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JOHN PAUL II
ANGELUS
Sunday, 11 February 2001
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
1. Today, the liturgical memorial of Our Lady of Lourdes, the
World Day of the Sick is being celebrated. The place designated this year
for the significant event is Sydney, Australia, where Archbishop Javier
Lozano Barragán, President of the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral
Care, went with his assistants. Every diocesan community, moreover, is
turning its attention to the sick and to health-care workers. In St Peter's
Basilica the traditional Eucharistic celebration will also take place this
afternoon, with Cardinal Camillo Ruini presiding. At the end of Mass I
myself will come down to meet the sick and pilgrims attending.
In my Message for this World Day, published on 22 August last
year, I reflected on the theme: "The New Evangelization and the Dignity
of the Suffering Person". Hospitals, centres for the sick or the elderly
and every home where human suffering is present are privileged settings for
proclaiming the Gospel message of hope. It is therefore important at the
beginning of the third millennium to give new energy to the Church's age-old
involvement in the world of health care, a genuine workshop for the
civilization of love.
2. Looking at the current world situation, I cannot forget
that many, too many, brothers and sisters still lack necessary health care.
This is a grave injustice which urgently demands effort on everyone's part,
starting especially with those who have greater political and economic
responsibilities.
On this significant occasion, I would like to give credit to
everyone, individuals, religious institutions and non-governmental
organizations, who devote themselves with admirable care to the service of
the sick and the suffering. I am thinking specifically of the host of men
and women religious who work along with many lay people at hospitals and
small health-care centres in the poorest countries amid problems and
conflicts, risking their lives to save those of their brethren. I encourage
them all to persevere in this praiseworthy task, which in many nations is
leading to a vast and providential sensitizing of consciences.
3. Let us now turn our gaze to the Blessed Virgin. The
cathedral of Sydney, where solemn Mass is being celebrated, with Cardinal
Edward Bede Clancy, Archbishop of that city, presiding in my name, is
dedicated to St Mary Auxilium Christianorum, "Help of Christians".
For nine years, in various parts of the world, this appointment with
suffering and hope has been renewed under the sign of Our Lady of Lourdes.
Let us entrust to her the sick of the whole world and all who put their
professional skill and sometimes their whole lives at their service.
After leading the recitation of the Angelus, the Holy
Father greeted the Italian, Spanish and Ukrainian pilgrims. To the
Ukrainians he said:
I am very pleased to greet a group of Ukrainian pilgrims. Dear
friends, I hope that your visit to St Peter's tomb and to Rome's other holy
places will strengthen your faith and spirit of communion with the universal
Church. As I anxiously wait to visit your homeland, I cordially give my
Apostolic Blessing to you, your loved ones and the Ukrainian people.
© Copyright 2001 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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