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Sulla Malattia e sulla
Sofferenza
On Illness and Suffering
(Translation: Hope Ammann)
SUMMARY
Controluce
TSI 23.1.94
Sacrament
of the Sick, Lourdes 25.9.1994
Sermon at the Holy Mass for the administration of the Sacrament
of the Sick.
Convention of the Ticino Association of the Third
Age (ATTE), Lugano 03.10.1994
"On
illness and suffering", meeting in Trevano,
27.11.1994
Christmas
1994
Controluce TSI 23.1.94
Bishop Eugenio Corecco, interviewed
by Michele Fazioli during the television programme "Controluce" on
23rd of January 1994 on the TSI, moved the Ticino
in speaking about his illness. We report part of
that interview so that it can be re-interpreted
as a testimony of great humanity and help for people
to cope with suffering, illness and death in a
different way.
Fazioli: ... you are once again
sick and undergoing treatment. You said it in a
letter 7 days ago to all clergymen and therefore
to all the Catholics in the Ticino. Mons. Corecco
you in effect wrote to the men and women of the
Ticino saying "I am ill, I am undergoing treatment,
let us strengthen the communion between us".
Why did you write this? Why did you state this
publicly?
Corecco: because
I have an intuition that it was right to do it
because I have a public function. I do not have
a private life; indeed, when I became Bishop
the private aspect of my life disappeared completely.
I have a responsibility to many people; there
is no reason to hide an illness. Indeed, revealing
the presence of a disease can be of aid to many
people who suffer, who are also sick. I notice
this moreover because when I go to Bellinzona,
to the “San Giovanni” hospital for
radiotherapy, I meet many people, and feel that
their hearts fill when they see that their Bishop
is there with them, too, and that he undergoes
the same therapies that they have to. And then
I thought that it was a way of giving a testimony,
on how to cope with an illness, which is a serious
time, perhaps the most serious time in a person’s
life (...)
Fazioli: ...
in your letter, which was read out in the churches
of the Ticino last Saturday and Sunday, you say
that this illness of yours has to emphasize the
communion with the faithful, the members, the
Catholics who form part of the Dioceses, of the
Church that is in Lugano, that is in the Ticino.
What does this relationship between illness and
communion mean for you?
Corecco: but,
illness is a value, provided that you know how
to live it in its true meaning. I have just said
that illness represents an extremely serious
moment in life, all the more so when the prospect
could be even be death. Illness therefore places
man face to face with himself, brings him back
down to size; man feels that he has within him
a "finiteness" but discovers its truth
only when this existential, let us say metaphysical,
finiteness, that he has within him, is revealed
through the illness of the body, and the illness
of the body makes him realise that his days are
numbered, time is shorter than what a man might
think when he is healthy. As a result, man feels
the need or the urge to think about his destiny,
about the reasons for his living, his dying and
his disappearing. So, in this sense we can see
that illness has a value, it has within it a
value that is common to everyone. Therefore,
facing up to the illness and announcing to others,
telling others, testifying to others how an illness
should be faced helps other people to grow within
the same experience. It is true in fact that
when two people share the same experience they
feel a closer bond of friendship; sharing a religious
and spiritual experience produces the same effect.
Fazioli: in
an article published on Monday, the Editor of
the “Corriere del Ticino”, Sergio
Caratti, said that the text of the Bishop’s
letter was not meant to instil sadness, but on
the contrary to invite serenity, prayer, and
is basically a short pastoral letter that teaches
Christians the sort of attitude they should take
towards an illness. Can it be interpreted in
this way, almost as a pastoral instruction?
Corecco: of
course, Caratti is perfectly right. He has interpreted
it correctly, perhaps even seeing beyond my intentions.
I did not intend to write a pastoral letter,
nor did I anticipate that this short text would
arouse such great interest, but this in fact
has been the case and is born out by the many
letters that I have received in the past few
days.
Fazioli: and
you cannot answer all of them of course.
Corecco: I
cannot answer all of them. I will try, if I can,
when I go to the Holy Land to send them a postcard.
However, I thank everyone who has written to
me in relation to what I said in my letter. I
have received some wonderful letters, which makes
us realise that, far from what it appears, many
people live deeply spiritual lives and have the
sense of these things. For me it is not the first
time because, when I had my first operation,
I received a mountain of correspondence and I
realised then that, yes I would almost dare say
that I am more useful to people when I am ill
then when I am healthy.
Fazioli: this
would indicate that somehow illness, pain, the
cross we can say, is almost desirable, but this
is a pessimistic approach, because voluntarism
through suffering is also wrong.
Corecco: no,
we cannot wish them on anyone, not even a Bishop,
because the Church teaches us to pray in order
to remain in good health; they can become a positive
thing after they have happened. People must be
able to transform this event, in itself negative,
into a time for re-building their characters
and for establishing relationships with other
people. Christians moreover, regardless of their
ability to live these things, have always had
a way out because they can always give meaning
to their illness, knowing that Christ, who died
on the cross, is with them.
Fazioli: talking
about this in an interview you said "illness
puts everything into discussion: you may recover,
you may die, it may change the rest of your life,
it makes it clear that we each have a present
and future destiny" and further on in this
interview with the editor of the “Corriere
del Ticino” you said “even if he
does not express himself inside through prayer,
a sick person understands, registers deep thoughts,
experiences feelings of rebellion against his
destiny, loves God or hates him, says yes to
him or screams injustice; in the final analysis
a person either prays or blasphemes but in a
hospital bed he always experiences something
deeper and therefore more spiritual".
Corecco: this
is true not because it is something I have thought
it but something I have experienced. I too was
assailed by feelings of rebellion, incomprehension
and fear, not so much this time as the previous
time, the fear of disappear into nothing, because
faith does not eliminate people’s emotivity,
does not dispel their fears, not everyone’s
at least, because there are also many ways of
dying; some people die with joy in their hearts,
whereas others die in fear, in the face of death
they are very afraid because they have the impression
of disappearing into the unknown. And I have
experienced these things, I have discovered them,
not knowing that people could live this way,
it has enriched me. Faith is a judgment that
supports people, that prevents them from abandoning
themselves to these kinds of things. However,
experiencing them and feeling them as temptations
is one thing but embracing this solution of life
is another thing altogether.
Fazioli: your
letter to Catholics asks them to pray. You say: "you
can help me with prayer, with your renewed commitment".
You say to your priests, and you say that you
are confident, that “this time, too, mutual
prayer and the deep prayers of the communities
will have the power to create a deeper bond of
unity between us". What, therefore, are
you asking from the prayer of the Catholics of
the Ticino?
Corecco:
I am asking for two things, at the same time,
one more important than the other but, in human
terms, the importance is reversed. I am asking
to recover, but I am asking above all to cope
well with the illness, because this is more important
than getting better. Moreover I mentioned a Psalm
that I have been reading for 50 years and have
never discovered, because you can read and re-read
a prayer before it suddenly triggers something
in your mind, it is as though it switches on
a light, and you discover a phrase that you have
passed over a thousand times: "Your grace
is more important of life". How many times
have I read this phrase? Who knows how many times
it has been uttered by priests, nuns and Sunday
lay preachers. Then, quite suddenly, I realised
the profound truth that is contained in this
phrase.
Fazioli: perhaps
because in order to be alive faith must be incarnated
in real life.
Corecco: certainly.
Human experience helps us feel and realise the
truth of faith because we are given faith in
order to better understand our humanity and our
destiny, not in order to replace it, but in order
to better realise why faith is not an alternative
to life, but is the revelation of the truth about
man and about God, a help therefore to better
appreciate what we are doing. In other words
Faith is following our destiny (...)
So, I have a prayer that has sent to me by a lady.
Amongst all the things that they send to me, they
send me some extremely meaningful and beautiful
prayers. This is the prayer of a priest who lived
in the fourth century, and who was also a philosopher
and poet, “San Gregorio di Nazanzio” who
fell ill. Imagine what falling ill meant in the
fourth century; it meant dying. The prayer says: “give
me strength God, because now I am destroyed".
He saw death and suffering "my mouth used
to speak strongly about You, now it is silent" and
he goes on to pray, "God, give me strength,
do not abandon me because I want to be well again,
to shout your name to everyone". I was almost
afraid of asking God to recover because I said
to myself, why should he privilege me when so many
people die. But when I read this phrase I started
to pray more because I, too, want to carry on praising
God. “God, my strength, do not leave me alone".
These are prayers that reveal the heart of man.
Fazioli: the
fact that people send you these prayers means
that, as you say, as a sick person you have succeeded
in creating a perhaps even more intense, more
sincere bond, in a deeper way than in your official
capacity as a Bishop.
Corecco: that
is why I say that it may be that illness makes
me more useful than health.
Fazioli: perhaps
illness also brings up the issue of time, because
there is the time of suffering, of undergoing
treatment, of getting better; there is also the
perception that it may be one’s last time
and so every minute becomes precious for the
engagement just of life.
Corecco: it
may even be the most favourable time and this
is sufficient. (...)
Fazioli: ...
you also meet people when undergoing radiotherapy
at Bellinzona?
Corecco: there
are, of course, people who absolutely want to
say hello to me. One lady greeted me just before
she went in to see the same team of nurses, who
afterwards told me that she was happy: "at
long last I have touch the Bishop’s hand
". (...)
Fazioli: So,
Mons. Corecco, you will also live sharing the
therapies, the illness, the possible pain and
suffering, all together in a sort of more intense
life, although we certainly hope that there will
be no suffering and that the treatments have
their effect.
Corecco: but,
it is not the physical suffering, because nowadays
this is easily controlled, even though it cannot
be eliminated entirely, but it is not that. Nowadays
illness is something spiritual, which can be
hard to endure or which can have a meaning.
Fazioli: you
realise that with these words you have also spoken
to sick people on television.
Corecco: I
am pleased to have this opportunity since I perhaps
neglect them, because as far as my own personal
apostolic mission is concerned, what I myself
do, I have focused on young people as a result
of an experience, my own personal history, my
particular talent in these things. But many times
I have said to myself, why don’t I go once
a month, spend a whole day in a hospital to meet
people. Now I have the opportunity to say that
I none the less am thinking of all of them, that
I am in their same situation, that I am not consoling
them from the outside because..., consoling means
helping people to live by speaking to them with
words that are true, with words that help them
to live through their situation, not to hide
it. That is why I wrote the letter; illness should
not be hidden away but lived.
Sacrament
of the Sick, Lourdes 25.9.94
Sermon at the Holy Mass for the administration
of the Sacrament of the Sick.
My dear
brothers and sisters in Christ, what we are performing
in this ritual, in which we receive the Sacrament
of the Sick, has a long history, dating back
to the time of the Apostles. The first communities
in fact tried to understand what the consequences
would be, in the relations between Christians,
of the communion of faith in Jesus Christ and
translated this relationship into liturgical
and charitable gestures.
In this
way they institutionalized the intuition gained,
after meditating on Christ’s words, in
the Beatitudes:
"Blessed are those who mourn, for they will
be comforted". Saint James, whose words we
have just read from chapter 5 of his letter, one
day sent this message to Christians: “Is
any sick among you? let him call for the elders
of the church; and let them pray over him, anointing
him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer
of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall
raise him up and if he have committed sins, they
shall be forgiven. Confess your faults to one another
and pray for one another, that ye may be healed.
The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man
availeth much ". This is a new fact in the
history of humanity. The men of medicine have always
come to the aid of the sick, but not generally
the men of the cloth. We are well aware that, in
many cultures, the sick were segregated from the
healthy communities and left to fend for themselves.
Saint James realised that this was not a way for
man to live and had the intuition to call the priests
and the Christian community to gather around the
sick, thereby signifying that the Church must take
responsible care of the people who, within its
bosom, are sick.
This
new departure in the history of humanity is a
beautiful gesture, which can be performed only
if Jesus Christ’s call to comfort the suffering
is taken seriously: "Blessed are the suffering
for they will be comforted". And this has
become the Sacrament of the Sick.
"After having anointed the sick person with
oil in the name of God - oil was regarded as a
generic medication, which relieved many physical
ailments - pray on him". Gather together the
priests and the community around him so that they
look after him, anoint him with oil and pray with
him, because
“prayer offered with faith will save the
sick person". The Lord will lift him up again
and "if he has committed sins, these will
be forgiven". He will save him, place trust
in him so that the sick person will still feel
useful, will still feel that he belongs to someone,
that he has not been abandoned. This is the first
sign of salvation, which can also translate into
healing. We are well aware that praying for the
sick, and Lourdes is proof of this, can also translate
into special mercies, even into a miracle.
This fact typically belongs to the culture of the
Christians, who immediately started to look after
their sick, in every community. It is what we are
doing now, giving explicit form to what Saint James,
right from the start, exhorted Christians to do.
We must
realise therefore that we are performing a simple
rite, which might even not exist, but one of
the seven Sacraments, one of the fundamental
stages of the life of a Christian and of the
life of the Christian community, together with
Baptism, Confirmation, the Eucharist and Marriage.
So, together with all the other Sacraments, there
is also a Sacrament that, not only accompanies
the future of its individual persons, but that
also accompanies those who are afflicted by suffering
and perhaps even close to death.
It is
already a great consolation to know these things
and to know that the Church, which is the Community
of all Christians, has the duty, which is born
of its very nature, of its very existence, to
look after the sick. This prayer and this oil
with which the sick are anointed have a redeeming
power, they save men’s hearts, they promote
their inner conversion, they make them shed tears
of grief for their sins, they console men and
help them to accept illness and death, they may
well even give men the gift of physical salvation.
It is
difficult to say which Sacrament, after the Eucharist,
is the one we should hold most dear, but this
one touches the deepest chords of our humanity,
of man, who lives well when he is healthy, but
who, when he is sick and feeling that he might
even be close to his death, lives in anguish.
This
Sacrament expresses the charity of the Church,
your charity towards all sick people. And charity
represents the zenith of the Christian experience;
everything that we do and say to each other must
find its expression in mutual charity, in communion.
It is a Sacrament that, if lived truly well,
expresses the very essence of the Church, the
ultimate reason why the Church exists, namely:
to forgive us our sins. "Confess therefore
your sins to each other and all of you pray for
each other to be healed". Now, before everyone,
we have asked God for forgiveness, because we
have acknowledged ourselves as sinners, we have
recited the “Confiteor” and we are
praying together. You realise how great a person’s
consolation is, when they feel that others are
praying for their salvation, for their body and
their soul. I myself am gaining extensive experience
of this. I fervently hope that every sick person,
who is here among us, can live the same experience,
can feel that the whole diocesan community is
praying for him, for his salvation, which can
also be imparted through consolation, through
the peace of the heart when faced with the thought
of death, with the acceptance of the fact that
man has to one day die. It is the greatest thing
that we succeed in doing in life, because death
is its most important moment.
You
must spread the meaning of this Sacrament amongst
Christians, because we are reducing it to a short
rite, performed almost secretly, at the last
moment, in order not to instil fear in the sick,
whereas it is the Sacrament that should help
them to consciously accept their situation. We
instead have altered it radically. We must fully
restore it to our communities and take part in
the Sacraments of the Sick administered in the
parish. But in order to take part legitimately,
we should previously have been mindful of these
sick people, supporting them, visiting them,
coming to their aid.
After
hearing these things, let us reflect for an instance,
because everything that I have just said to you
is about to become true at this very moment.
At
the end of the Eucharistic
Having now finished this liturgy in which we have
celebrated the Sacraments of the Eucharist
and of the Sick, I wish to thank you all for
the unceasing prayers that you have offered
for my health: I feel so privileged. But I
urge to not to forget the other sick people
among us. You must not forget Mons. Farco Biffi,
Mons. Albisetti of Chiasso and Don Cipriano
Pianini. Please also think of all those people
who have died slaughtered in one way or another,
without having had the comfort of the Sacrament
of the Sick.
It is
the theme of this pilgrimage: to open up our
hearts to the pain and grief of the whole world,
of the whole of humanity, because this is important
for the health of our soul. We cannot live thinking
only of ourselves, even were it in prayer. We
must have a mind that embraces all of the Church’s
needs. And use these opportunities, which lend
themselves so well to involving, in prayer, all
those people who suffer in the world, above all
those who suffer in a profoundly unjust way.
This is an important moment for our personal
growth.
I urge
you to pray for all those people who have entrusted
themselves to your prayers, because it is easy
for us to forget. I remember this often on pilgrimages,
because we too urge others to pray for us, before
they set out on a pilgrimage. Prayer is the deeper
way that we Christians communicate with each
other; in the Mystical Body of Christ, of which
we form part, mutual prayer is the profoundest
and safest communication.
Convention
of the Ticino Association
of the Third Age (ATTE) Lugano 3.10.94
"Allow
me to attempt a parallel between a serious illness
and the third or fourth ages, not because these
ages are a, or the illness of life, even were
they to be afflicted and marked by bodily and
spiritual suffering.
Ignoring the obvious difference between illness
and the third age, the two situations have one
characteristic in common, and that is the time
factor. People in both of these conditions realise
that time is getting short, that time is no longer
what it used to be, when they could live their
lives without thinking about time.
Time becomes a constant presence on the daily horizon
of a seriously ill or elderly person. Time intensifies
life and delimits it more precisely, highlighting,
not only its finiteness, but above all its value.
Time
becomes a presence in our life that we cannot
escape any more, that we cannot forget, like
we could when we were healthy or young.
This realisation is not in any way a negative fact,
since we can and must regard it as a positive experience.
As for
me personally, I have noticed that, in this situation,
the essence of life has become concentrated,
acquiring an existential substance that is much
stronger than it was previously. I imagine that
many of you have noticed it too. Life takes on
a dimension of urgency, previously unsuspected,
even though the hypothesis of getting better
and of still being able to live for a long time
was a real one. We come to the realisation that,
as well as being unrepeatable, time has become
short, and so it must be lived and appreciated
more intensely than before, certainly not for
what we are still able to do, but for what we
experience inside, measuring up both with ourselves
and with our destiny.
In this
perspective the past becomes secondary: what
really counts, since we are still in control
of it, is the present. In fact, only if we live
in the present can we live the future according
to the theme of the Congress: I was, I am, I
will be.
Together
with the awareness that time is running out,
we increasingly begin to notice our loneliness.
In fact, either we no longer have people to accompany
us in life, like we did when we were young, or
we realize, if we are ill, that despite the affectionate
solidarity of many people – which is none
the less still an immense help –
no-one can replace our own person. Two and a half
years ago, after an entire day spent in a hospital
undergoing tests, I perceived, perhaps for the
first time, the loneliness that surrounded me.
The doctor could still have offered me, as a sign
of his affection, a cup of tea to sip, but it was
all he could have done. Then, I would have to face
up to things alone, by myself.
Even
when I say this, I do not intend for it to acquire
in any way a negative connotation. Loneliness
too, which is in any case a constant presence
within us, can and must become a possibility
for gaining greater awareness of ourselves. And
all the more so because it is never too late
to acquire this awareness of life and of the
meaning of our destiny. It can even come to us
right at the end, and this is enough. Both the
certainty that time is running out and becomes
charged with a new human intensity, and knowing
how to face up to our loneliness with greater
maturity helps us to discover the unrepeatable
value of our person. These seem to me to be the
two aspects, both profoundly positive, that illness
and old age have in common. They help us to realise
with greater dignity, and perhaps with greater
conviction too, the meaning of our present, past
and future life.
Each
person will be able to find his own solution
in the values that he has always believed in:
the solution that can most support him. And I
sincerely hope that all of you will be able to
do this, so as not to live the third and fourth
ages of your lives in regret, melancholy or resignation;
for a Christian however, it is normal that this
new spirituality should translate into prayer.
It is
inevitable that, in these situations of life,
a believer should think about his origin, establishing
a more intense relationship, while carrying on
his everyday life, with the Lord, on whom he
knows that he totally depends for his existence.
This also gives a liveable meaning to solitude
because, in his inner prayer, a Christian is
trying to discover a final companion for his
person, the one who will be with him at the end.
If this testimony of mine will help you to live
your lives more intensely and with a greater sense
of security in your hearts, then I am very happy
that I have succeeded in communicating it to you".
On
illness and suffering
Trevano 27.11.94
The
mission of the Bishop does not consist solely
of preaching the Gospel, of announcing the Word,
but also lies in materially helping the faithful
who are entrusted to him to live this announcement.
Precisely because he must, as far as he is able,
materially help the faithful to embody the Gospel
in their everyday lives, I believe that he has
the duty to talk about the way in which he has
faced illness and about the way in which illness
can be faced, because illness is an integrating
part of human life. If we left illness outside
of life, we would not be sincere, we would not
be covering the whole of human existence; indeed
we would not be covering an essential part of
our human experience.
Our
society, on the other hand, tends to extrapolate
illness outside the context of social life because,
while a great deal is done to help people to
overcome illness, at the same time we censor
it. Nobody in fact gladly talks about being in
poor health and the main value of life is often
is placed in the health that a person enjoys. "Health
above all else"; "the most important
thing is to be healthy": these are statements
that are constantly expressed not only amongst
men, but also amongst those who believe in Jesus
Christ. The supreme value of life is often identified
as the enjoyment of good health. Health is certainly
an important condition for being able to do many
things that we must achieve in life, but it is
not the basic presupposition for our life to
truly have value. Even people who suffer, who
have to cope with serious illness, who are ill
for the whole of their lives, can enjoy a beautiful
human experience and can give their existence
an inestimable value. If well lived, illness
can often give life a greater value than health
itself can give. This is the reason why I accepted
the invitation of Caritas, who I thank for having
had this idea of inviting me to talk about my
experience, but mainly because they are trying
to help everyone suffering from serious illness.
I thank Caritas, because perhaps only Caritas,
being a reflection of what the Church must do
in society, could conceive the idea of asking
a Bishop to speak in public about his illness.
It is not possible to talk on "Controluce" every
week, it perhaps can be done only once in a lifetime,
but I still want to get back to the issue, albeit
in other terms, inasmuch as not prompted by any
question, because I am convinced that I can help
those of you who are ill and also those of you
who are healthy, even though you are not in the
right condition to be able to understand what
the value of illness is, to live your life in
such a profound way that it gives value to physical
suffering, too.
Healthy
people have difficulty in understanding and this
was my own personal experience, too, before I
became ill. I almost never considered the problem
of suffering through illness. And I do not think
I have not understood a lot about illness, reading
simply texts or books on the subject. Because
it is only the attention that we pay to the experience
that we are going through that really enables
us to understand the true essence of our life.
In fact, simply by living an experience with
awareness, we can always obtain from it an indication
for our life.
Thinking
back to a beautiful service that we perform every
year and that we have performed this year too,
I asked myself why our particular Church feels
the need to takes its sick to Lourdes. It is
not a project, nor is it even a simple gesture
of charity, it is not simply to help people to
go there and pray to the Madonna for spiritual
or physical healing. I think that this gesture
by the Church to bring its sick together - and
the Gospel reminds us that this phenomenon began
around the person of Jesus - is prompted by a
deeper need, that goes beyond the need and the
situation of each individual person, and that
is to show that, in the midst of Christian people,
in the experience of the Christian community,
illness has a prophetic value. By taking the
sick to Lourdes, we want to make manifest this
function, this value of illness, making public
what illness really is. Because illness is always
a sign of death. It is in this that the prophetic
value of being ill lies. Everyone in fact, when
struck by an illness that could shortly lead
to death, anticipates life’s final moment,
death: the most important moment in a person’s
life, in the passing from this life on earth
to future life. Illness appears among us as a
sign and reminder of what we shall all us have
to face: the moment of our death. We have to
talk about this value, we have to talk about
it continually among us, because death is the
most important moment of our existence. Illness
can help us understand its importance, to understand
how great the moment of the end of our earthly
life is. It helps us in fact to realise in advance – hence
its prophetic character - our destiny and how
much we need “Another”, Someone greater
than us. If lived well, illness is the moment
in a man’s life that more than any other
can teach and help him understand who he is,
who “God” is and how much greater
is “God”. In effect, because of the
experience that I am going through, but first
of all because of what the Gospel reveals to
us, illness helps to realise whether we are truly
willing, in life, to do God’s will. At
the end of his life in fact, the real problem
for a Christian is not, first of all, to succeed
in asking for the forgiveness of his sins or
in making even a general confession. The real
problem that remains to be solved, even though
we confess our sins, even though we receive the
Sacrament of the Sick, is to succeed in saying
our “Yes” to the Lord, who calls
us. In the face of this, yes, we are afraid.
In the course of our life, it is not easy to
really say
“Yes” to God, without resorting to
subterfuges. We say it a thousand times a day,
reciting the Lord’s Prayer, but we often
and generally live with mental reservations. We
say "Yes" to God, but we also say yes
to our own plans, our own wishes. Rather than pray
to God for his will to be done, we beseech him
to accommodate our own requests, to do our will.
There is nothing wrong in this: in fact we can
ask God to do what we would like to be done, but
in the knowledge that the most important thing
is none the less for God’s will to be done.
The problem with death is knowing how to face it,
saying “Yes” to God, saying: "I
am willing to come". It may appear simple,
but in actual fact it is very difficult. And illness
prepares us, because in suffering illness we find
ourselves in almost the same situation as death.
This is why it is more important to die through
illness, than to die a sudden and unexpected death.
Lots of people think that the best way to go is
to die suddenly, so as not to suffer, so as not
to be aware of what it is happening, so as not
to cause disturbance to anybody. But this is a
line of thought that a Christian should not follow,
because illness helps us prepare for death: be
it an illness that places us close to death or
one where death is still relatively far away, but
one that none the less contains the “germ”
of death. An unexpected death is not something
we should hope and wish for, because suffering
helps us to prepare ourselves, to present ourselves
to the Lord, to follow the Lord who is calling
us. This is what we must all wish for: to be ready
to say our “Yes” to God. Before my
first serious operation, I was visiting a lady
at a hospital in Lugano one day and I realized
that this lady, although she had always attended
the religious services in the cathedral, was faithful,
assiduous and dedicated to prayer, was unable to
accept the fact of having to die. I went to visit
her to try and help her realise that the essential
thing in her situation was to accept this call
to God, however premature it might seem. I thought
about this a lot until, having fallen too ill,
I understood how this lady, even though she was
a good Christian, might not accept the moment of
death, because I think that I myself have also
experienced the same temptations that she did.
Death is the moment of temptation and illness is
prophetic, because it gives us a foretaste of the
temptations that death brings to us. These temptations
spring from our reason and grip all those affected
by serious illness, which can lead to death. In
fact, anyone who finds himself in this situation
inevitably asks himself: "Why me"; "What
have I done wrong"; "I have always tried
to bring my children up in the right way, and yet
now I have to die"; "Where is the justice
in that". It is regarded as something unjust.
Life appears to be a swindle, a promise of something
which then ends in a way that apparently does not
contain any promise, that no longer fulfils any
promise, until the person thinks that it is better
not to live, than to die like this. These are the
temptations that beset people who are close to
death; in sick people, in people who are aware
that they could die. They feel the force of these
objections which are apparently raised by our reason
and they rebel. I realised that that lady was going
through an experience that was not peculiar to
her, but that first of all had become my own experience
and is probably everyone’s experience. A
rebellion against death, a moment that in certain
cases arrives sooner because of illness, a rebellion
felt by Jesus too, because he lived the whole human
experience. He went through everything that a man
can experience and endure in his existence. In
the very face of death Jesus underwent the deepest
experience we can imagine, when he sweated blood
in the garden of “Gethsemane”. In the
midst of all the atrocities that we see happening
today, we have never heard of people who sweat
blood when faced with death. And yet Jesus, says
the Gospel, sweated blood. It means that his fear
in the face of death almost went beyond the bounds
of human expression. It means that he truly was
afraid of disappearing into nothing, of being encased
in a tomb that is closed, never again to be opened,
taking away our personal life without leaving a
trace. On the cross God he screamed out the words
of a psalm from the Old Testament: "My God,
my God, why have you forsaken me?", words
of desperation that then dissolve into feelings
of hope, of trust in God. On the cross he expressed
the first part of this experience, that the Hebrew
people had given a formal tone and poetic style
to. "My God, My God, why have you forsaken
me". We experience the same feelings. In the
face of death we, too, have the impression of having
been forsaken by God. We do not sweat blood, because
in our person we do not contain the whole strength
of humanity present in Jesus, who embodied the
experience of everyone of us. His experience was
more precise, deeper and more painful than ours
is. Not only does each one of us, therefore, feel
the temptation of avoiding God’s will, struggle
to adjust our own life when called by God and to
truly say an unreserved and totally honest "yes" to
him; Jesus Christ went through the same experience.
This
consoles us, helps us, helps us realise that
we must not despair, because, in the same way
that Christ was able to get through this trial
by asking his Father to do his will, i.e. his
Father’s will and not his own, we too can
do it. We too shall have the strength, we too
shall have the grace to ask the Father to do
his, rather than our own will. What was possible
in Jesus Christ, is possible for us too. However,
we must not reach this moment unprepared, otherwise
it becomes very difficult.
Illness
is not only a prophetic moment, a moment that
brings forward the final moment; it is not only
the moment when we, just like Jesus did, feel
the temptation to rebel against God, but it is
also a grace. To say that illness is a grace
is very difficult. I too perhaps might never
have been able to say this. Saying that illness
is a grace offends our common sense, apparently
goes against our reason. If, however, we examine
what happens during the course of an illness,
we realise that it is true, that illness is a
grace. We are all afraid or would be afraid of
making this assertion to another person and yet
it is profoundly true. Because, looking closely
at what happens in us during our illness, at
what the illness does to us, if we live all this
in a Christian way, we realise that an enormous
change takes place. From when the illness started
to afterwards, we feel that we have undergone
a deep change, we are not the same people we
were before: this is the grace. Therefore it
is true that illness is a grace. But we can only
say this afterwards. If we say it before, it
is as though it were too early, it is as though
it were an ideology. It is instead only on the
basis of the experience that we have gone through,
which I myself have undoubtedly gone through
to some degree, that we can say that illness
is a grace. And we must know how to live it as
a grace. Because illness changes our relationship
with God, we certainly come close to him, we
pray more, even though it be only to ask him
to help make us better: a legitimately biased
prayer.
Illness
causes us to feel the time that we are living
in a different way than before. We realise that
life is something extremely precious, that it
is the greatest gift that we have received from
God. We discover that time has a different intensity
compared to before, no longer in relation to
all the things that we have to do, but with regard
to the existential experience of our person.
We feel that time is precious, because time is
pressing, because we no longer have the chance
of wasting, like we did before. Time becomes
more substantial, something that we would like
to live as intensely as possible.
Illness
changes us, because it makes us touch with our
own hands the loneliness that we have inside
us. There are in fact moments during the illness
when a person realises that in the final analysis
the issue is only his. Nobody can take his place.
Nobody can do or say anything in his place. He
feels his own finiteness and he realises that
only one Person can fill this finiteness, because
this person is someone greater than him: it is
The One who gave us life. We discover that loneliness
cannot be overcome within the human experience;
we cannot overcome personal loneliness in any
situation of our life. Whether we get married,
or become God’s ministers, or consecrate
our lives to God, there is a point of our life
in which we are always alone before God and no
one from the outside can help us by taking our
taking place. This drives us, opens the door
in us to the discovery of the fact that only
God can fill the human loneliness that we have
inside us. These few things should suffice to
bring us to the realisation, afterwards, that
illness truly is a grace. Said at the beginning,
it can seem totally untrue or absurd, but the
analysis of what happens within our person shows
that the statement that illness is a grace is
profoundly true.
There
is however one condition that I have left as
a final thought. Everything that I have said
comes true for us, only if we succeed in accepting
the illness. The most important thing that we
have to do, our own first attitude towards the
sick, is to personally accept what happens to
us and help others to do the same. We must help
the sick to accept their situation.
"Anyone
who loves his father, his mother, his brothers
and sisters ...", this statement by Jesus
in the Gospel, where moreover he does not intend
to be exhaustive in the examples he gives, helps
this reflection of ours. Jesus states in fact
that anyone who loves someone or something "more
than me, is not worthy of me". So, if we
love health as a supreme value, we are not worthy
of Jesus Christ. We must therefore learn to accept
in our hearts, without pretence, without subterfuges –
subterfuge is the subtlest temptation – truly
succeeding in standing before God in all sincerity.
Accepting
the illness is the condition whereby it can become
a prophetic sign, a moment in which we overcome
the temptations that we experience throughout
our lives, whereby we can realise that it is
a grace, inasmuch as it changes us inwardly.
Acceptance is the presupposition that we must
have within us, that the Lord can give us as
a grace, because on our own we cannot fully realize
it.
The first thing that we must do when we are ill
is to accept our station before God, so as to allow
this new situation of our existence to manifest
all the beneficial effects, all the beneficial
consequences, which the world may perhaps not share.
I just wanted to say this to you and what I have
told to you I have experienced, I did not simply
think it. I have probably thought of lots of things
but if I have thought them it is because God has
given me the grace to accept, I hope, my illness.
And if I have thought, it is because I have tried
to live what has happened to me in a certain way,
which is exactly the same thing that could happen
to anyone else.
That
is the reason why Caritas did a good thing in
inviting me to talk about this experience, which
has become, to some extent, a message about illness,
a message that is however closely linked to that
experience that God has granted I should undergo.
Saying
that I thank God for this is not easy, because
it is like saying to God that I thank him for
having taken away from us something fundamental:
our health. It is not easy for me, it is not
easy for anyone, it is not easy for the Pope,
because we are touching the most sensitive, truest
and most vital point of our whole human experience,
that of being truly sincere before the Lord,
when we say things about Him and about ourselves
in relation to him.
† Bishop Eugenio.
Questions from the audience
I heard
a young person say: "death does not scare
me, the thing that frightens me is suffering...".
Was it, perhaps, that for this young person the
aspect of the relationship between suffering
and death was not very clear?
I have
the impression that before God it is easier to
be sincere whereas, sometimes, when we are ill,
the context in which we live makes it even more
difficult to face our suffering because we already
feel a bit outside of things and our possibilities
reduced. How can we overcome these difficulties?
Monsignor
Bishop, during this illness of yours, you have
given us an exemplary demonstration of how is
possible to reconcile oneself to treatment, because
you have not shirked any treatment, looking instead
beyond the therapy. You have shown and taught
us how much this experience has been, for you,
an opportunity to show maturity, while continuing
to pursue your apostolic mission. How can we
doctors, nurses and everyone who works in the
health service ask our patients to look beyond
their illness. In our daily experience we often
see our patients practically identifying with
their “role” as sick people and living
solely for the purpose of getting better. How
can we carry out with them a reflection on illness
that will help them to stop identifying themselves
with their illness?
I wanted
to ask you a question with regard to children’s
illness, because you have spoken about illness
in adults, who are able to realise that they
are ill and endure the illness. Going to Lourdes
and seeing the children taken to the swimming-pools,
we see all sorts of illness and all sorts of
reaction. I would like to know how the illness
of children should be faced?
I take
my cue from what was said about the illness of
children. A family who loses a son, who has a
child who is fighting a drug addiction and who
is unable to help him. How can a person accept
it? Do they go to the Madonna with their child
on their knees and say: I offer him to you God
... but it is hard. David, too, at the death
of Absalom shouted out: Absalom, my son, why
did I not die instead of you?
I am
a priest and I would like to go back to the question
that a doctor just asked you, applying it however
to us priests, because I think that it is a very
important part of a priest’s work with
the sick. I, too, am seriously ill, and like
you, Monsignor Bishop, I have realised what it
means to suffer but, very often, we clergymen
do not have a clear idea on how to talk to a
sick person in order to first instil in him,
if possible, the trust to accept the illness
and then lead him to God.
Bishop
Eugenio’s answers
I think
that the fact that a young person dies more easily
than a mature or even elderly person is a fairly
universal observation. Why? I do not know how
to explain it but I have the impression that,
here too, based on the experience that we have
all already made, a young person still does not
have an overall understanding of the meaning
of life, he is more casual about life and less
attached to it. It is frequently the case that
old people, as they get older, become more attached
to life because it becomes such a complete experience
for them that it is more difficult for them to
detach themselves from it. I think that this
is the explanation but it is my own personal
impression.
How
can we help other people? We cannot help others
if we are not someone; simply saying something
to other people does not help. It is not said
at the right moment, if we are not and do not
identify with what we say. The more we identify
with what we say (because what we say is what
we truly think, what we have inside us, is the
experience that we have been through) the more
we can console the patient. There is also probably
a question of technique, of knowing how to talk
to sick people, but I believe that no technique
can take the place of truth. When we talk to
sick people we must be true and we must be convinced
about what we say, to the point that we ourselves
practise it. In this way, we shall have a better
chance of being able to help other people.
To some
extent this question is related to the one raised
by the priest who says that we clergymen are
not all that accustomed to dealing with the problem
of illness and death. But this is true for everyone,
because a sick person is not necessarily consoled
by a priest or a specialist, but by someone who
knows the right words to say, because consoling
does not mean dealing with the problem on a psychological
level. Consoling means saying to another person
that word that really helps him to live, that
proposes a value to him. You do not console a
sick person by saying: "Look, you will probably
get better", hiding part of the truth from
him. No, you console a sick person by saying
to them words that are true. The words of the
Gospel are always true and we must have the courage
to not say our own words, but the words of the
Gospel, even though they may appear absurd to
men.
We have
to say that illness is a grace, but we need to
know how to say it in the right way; we also
need to know the right moment, the opportune
moment to say it; nor must it be said like this
but in another way. We need to make the person
realise that he is changing, that he can change,
that his illness helps reconcile him with his
family. There are lots of ways of saying the
same thing which said face on can seem impossible
but we must, when talking to a sick person, to
a terminally ill person, say:
"Look, you can see for yourself, your illness
has changed you; this shows you that the Lord has
shown you great favour". In this way we console
a person in his innermost self because he realises
that what is happening to him is not pointless,
is not an injustice, is not one of life’s
swindles against which he can rebel. True and genuine
consolation is provided by words that are true
and genuine.
And
this is true whether we are priests, nuns or
lay people! We have to be able to say the same
things. It is not because a person is a priest
that is necessarily able to say them, even though
he may appear to be a professional in the matter.
A priest is not necessarily the person in the
best condition to say the right words. We are
all called to console; consoling is one of the
many things Christians must do; compassionate
deeds are part of what Christians must do in
their lives, that they are called to perform.
Compassionate deeds are not an extra, they form
part of what we are and are the expression of
our experience.
We shall
perform them only if we are truly deep in our
faith, and so, with regard to doing them, I shall
just say this to you: in order to be able to
be of comfort to the sick and dying we must be
able to say words that are also true for us.
With
regard to children, a child is a child in both
life and death, in the sense that he, or she,
is not able to live the same experience as an
adult, and so everything, in every sense, is
reduced to the experience that a child is capable
of living. And when he is ill too, a child is
unable to grasp, as instead an adult should be
able to do, the meaning of what is happening
to him, and so everything is in proportion. This
having been said, the child must still be taught
to obtain from his illness all the good that
is possible, he has to be helped, in the same
way the he is helped to live the Christian sacramental
experience in the best possible way, But we must
still bear in mind that his degree of human development
does not allow him to make such a complete experience
as an adult could make. We are sure that a child
is capable of understanding everything. When
his mother teaches her child the sign of the
cross and tells him God is the father, the child
realises that God is not the father like his
own father is, that he is something different;
he is probably unable to explain it but he intuitively
understands the truth that is hidden behind the
word father applied to God. We understood It
too. Faith is an intuition that is not always
able to give reasons for what it intuitively
understands, but it knows by intuition that it
is true; all pedagogy is based on this: pedagogy
in general and the Christian pedagogy. We can
explain to a child the mysteries, the greatest
mystery which is that of the “Trinity”
and say to a child that God has become man and
that Saint Joseph was his putative father, and
the child understands. The same is true for illness;
if we say to the child that God still loves him,
then the child understands this. Only we must have
the strength, the courage and the conviction of
how important it is to say it to him.
The
same thing applies to the mother who loses her
child in an accident, to drugs. It will be difficult,
it will be in certain situations even impossible
but we must try to help these people to accept
what is happening to them, because from this
you can start to construct. Without this presupposition
it is not possible to console a person; they
will never understand.
The
message may be a long one and can be effective
in proportion to our own personal faith, but
there is no other route to follow than to say
to every person, to any person, in any situation
they find themselves in, the complete truth:
that truth that we find in the Gospel. Nothing
we can say will be more effective than this.
The
Christian faith consoles us because it helps
us to understand the meaning of things and we
do not have to go and look for the meaning of
things in anything other than what we believe
in. A person who does not believe will try to
console another person by saying what he has
inside him. We must console a person by saying
what we have inside us, which we are the carriers
of, which we are the witnesses of. This is consolation,
anything else is not consolation, like when some
misfortune happens and we go into families, and
say false, banal things, in an attempt to console
people. At the most we console them because we
are showing a physical and moral presence to
their grief and pain but, in the majority of
cases, I believe we would have done better to
keep our mouths closed, because we say things
that have no strength for a Christian. I believe
I have answered all your questions.
I thank
you all, but before closing I would like to add
this: insomuch as I have succeeded in helping
you to understand something about the problem
of illness or to confirm what you already had
in your hearts and minds, I would like to draw
your attention to the importance of accompanying
the sick.
Christians
must accompany the sick, it takes time, it requires
generosity. We have to overcome our resistance
but providing people with consolation is a task
that we must perform, that we cannot avoid. The
Sacrament of the Sick helps us realise that,
when a person falls ill, the Church gathers around
him to pray. The Sacrament of the Sick is a gesture
that, generally speaking, in previous cultures
to Christianity did not exist; the sick were
excluded from society. In his letter Saint James
says: (and for him to say it is an indication
that it was still not happening) "If there
is a sick person among you call the elderly,
the elders or the rest of the faithful so that
they can anoint this sick person and pray with
him, so that he be saved".
Accompanying
the sick, which must develop much more than it
has so far, is simply a more recurring part of
the celebration of the Sacrament of the Sick,
but it is aligned exactly with what Saint James
says: "Gather around him and pray with him,
console him, saying true words". They are
not two separate things. Every so often we can
also celebrate the Sacrament of the Sick, but
we must in general develop accompanying the sick
as a normal practise of Christian life. There
are many groups that gather together and organize
themselves for this purpose. We are also called
to do this, there is nothing in life that we
are not called to do, we must do everything.
This
evening I say to you: we must accompany the sick
with much more awareness than we have done up
until now.
I thank
you.
Christmas
1994
Dear fellow priests, dear brothers and sisters
in the Lord, Jesus’ birthday is in itself
a day of inexpressible joy for us Christians. It
reminds us of and helps us to re-live the moment
when God revealed himself to the world, showing
himself like a child, crying and laughing in a
cradle. In whatever situation it happens, even
in the most painful of life’s circumstances,
the birth of a child is always a magical moment:
it instils in everyone a great desire to celebrate.
For us Christians the birth of Jesus is a day of
joy, for an immeasurably deeper reason. It is a
joy that springs from an event that is not solely
human, but from the fact that this Child is our
Redeemer. This Child marks the beginning of the
story of our salvation which, as well as granting
us the forgiveness of all our sins, enables us
to discover the true face of God: the face of the
Trinity.
Christmas,
however, is a time of joy that is always accompanied
to some degree by pain. This was true even on
the first Christmas day, the day when Jesus was
physically born of Mary of Nazareth, not just
because of the actual pain she suffered in giving
birth, but also because the fear that someone
might try to kill the Child very soon disturbed
the joy of the Sacred Family.
However,
the innumerable Christmases celebrated by Christians
at times of immense physical and mental suffering
have never lost that moment of irrepressible
joy generated by the birth of Christ. The Christian
Christmas always brings with it the experience
of joy and pain.
In a
text of the Ambrosian liturgy Saint Ambrose asks
Jesus, all wrapped up in his swaddling clothes: "Quare
rubiconda vestimenta tua?" - why are your
clothes are already stained with the blood of
the cross?
Dear
brothers and sisters, like the Christmas of Our
Lord, like the Christmases of very many Christians
and the overwhelming majority of men and women
on this planet of ours, this year my Christmas,
too, is tinged not only with joy but also with
a little pain.
In fact,
in Bern, just before Christmas, I had to undergo
orthopaedic surgery in my pelvic region.
There
is of course no comparison between the pain suffered
by Christ on the cross, between the pain that
atrociously afflicts billions of people and the
physical and mental suffering of a person who
undergoes an operation in a modern hospital,
such as ours, equipped with all the very latest
equipment.
However,
a relationship between these various manifestations
of human suffering does exist: it lies in the
fact that all who suffer, regardless of the gravity
of their suffering, can, by following the example
of and yielding themselves to Christ, become
source of purification and of expiation for the
bad things we have done, in our own society and
in the entire world. I am perfectly aware that,
compared to the overwhelming majority of sufferers,
I enjoy one extraordinary privilege: that of
being accompanied by your prays. I know that,
thanks to you, I have accumulated an enormous
patrimony of prayers, which allows me to overcome
every difficulty, as it would allow any other
person.
The
greatest difficulty, however, never comes from
physical and mental suffering, but lies in accepting
illness as a sign of the presence of God in our
lives. In the face of this sign we are asked
to inwardly say "yes", as we are asked
to do by the Christian’s model prayer,
the Our father: "They will be done".
Moreover,
for Christ too, the most difficult moment to
overcome was not the suffering on the cross,
but that moment in the garden of the Gethsemane,
when, sweating blood, he had the clear perception
of having to promise to his Father that he would
do his will: "Father, if you wish, take
this cup away from me! But let not my will be
done, but yours"(Lc 22, 42).
I am
sure, dear worshippers, that the immense patrimony
of prayers that you have put together over these
last few years, in order to help your Bishop,
will once again be extremely effective this time
too.
It is
precisely this certainty that helps me do everything
I can to accept from God this fresh difficulty.
I am equally certain that the help that you give
me will also benefit you yourselves, your families
and all of the circle of people who are dear
to you. Despite the uncertainty of the joy of
those who, today, are celebrating this Christmas
tormented by hunger, violence and war, I pray
to the Lord that in all of you, within your families,
in the company of your children and your friends,
the moment and the expression of joy prevails
over everything else that might overshadow it.
The
greeting of "Merry Christmas", which
we traditionally exchange with each other, must
retain its intrinsic meaning: that of being the
manifestation of our faith in Jesus Christ, who
by redeeming us through his birth, death and
resurrection, allows all believers to experience
– at Christmastime at least - a moment of
profound gratitude and joy.
† Bishop
Eugenio
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