Thursday, 11 February 2010

Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes - World Day of Prayer for the sick; Pope'S Homily in St Peter's today

Today, the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes, is World day of Prayer for the sick. The day was inaugurated by Pope John Paul II 18 years ago, and is being marked around the world with special Masses for people who are sick, as well as medical staff and healthcare chaplains.

To read Pope Benedict's for The World Day of Prayer for the Sick see: www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/messages/sick/documents/hf_ben-xvi_mes_20091122_world-day-of-the-sick-2010_en.html

The feast is celebrated in Lancaster Cathedral with a sung Mass at 12:15pm; this evening the Bishop will lead the Rosary (with Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament) at 7pm, then preside at sung Vespers at 7:30pm. Vespers will end with a short candlelit procession in the Cathedral


In London, a Mass in honour of Our Lady of Lourdes will take place in Westminster Cathedral on Saturday, 13 February at 3pm.

The Sacrament of the Sick will be administered during the Mass by Archbishop Vincent Nichols, the auxiliary bishops of Westminster and priests of the Diocese. The Mass will also be attended by doctors and hospital chaplains from around the Diocese, as well as pilgrims past and present from the Diocesan Lourdes pilgrimage.

All are welcome to attend on the 13 February

My comment: Today is good day to pray for doctors, nurses, and all other staff in hospitals and homes, cleaners etc, as well as those who care for someone sick in their own family at home.
Today also Sister Mary Jarlath's burial will take place in Whitstable. May she rest in peace. Please remember her sister, Sister Angela, who, due to disability, will will unable to attend the burial. I travelled to Worthing yesterday to celebrate a Requiem Mass with Sister Angela and the community there.

POPE'S HOMILY IN ROME TODAY
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The pastoral care of the sick and infirm is a priceless gift the church offers to those who suffer, to their families and to the world, Pope Benedict XVI said.

Accepting and offering up one's suffering along with sincerely and selflessly participating in the suffering of others are all "miracles of love" --- signs of God's love operating within the church, "performing great things through humble and simple people," the pope said Feb. 11 as he marked World Day of the Sick on the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.

Meeting and blessing sick people and their caregivers during a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, the pope said another miracle at work was the presence of God's grace in the many people who care for those who suffer, offering them the courage to face pain and illness "with just the strength of faith and of hope in the Lord."

"We live a joy that does not forget suffering, but understands it," he said in his homily. "In this way the ill and those who suffer are, within the church, not just the recipients of care and concern, but first and foremost protagonists in the pilgrimage of faith and hope" embarked upon by all Christians, he added.

Before the Mass, a few hundred people -- including many using wheelchairs -- processed down the broad boulevard leading to St. Peter's Basilica. Led by flag twirlers in medieval costume, the procession followed a truck carrying the relics of St. Bernadette Soubirous -- the 19th-century saint who witnessed a number of apparitions of Mary at a grotto outside Lourdes, France.

The relics were carried by ushers up the main aisle of St. Peter's Basilica and placed in front of the altar. The Mass was broadcast live to pilgrims gathered at several Marian shrines around the world, including Lourdes, Fatima in Portugal, and Czestochowa in Poland.

The Mass also marked the 25th anniversary of the institution of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Ministry. Pope Benedict said the council was created to help promote "a world better capable of welcoming and healing the sick as people" whose dignity must be respected.

Through the council's work, the church wants to help sick people "live the experience of illness in a more human way, not denying (their infirmity), but giving it meaning," he said.

In his homily, the pope also stressed the important role priests play in carrying out the church's mission of healing and evangelization.

Priests and those who are ill must work together, forming a kind of alliance, he said, in which the sick call out for God and the priests quickly respond with God's loving and saving grace.

1 comments:

  1. Great post, thanks, Father

    Joseph D

    ReplyDelete

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