Mary
Suffers With Those Who Are in Affliction
1. On 11 February, the memorial of the
Blessed Mary Virgin of Lourdes, the World Day of the Sick will be celebrated, a
propitious occasion to reflect on the meaning of pain and the Christian duty to
take responsibility for it in whatever situation it arises. This year this
significant day is connected to two important events for the life of the
Church, as one already understands from the theme chosen 'The Eucharist,
Lourdes and Pastoral Care for the Sick': the one hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of the apparitions of the Immaculate Mary at Lourdes, and the
celebration of the International Eucharistic Congress at Quebec in Canada. In
this way, a remarkable opportunity to consider the close connection that exists
between the Mystery of the Eucharist, the role of Mary in the project of
salvation, and the reality of human pain and suffering, is offered to us.
The hundred and fifty years since the
apparitions of Lourdes invite us to turn our gaze towards the Holy Virgin,
whose Immaculate Conception constitutes the sublime and freely-given gift of
God to a woman so that she could fully adhere to divine designs with a steady
and unshakable faith, despite the tribulations and the sufferings that she
would have to face. For this reason, Mary is a model of total self-abandonment
to the will of God: she received in her heart the eternal Word and she
conceived it in her virginal womb; she trusted to God and, with her soul
pierced by a sword (cf. Lk 2:35), she did not hesitate to share the passion of
her Son, renewing on Calvary at the foot of the Cross her 'Yes' of the
Annunciation. To reflect upon the Immaculate Conception of Mary is thus to
allow oneself to be attracted by the 'Yes' which joined her wonderfully to the
mission of Christ, the redeemer of humanity; it is to allow oneself to be taken
and led by her hand to pronounce in one's turn 'fiat' to the will of God, with
all one's existence interwoven with joys and sadness, hopes and
disappointments, in the awareness that tribulations, pain and suffering make
rich the meaning of our pilgrimage on the earth.
2. One cannot contemplate Mary without being
attracted by Christ and one cannot look at Christ without immediately
perceiving the presence of Mary. There is an indissoluble link between the
Mother and the Son, generated in her womb by work of the Holy Spirit, and this
link we perceive, in a mysterious way, in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, as
the Fathers of the Church and theologians pointed out from the early centuries
onwards. 'The flesh born of Mary, coming from the Holy Spirit, is bread
descended from heaven', observed St. Hilary of Poitiers. In the
"Bergomensium Sacramentary" of the ninth century we read: 'Her womb
made flower a fruit, a bread that has filled us with an angelic gift. Mary
restored to salvation what Eve had destroyed by her sin'. And St. Pier Damiani
observed: 'That body that the most blessed Virgin generated, nourished in her
womb with maternal care, that body I say, without doubt and no other, we now
receive from the sacred altar, and we drink its blood as a sacrament of our
redemption. This is what the Catholic faith believes, this the holy Church
faithfully teaches'. The link of the Holy Virgin with the Son, the sacrificed
Lamb who takes away the sins of the world, is extended to the Church, the
mystic Body of Christ. Mary, observes the Servant of God John Paul II, is a
'woman of the Eucharist' in her whole life, as a result of which the Church,
seeing Mary as her model, 'is also called to imitate her in her relationship
with this most holy mystery' (Encyclical "Ecclesia de Eucharistia,"
n. 53). In this perspective one understands even further why in Lourdes the
cult of the Blessed Virgin Mary is joined to a strong and constant reference to
the Eucharist with daily Celebrations of the Eucharist, with adoration of the
Most Holy Sacrament, and with the blessing of the sick, which constitutes one
of the strongest moments of the visit of pilgrims to the grotto of
Massabielles.
The presence of many sick pilgrims in
Lourdes, and of the volunteers who accompany them, helps us to reflect on the
maternal and tender care that the Virgin expresses towards human pain and
suffering. Associated with the Sacrifice of Christ, Mary, Mater Dolorosa, who
at the foot of the Cross suffers with her divine Son, is felt to be especially
near by the Christian community, which gathers around its suffering members,
who bear the signs of the passion of the Lord. Mary suffers with those who are
in affliction, with them she hopes, and she is their comfort, supporting them
with her maternal help. And is it not perhaps true that the spiritual
experience of very many sick people leads us to understand increasingly that
'the Divine Redeemer wishes to penetrate the soul of every sufferer through the
heart of his holy Mother, the first and the most exalted of all the redeemed'?
(John Paul II, Apostolic Letter, "Salvifici doloris," n. 26).
3. If Lourdes leads us to reflect upon the
maternal love of the Immaculate Virgin for her sick and suffering children, the
next International Eucharistic Congress will be an opportunity to worship Jesus
Christ present in the Sacrament of the altar, to entrust ourselves to him as
Hope that does not disappoint, to receive him as that medicine of immortality
which heals the body and the spirit. Jesus Christ redeemed the world through
his suffering, his death and his resurrection, and he wanted to remain with us
as the 'bread of life' on our earthly pilgrimage. 'The Eucharist, Gift of God
for the Life of the World': this is the theme of the Eucharistic Congress and
it emphasises how the Eucharist is the gift that the Father makes to the world
of His only Son, incarnated and crucified. It is he who gathers us around the
Eucharistic table, provoking in his disciples loving care for the suffering and
the sick, in whom the Christian community recognises the face of its Lord. As I
pointed out in the Post-Synodal Exhortation "Sacramentum caritatis,"
'Our communities, when they celebrate the Eucharist, must become ever more
conscious that the sacrifice of Christ is for all, and that the Eucharist thus
compels all who believe in him to become "bread that is broken" for
others' (n. 88). We are thus encouraged to commit ourselves in the first person
to helping our brethren, especially those in difficulty, because the vocation
of every Christian is truly that of being, together with Jesus, bread that is
broken for the life of the world.
4. It thus appears clear that it is
specifically from the Eucharist that pastoral care in health must draw the
necessary spiritual strength to come effectively to man's aid and to help him
to understand the salvific value of his own suffering. As the Servant of God
John Paul II was to write in the already quoted Apostolic Letter Salvifici
doloris, the Church sees in her suffering brothers and sisters as it were a
multiple subject of the supernatural power of Christ (cf. n. 27). Mysteriously
united to Christ, the man who suffers with love and meek self-abandonment to
the will of God becomes a living offering for the salvation of the world.
My beloved Predecessor also stated that 'The
more a person is threatened by sin, the heavier the structures of sin which
today's world brings with it, the greater is the eloquence which human
suffering possesses in itself. And the more the Church feels the need to have
recourse to the value of human sufferings for the salvation of the world'
(ibidem). If, therefore, at Quebec the mystery of the Eucharist, the gift of
God for the life of the world, is contemplated during the World Day of the Sick
in an ideal spiritual parallelism, not only will the actual participation of
human suffering in the salvific work of God be celebrated, but the valuable
fruits promised to those who believe can in a certain sense be enjoyed. Thus
pain, received with faith, becomes the door by which to enter the mystery of
the redemptive suffering of Jesus and to reach with him the peace and the
happiness of his Resurrection.
5. While I extend my cordial greetings to
all sick people and to all those who take care of them in various ways, I
invite the diocesan and parish communities to celebrate the next World Day of
the Sick by appreciating to the full the happy coinciding of the one hundred
and fiftieth anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady at Lourdes with the
International Eucharistic Congress. May it be an occasion to emphasize the
importance of the Holy Mass, of the Adoration of the Eucharist and of the cult
of the Eucharist, so that chapels in our health-care centres become a beating
heart in which Jesus offers himself unceasingly to the Father for the life of
humanity! The distribution of the Eucharist to the sick as well, done with
decorum and in a spirit of prayer, is true comfort for those who suffer,
afflicted by all forms of infirmity.
May the next World Day of the Sick be, in
addition, a propitious circumstance to invoke in a special way the maternal
protection of Mary over those who are weighed down by illness; health-care
workers; and workers in pastoral care in health! I think in particular of
priests involved in this field, women and men religious, volunteers and all
those who with active dedication are concerned to serve, in body and soul, the
sick and those in need. I entrust all to Mary, the Mother of God and our
Mother, the Immaculate Conception. May she help everyone in testifying that the
only valid response to human pain and suffering is Christ, who in resurrecting
defeated death and gave us the life that knows no end. With these feelings,
from my heart I impart to everyone my special Apostolic Blessing.
BENEDICTUS PP. XVI
From the Vatican, 11 January 2008
From the Vatican, 11 January 2008
Image Credit Waiting for the Word
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