Sick must be cared for in body and soul, pope says

Sick must be cared for in body and soul, pope says
People in wheelchairs wait for the start of Mass marking World Day of the Sick, in St. Peter’s Basilica on February 11. Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

VATICAN (CNS): “Care cannot be divided because the human being cannot be divided. We could—paradoxically—save the body and lose humanity,” Pope Francis said in a video message on the eve of the 30th World Day of the Sick, which was celebrated on February 11.

“The saints who cared for the sick always followed the Master’s teaching: heal the wounds of body and soul; pray and act for physical and spiritual healing together,” the pope said.

The message, which was released by the Vatican on February 10, was sent to participants of a webinar hosted by the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development.

In his message, Pope Francis said that the current pandemic “is teaching us to view illness as a global and not a merely individual phenomenon” and should motivate reflection on other types of “pathologies” that threaten humanity, including individualism and indifference.

These and other forms of selfishness, he said, generate inequalities, especially in the field of health care “where some enjoy so-called ‘excellence’” while many others “struggle to access basic health care.”

Consolation means to encourage, to exhort, to comfort or to give joy to a person or community that finds themselves in a situation of sadness, anguish and desolation

Pope Francis

The pope said, “To cure this ‘social’ virus, the antidote is the culture of fraternity, based on the awareness that we are all equal as human persons, all equal as children of one God. On this basis, it will be possible to have effective treatments for everyone. But if we are not convinced that we are all equal, this will not work.”

Peter Cardinal Turkson, former prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, echoed Pope Francis’ sentiments during his homily at a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica on February 11 with people who are sick, along with their caregivers.

Reflecting on the divine consolation that God gives to his children, Cardinal Turkson said that Christians are also called to pass on that consolation to those who suffer in body and soul.

“Consolation means to encourage, to exhort, to comfort or to give joy to a person or community that finds themselves in a situation of sadness, anguish and desolation,” the cardinal said.

He said that those who dedicate their lives to consoling others, draw inspiration from God who throughout history “has been close to a wounded humanity in order to comfort, strengthen and heal it.”

The cardinal said that the commemoration of the World Day of the Sick is a “celebration of God’s works of mercy,” especially through those who work tirelessly in the health care field.

“May your hands, which touch the suffering flesh of Christ, be a sign of the merciful hands of the Father,” Cardinal Turkson said before he and the concelebrating bishops administered the sacramental anointing of the sick to many people in the congregation.

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