After the
Jubilee of the sick and health-care workers
IN JESUS WE FIND SUPPORT AND the
ANSWER
13 February 2000
Before praying the Angelus on Sunday, 13
February, the Holy Father recalled the Jubilee of the Sick and spoke of the
Jubilee of Artists, which will be held on 18 February, as he called attention
to the Church's special dialogue with the world of art. Here is a translation
of his reflection, which was given in Italian.
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
1. I have vivid memories of the extraordinary
celebration of the Jubilee of the Sick in
St
Peter's Square last Friday, the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.
Illness helps us to understand the human mystery. Like the leper mentioned in
this Sunday's Gospel, when we are ill we experience human frailty and feel a
strong desire to recover. In Jesus, who is moved to compassion for us, we find
support and the answer to our deepest longings. In his Cross every form of
suffering can become meaningful; illness never stops being a trial, but it is
enlightened by hope. Yes, God does not want sickness; he did not create evil or
death. But ever since they entered the world because of sin, all his love has
been directed to restoring man's health, to healing him from sin and all evil
and to filling him with life, peace and joy. This is the comforting message of
the Jubilee and, in particular, of this Great Jubilee marking the 2,000th
anniversary of Christ's Incarnation.
2. Continuing our Jubilee journey, which
becomes more and more filled with spiritual opportunities, next Friday, 18
February, the liturgical memorial of Blessed Angelico,
their patron, we will celebrate the Jubilee
of Artists. On this occasion I will have the joy of meeting these brothers
and sisters who, endowed by God with special intuitive and expressive abilities,
which they cultivate by study and experience, become privileged interpreters of
the human mystery. They will come to Rome to show their faith in Jesus Christ, the
incarnate Word of God, the epiphany of divine beauty in human form. Christ is
the supreme source of inspiration for all art, and the contemporary era,
although marked by atheism, confirms this: the greatest artists from every
continent have felt the need to measure themselves against Jesus and his
inexhaustible mystery. This is why the Church engages in a special dialogue
with art.
3. Let us entrust this exceptional Jubilee
celebration to the Virgin All Fair. In her, preserved from the stain of
original sin, shines the brightness of Christ, the Beauty which redeemed the
world. May Our Lady help us to love this Beauty and make it constantly shine in
our lives.
After leading the Angelus, the Holy Father
greeted the faithful. To the English- speaking pilgrims he said:
I extend a special greeting to the Filipino
pilgrims from Florence, and I pray that almighty God will continue to
bless your community with vigorous faith and generosity in works of charity.
Upon all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors, I invoke the abundant
blessings of almighty God.