MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
XXXI WORLD DAY OF THE SICK
11 February 2023
“Take care of him”
Compassion as a synodal exercise of healing
Dear brothers and sisters!
Illness is part of our human condition. Yet, if
illness is experienced in isolation and
abandonment, unaccompanied by care and
compassion, it can become inhumane.
When we go on a journey with others, it is not
unusual for someone to feel sick, to have to
stop because of fatigue or of some mishap along
the way.
It is precisely in such moments that we
see how we are walking together: whether we are
truly companions on the journey, or merely
individuals on the same path, looking after our
own interests and leaving others to “make do”.
For this reason, on the thirty-first World Day
of the Sick, as the whole Church journeys along
the synodal path, I invite all of us to reflect
on the fact that it is especially through the
experience of vulnerability and illness that we
can learn to walk together according to the
style of God, which is closeness, compassion,
and tenderness.
In the Book of the Prophet Ezekiel, the Lord
speaks these words that represent one of the
high points of God’s Revelation: “I myself will
be the shepherd of my sheep, and I will make
them lie down,says the Lord God.. I will seek
the lost, and I will bring back the strayed, and
I will bind up the injured, and I will
strengthen the weak […] I will feed them with
justice” (34:15-16). Experiences of
bewilderment, sickness, and weakness are part of
the human journey. Far from excluding us from
God’s people, they bring us to the centre of the
Lord’s attention, for he is our Father and does
not want to lose even one of his children along
the way. Let us learn from him, then, how to be
a community that truly walks together, capable
of resisting the throwaway culture.
The Encyclical Fratelli Tutti encourages us to
read anew the parable of the Good Samaritan,
which I chose in order to illustrate how we can
move from the “dark clouds” of a closed world to
“envisaging and engendering an open world” (cf.
No. 56). There is a profound link between this
parable of Jesus and the many ways in which
fraternity is denied in today’s world. In
particular, the fact that the man, beaten and
robbed, is abandoned on the side of the road
represents the condition in which all too many
of our brothers and sisters are left at a time
when they most need help. It is no longer easy
to distinguish the assaults on human life and
dignity that arise from natural causes from
those caused by injustice and violence. In fact,
increasing levels of inequality and the
prevailing interests of the few now affect every
human environment to the extent that it is
difficult to consider any experience as having
solely “natural” causes. All suffering takes
place in the context of a “culture” and its
various contradictions.
Here it is especially important to recognize the
condition of loneliness and abandonment. This
kind of cruelty can be overcome more easily than
any other injustice, because – as the parable
tells us – it only takes a moment of our
attention, of being moved to compassion within
us, in order to eliminate it. Two travellers,
considered pious and religious, see the wounded
man, yet fail to stop. The third passer-by,
however, a Samaritan, a scorned foreigner, is
moved with compassion and takes care of that
stranger on the road, treating him as a brother.
In doing so, without even thinking about it, he
makes a difference, he makes the world more
fraternal.
Brothers and sisters, we are rarely prepared for
illness. Oftentimes, we fail even to admit that
we are getting older. Our vulnerability
frightens us and the pervasive culture of
efficiency pushes us to sweep it under the
carpet, leaving no room for our human frailty.
In this way, when evil bursts onto the scene and
wounds us, we are left stunned. Moreover, others
might abandon us at such times. Or, in our own
moments of weakness, we may feel that we should
abandon others in order to avoid becoming a
burden. This is how loneliness sets in, and we
can become poisoned by a bitter sense of
injustice, as if God himself had abandoned us.
Indeed, we may find it hard to remain at peace
with the Lord when our relationship with others
and with ourselves is damaged. It is crucial,
then, even in the midst of illness, that the
whole Church measure herself against the Gospel
example of the Good Samaritan, in order that she
may become a true “field hospital”, for her
mission is manifested in acts of care,
particularly in the historical circumstances of
our time. We are all fragile and vulnerable, and
need that compassion which knows how to pause,
approach, heal, and raise up. Thus, the plight
of the sick is a call that cuts through
indifference and slows the pace of those who go
on their way as if they had no sisters and
brothers.
The World Day of the Sick calls for prayer and
closeness towards those who suffer. Yet it also
aims to raise the awareness of God’s people,
healthcare institutions and civil society with
regard to a new way of moving forward together.
The above-quoted prophecy of Ezekiel judges
harshly the priorities of those who wield
economic, cultural, and political power over
others: “You eat the fat, you clothe yourselves
with the wool, you slaughter the fatlings; but
you do not feed the sheep. You have not
strengthened the weak, you have not healed the
sick, you have not bound up the injured, you
have not brought back the strayed, you have not
sought the lost, but with force and harshness
you have ruled them” (34:3-4). God’s word is
always illuminating and timely; not only in what
it denounces, but also in what it proposes.
Indeed, the conclusion of the parable of the
Good Samaritan suggests how the exercise of
fraternity, which began as a face-to-face
encounter, can be expanded into organized care.
The elements of the inn, the innkeeper, the
money and the promise to remain informed of the
situation (cf. Lk 10:34-35) all point to the
commitment of healthcare and social workers,
family members and volunteers, through whom good
stands up in the face of evil every day, in
every part of the world.
These past years of the pandemic have increased
our sense of gratitude for those who work each
day in the fields of healthcare and research.
Yet it is not enough to emerge from such an
immense collective tragedy simply by honouring
heroes. Covid-19 has strained the great networks
of expertise and solidarity, and has exposed the
structural limits of existing public welfare
systems.
Gratitude, then, needs to be matched by
actively seeking, in every country, strategies
and resources in order to guarantee each
person’s fundamental right to basic and decent
healthcare.
The Samaritan calls the innkeeper to “take care
of him” (Lk 10:35). Jesus addresses the same
call to each of us. He exhorts us to “go and do
likewise” (Lk 10:37). As I noted in Fratelli
Tutti, “The parable shows us how a community can
be rebuilt by men and women who identify with
the vulnerability of others, who reject the
creation of a society of exclusion, and act
instead as neighbours, lifting up and
rehabilitating the fallen for the sake of the
common good” (No. 67). Indeed, “we were created
for a fulfilment that can only be found in love.
We cannot be indifferent to suffering” (No. 68).
On 11 February 2023, let us turn our thoughts to
the Shrine of Lourdes, a prophetic lesson
entrusted to the Church for our modern times. It
is not only what functions well or those who are
productive that matter. Sick people, in fact,
are at the centre of God’s people, and the
Church advances together with them as a sign of
a humanity in which everyone is precious and no
one should be discarded or left behind.
To the intercession of Mary, Health of the Sick,
I entrust all of you who are ill; you who care
for them in your families, or through your work,
research and volunteer service; and those of you
who are committed to weaving personal,
ecclesial, and civic bonds of fraternity. To
all, I impart my heartfelt blessing.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 10 January 2023
FRANCIS
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