ADDRESS TO SICK PERSONS FOR THE XI WORLD DAY OF THE SICK
ON THE MEMORIAL OF OUR LADY OF LOURDES
11 February 2003
To the sick gathered in Rome in Saint Peter’s
Square
Dear Brothers and
Sisters,
1. I meet you with great joy, as I do every
year, at the end of this celebration dedicated especially to you, dear sick
people.
My first greeting is for you, the primary
participants of today's World Day of the
Sick. I greet all who are close to you, relatives, friends and volunteers,
and the members of the Italian National Union for Transporting the Sick to
Shrines (UNITALSI). I greet the Cardinal Vicar, and the bishops and priests
present, the men and women religious and those who in various ways place
themselves at the service of the sick and the suffering.
I also greet the members of the "Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi" (the
Roman Work for Pilgrimages to Lourdes), and those who take part in the national
theological-pastoral convention held in Rome on the theme: "the Pilgrimage, Path of Peace".
This reminds me of the Holy Land. I express the hope and the prayer that as
soon as possible those places sanctified by Christ's presence may recover a
stable peace that will allow the return of the groups of pilgrims.
2. Today we celebrate the 11th World Day of the
Sick, placed under the protection of the
Immaculate Virgin Mary. In a little while, the hymns and prayers will take
us in spirit to Lourdes, a place blessed by God and dear to you. At the same
time, we join the faithful who have thronged the National Shrine in Washington, also dedicated to the
Immaculate Virgin, where this year the principal celebrations of the World Day
of the Sick take place.
As we look to the revered image of Our Lady of
Lourdes, our eyes are drawn to the Rosary
that hangs from her joined hands. The Virgin in prayer seems to want to renew her invitation to young
Bernadette to recite the Rosary
confidently. With great joy we accept this exhortation on the World Day of
the Sick, an important date in the Year of the Rosary! Today Lourdes, Rome and
Washington form a providential "crossroads" in a concerted invocation
to the God of life that he instil confidence, comfort
and hope in those who are suffering all over the world.
3. Dear sick people, the Rosary offers the Christian response to the problem of suffering,
drawing it from the Easter mystery of Christ. Those who pray follow, with Mary,
the whole itinerary of life and faith, an itinerary that has as an integral
part human suffering, that in Christ becomes divine - human suffering, the saving
Passion.
In the sorrowful mysteries we contemplate
Christ who takes upon himself, we can say, all the "sickness" of the
human person and of the human race. As the Lamb of God, he not only bears the
burden of their consequences, but of their profound cause, that is, not just the evils, but the radical evil of sin. His struggle is not superficial but
radical; his cure is not palliative but definitive.
The power through which Christ overcame the dominion of evil and healed the
human person is his confident abandonment
in an attitude of filial submission to the Father's will. This same
attitude operates in us, thanks to the Holy Spirit, when, in the experience of
sickness, we travel with Mary the way of the sorrowful mysteries.
4. Dear Brothers and Sisters, the heart of the
Virgin Mary that was pierced by the sword teaches us to "learn
Christ", to be conformed to him and to pray to him (cf. Apostolic Letter On the Most Holy Rosary, nn. 13-16). She guides us to proclaim his love (cf. ibid., n. 17); those who carry the cross
with Jesus also offer an eloquent witness to those who are unable to believe or
to hope.
In this year, troubled by such great anxiety
for the future of humanity, I wished the prayer of the Rosary to have as
specific intentions the cause of peace
and of the family (ibid., nn. 6;
40-42).
Dear sick
brothers and sisters, you are "on the front line" to intercede for
these two great designs.
May your life, marked by trial, instil in everyone that hope and serenity which can only be
experienced in meeting Christ. Let us entrust this hope and all our special
intentions to Mary Immaculate, Health of the Sick.
To you who are here, and to your loved ones, I
affectionately impart my Apostolic Blessing.
The Holy Father gave his blessing from his study
window to the candlelight procession in St Peter's Square
I warmly thank you for this candlelight
procession. Let us remember all the sick across the world. Let us join Our Lady
of Lourdes and the sick people who are in Lourdes. Let us also join those in
Washington, where this year the World Day of the Sick is being celebrated.