith has saved you”.
5. Dear brothers and sisters, the commandment of
love that Jesus left to his disciples is also
kept in our relationship with the sick. A
society is all the more human to the degree that
it cares effectively for its most frail and
suffering members, in a spirit of fraternal
love. Let us strive to achieve this goal, so
that no one will feel alone, excluded or
abandoned.
To Mary, Mother of Mercy and Health of the
Infirm, I entrust the sick, healthcare workers
and all those who generously assist our
suffering brothers and sisters. From the Grotto
of Lourdes and her many other shrines throughout
the world, may she sustain our faith and hope,
and help us care for one another with fraternal
love. To each and all, I cordially impart my
blessing.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 20 December 2020,
Fourth Sunday of Advent.
FRANCIS
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