Sydney
18 February 2001

The sick are not a burden

Health care workers need pastoral assistance

“Where do we draw the line?” Young pro-lifers protest against late-abortion US judge

When in Sydney… he reads The Weekly

Women’s Commission a ‘leap of faith’

Cloning in breach of UNESCO human rights document: CWL

Church welcomes Victoria’s ‘responsbile’ gambling controls

CWL sponsors East Timorese woman to visit Rome

Church in frontline of AIDS health care

Intervention program aims to combat anxiety disorders in children

Much can be learnt from the suffering of sick: Worldwide Day of the Sick shows sick central to Church’s ministry

Health care for benefit of sick not medical research

Editorial: Sickness softens the hard of heart

Letters: Inappropriate promotion

Justice beyond borders: Sandie Cornish, Australian Catholic Social Justice Council executive officer

Reflection: Problems with a liberal society

New project to help anxious kids

Jubilee CD celebrates lives and school history

Under the oak tree: The committed one

Seeking to be a loving bulwark against violence

18 Feb 01

Health care for benefit of sick not medical research

In his second World Day of the Sick message, delivered by the Vatican’s Archbishop Barragán, Pope John Paul II warned of a “fatal confusion” over health care

In the peace that comes from God, I greet you and all who are gathered in Saint Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney for the Eucharistic Sacrifice that is the very heart of the Ninth World Day of the Sick. I ask you to convey to Cardinal Edward Clancy and to the Church in Sydney and throughout Australia the assurance of my closeness in prayer as you meet to reflect on how the new evangelisation needed at the beginning of the Third Christian Millennium must respond to the many complex questions arising in the field of health care, always in the light of the Cross of Christ, in which human suffering finds “its supreme and surest point of reference” (Salvifici Doloris, 3 1).

Few areas of human concern are as subject to the profound social and cultural changes affecting contemporary life as health care. This is one of the reasons why in 1985 I established the body that has become the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care, over which you diligently preside. Down the years, the Pontifical Council has rendered an invaluable service not only to those directly involved in Catholic health care, but to the wider community as it grapples with the many issues which have become still more pressing in the time since the Council was established. For that service, I give fervent thanks to Almighty God.

At the dawn of the new millennium, it is more urgent than ever that the Gospel of Jesus Christ should permeate every aspect of health care, and therefore I welcome the choice of theme for this World Day of the Sick: The New Evangelisation and the Dignity of the Suffering Person. Evangelisation must be new – new in method and new in ardour – because so much has changed and is changing in the care of the sick. Not only is health care facing unprecedented economic pressures and legal complexities, but at times there is also an ethical uncertainty which tends to obscure what have always been its clear moral foundations. This uncertainty can become a fatal confusion, manifested as a failure to understand that the essential purpose of health care is to promote and safeguard the well-being of those who need it, that medical research and practice must always be tied to ethical imperatives, that the weak and those who may seem unproductive to the eyes of a consumer society have an inviolable dignity that must always be respected, and that health care should be available as a basic right to all people without exception. Regarding all of this I would apply to the work of the Pontifical Council and the discussions of your Conference what I said in my recent Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte at the close of the Jubilee Year: it has become increasingly important “to explain properly the reasons for the Church’s position, stressing that it is not a case of imposing on non-believers a vision based on faith, but of interpreting and defending the values rooted in the very nature of the human person” (No 51).

The World Day of the Sick has a vital word to say and the Pontifical Council has an indispensable role to play in the Church’s mission of proclaiming the Gospel of life and love to the world.

As you gather on this day dedicated to Our Lady of Lourdes in the cathedral dedicated to Mary Help of Christians, I commend you and Cardinal Clancy, the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care and all taking part in the World Day of the Sick to the loving intercession of Mary Most Holy, the Woman whom the Church invokes as ‘Health of the Sick’. As a pledge of joy and peace in her Son, the Redeemer of the world, I gladly impart my Apostolic Blessing.