Vatican City, 12 April 2014 (VIS) –
This morning the Holy Father met with the participants in the
Congress of the Italian Society for Oncological Surgery, organised by
the “La Sapienza” University of Rome and by the Sant'Andrea
Hospital. “Scientific research has multiplied the possibilities for
prevention and treatment, and has discovered therapies to treat many
illnesses”, said the Pope. “But when we speak of in full health,
it is necessary not to lose sign of the fact that the human person,
created in the image and semblance of God, is a unity of body and
spirit. These two elements are distinct but inseparable, because the
person is one entity. Therefore, even illness, the experience of pain
and suffering, does not relate only to the bodily dimension, but to
man in his entirety. This creates the need for an integral treatment,
that considers the person as a whole and unites medical care with
human, psychological and social support, spiritual guidance, and
support for patients' families”.
Pope Francis recalled Pope John Paul
II's Moto Proprio “Dolentium hominum” of 1985, remarking that “it
is indispensable for healthcare workers to 'be led by an integrally
human view of illness” and as a result be “able to effect a fully
human approach to the sick person who is suffering'. … Fraternal
communion with the sick opens us up to the true beauty of human
life”.
Finally, referring the beginning of
Holy Week, which culminates in the Triduum of the passion, death and
resurrection of Jesus, he affirmed, “Here human suffering reaches
its lowest point, and is redeemed by God. God as love. Only Christ
can give meaning to the scandal of innocent pain”.
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