Nurses attend to a patient in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Sanaa, Yemen, Dec. 23, 2019. In Jesus, the sick "will find strength to face all the worries and questions that assail you during this 'dark night' of body and soul," Pope Francis said in a message for the Feb. 11 celebration of World Day of the Sick. (CNS photo/Khaled Abdullah, Reuters)

Pope to health workers: Uphold ‘the truest human right, the right to life’

727 0

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Health care professionals always must “promote the dignity and life of each person and reject any compromise in the direction of euthanasia, assisted suicide or suppression of life, even in the case of terminal illness,” Pope Francis said.

“Life is sacred and belongs to God,” the pope said, “hence it is inviolable, and no one can claim the right to dispose of it freely.”

Pope Francis addressed health care professionals in his annual message for the celebration of World Day of the Sick, which is marked Feb. 11, the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes. The text of the message was released Jan. 3 by the Vatican.

To people suffering from illness in body or mind, the pope offered words of hope and encouragement, assuring them of Jesus’ closeness and his promise to alleviate their burdens.

“Jesus does not make demands of those who endure situations of frailty, suffering and weakness, but offers his mercy and his comforting presence,” the pope said.

Jesus “looks upon a wounded humanity with eyes that gaze into the heart of each person,” he said. “That gaze is not one of indifference; rather, it embraces people in their entirety, each person in his or her health condition, discarding no one, but rather inviting everyone to share in his life and to experience his tender love.”

In Jesus, the pope said, those who are sick “will find strength to face all the worries and questions that assail you during this ‘dark night’ of body and soul.”

And, he said, within the church they should find welcome, concern and gentle care, “a home where you can encounter his grace, which finds expression in closeness, acceptance and relief.”

In a section of the message addressed to physicians, nurses and other health professionals, Pope Francis urged them to “remember that diagnostic, preventive and therapeutic treatments, research, care and rehabilitation are always in the service of the sick person; indeed the noun ‘person’ takes priority over the adjective ‘sick.'”

Catholic health care professionals “can make patients feel the presence of Christ, who consoles and cares for the sick and heals every hurt.”

“Life must be welcomed, protected, respected and served from its beginning to its end: both human reason and faith in God, the author of life, require this,” Pope Francis said.

Sometimes, he told Catholic health workers, “conscientious objection becomes a necessary decision if you are to be consistent with your ‘yes’ to life and to the human person.”

Like all Christians, he said, they must safeguard “the truest human right, the right to life.”

And, the pope told them, “when you can no longer provide a cure, you will still be able to provide care and healing, through gestures and procedures that give comfort and relief to the sick.”

Pope Francis also urged governments to do more to ensure that all their citizens, especially the poor, have access to quality medical care, and he thanked “volunteers who serve the sick, often compensating for structural shortcomings, while reflecting the image of Christ, the good Samaritan, by their acts of tender love and closeness.”

Related Post

Dr. Shawn Fibkins, right, a radiologist in Parkland, Fla., stands with John Fernandez, director of religious education at St. John Neumann Church in Miami. The two men met at a retreat and Fernandez donated a kidney to Fibkins who suffered from kidney disease. "If you ever need a kidney, let me know man, I got you," Fernandez said. (CNS photo/Priscilla Greear, Florida Catholic)

Miami man met his future kidney donor at Catholic retreat

Posted by - January 12, 2020 0
MIAMI (CNS) — After a routine exam 16 years ago, Dr. Shawn Fibkins discovered that he had inherited polycystic kidney…
Staci Fox, chief executive and president of Planned Parenthood Southeast, speaks in protest of Georgia's anti-abortion "heartbeat" bill at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta May 7, 2019. Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed legislation to ban abortions in the state once a fetal heartbeat is detected, which is around six weeks. (CNS photo/Elijah Nouvelage, Reuters)

Georgia governor signs heartbeat bill restricting state abortions

Posted by - May 12, 2019 0
ATLANTA (CNS) — Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed legislation May 7 to ban abortions in the state once a…
Father Steve Clovis, vice president of administration and director of human formation at Mount Angel Seminary in St. Benedict, Ore., stops by to scratch Dagwood, who was off duty Oct. 1, 2019. Tony Del Castillo, a second-year theology student for the Diocese of Orange, Calif., and his guide dog "inspire us and humble us," said Father Clovis. (CNS photo/Katie Scott, Catholic Sentinel)

Blind seminarian in Oregon ‘sees’ beyond external trappings

Posted by - November 9, 2019 0
ST. BENEDICT, Ore. (CNS) — Although Tony Del Castillo cannot see, a friend’s question years ago helped him perceive people…
A technician stocks a pharmacy in Berea, Ky., Feb. 7. May is Mental Health Awareness Month and to mark the month, the California Catholic Conference issued a pastoral letter outlining ways the church could do a better job of serving people who struggle with mental illness. (CNS photo/Bryan Woolston, Reuters)

California bishops say church must care for those with mental illness

Posted by - May 13, 2018 0
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (CNS) — California’s Catholic bishops issued a pastoral letter outlining ways the church could do a better job…
Migrants eat at a Catholic-run shelter in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, May 10, 2019. Being indifferent to or excluding migrants is a sign of a deteriorating morality that will soon spread and risk marginalizing everyone who fails to fit in, Pope Francis said. (CNS photo/Jose Luis Gonzalez, Reuters)

Exclusion of migrants is red flag of society in moral decline, pope says

Posted by - June 1, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Being indifferent to or excluding migrants is a sign of a deteriorating morality that will soon…