Mary Says: 'Do Whatever He Tells You'

Author: John Paul II

MARY SAYS: "DO WHATEVER HE TELLS YOU"

Pope John Paul II

Message for 1997 World Day of the Sick (February 11, 1997, Fatima) October 18, 1996

1. The next World Day of the Sick will be celebrated on 11 February 1997 at the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima, in the noble nation of Portugal. The place chosen is particularly significant for me. I in fact wished to go there on the anniversary of the assassination attempt I suffered in St. Peter's Square, in order to thank Divine Providence, according to whose inscrutable design the dramatic event had mysteriously coincided with the anniversary of the first appearance of the Mother of Jesus on 13 May 1917, at Cova da Iria.

I am therefore happy that the official celebration of a Day like that of the Sick, which is especially close to my heart, should be held at Fatima. It will afford each of us the opportunity to listen once again to the message of the Virgin, whose basic core is "the call to conversion and penance, as in the Gospel. This call was pronounced at the beginning of the 20th century and has thus been addressed to this century in particular. The Lady of the message seems to read the signs of the times— the signs of our time—with special insight" (Address at Fatima, 13 May 1982, in Insegnamenti V/2 [1982], p. 1580).

In listening to the Blessed Virgin it will be possible to rediscover her mission in the mystery of Christ and of the Church in a vital and moving way—a mission which is already found to be indicated in the Gospel, when Mary asks Christ to begin to perform his miracles, saying to the servants at the wedding banquet at Cana in Galilee, "Do whatever he tells you" (Jn 2:5). At Fatima she echoed a specific word pronounced by her Son at the outset of his public mission: "The time is fulfilled...; repent and believe in the Gospel" (Mk 1:15). The insistent invitation of Mary most holy to penance is nothing but the manifestation of her maternal concern for the fate of the human family, in need of conversion and forgiveness.

God grants spiritual relief from our weakness

2. Mary became the spokeswoman for other words of her Son at Fatima. Christ's invitation especially resounded in Cova da Iria: "Come to me, all you that labour and are overburdened, and I will give you rest" (Mt 11:28). Are the throngs of pilgrims who hasten to that blessed land from all over the world not perhaps eloquent testimony of the need for relief and comfort which numberless persons experience in their lives?

Above all, it is the suffering who feel attracted by the perspective of "relief" which the Divine Physician is able to offer those who turn to him with trust. And in Fatima this relief is found: sometimes it is physical relief, when, in his providence God grants healing from illness, more often it is spiritual relief when the soul, pervaded by the inner light of grace, finds the strength to accept the painful weight of infirmity, transforming it, through communion with Christ, the suffering servant, into an instrument of redemption and salvation for oneself and one's brothers and sisters.

The direction to move in, on this hard road, is pointed out to us by the motherly voice of Mary, who, in the history and life of the Church, has always continued to repeat—and in a special way in our time—the words: "Do whatever he tells you".

3. The World Day of the Sick, then, is a precious occasion to hear again and accept the exhortation of the Mother of Jesus, who, at the foot of the Cross, was entrusted with mankind (cf. Jn 19:25-27). The World Day is situated in the first year of the preparatory "triduum" for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000: a year entirely dedicated to reflection on Christ. Precisely this reflection on the centrality of Christ "cannot be separated from the recognition of the role played by his Most Holy Mother.... Mary in fact constantly points to her Divine Son and she is proposed to all believers as the model of faith which is put into practice" (Apostolic Letter Tertio millennio adveniente, n. 43).

The exemplariness of Mary is conveyed in the most lofty fashion by the invitation to look at the Crucified One so as to learn from him, who, in completely taking on the human condition freely wished to burden himself with our sufferings and offer himself to the Father as an innocent victim for us men and for our salvation, "with loud cries and tears" (Heb 5:7). He thus redeemed suffering, transforming it into a gift of salvific love.

4. Dear brothers and sisters who are suffering in spirit and in body! Do not yield to the temptation to regard pain as an experience which is only negative, to the point of doubting God's goodness. In the suffering Christ every sick person finds the meaning of his or her afflictions. Suffering and illness belong to the condition of man, a fragile, limited creature, marked by original sin from birth. In Christ, who died and rose again, however, humanity discovers a new dimension to its suffering: instead of a failure, it reveals itself to be the occasion for offering witness to faith and love.

Jesus looks on you with eyes of tenderness

Dear people who are sick, be able to find in love "the salvific meaning of your sorrow and valid answers to all of your questions" (cf. Apostolic Letter Salvifici doloris, n. 31). Yours is a mission of most lofty value for both the Church and society. "You who are weighed down by suffering are in the front line of those beloved by God. Just as he looked on all those whom he met on the roads of Palestine, Jesus looks on you with eyes full of tenderness; his love will never fail" (Address to the Sick and Suffering, Tours, 21 September 1996, n. 2; L'Osservatore Romano English edition, 2 October 1996, p. 6). Manage to be generous witnesses to this privileged love through the gift of your suffering, which can do so much for the salvation of the human race.

In a society like the present one, which is seeking to build its future on well-being and consumerism, and measures everything in terms of efficiency and profit, illness and suffering, which cannot be denied, are either removed or emptied of their meaning in the illusion of their being overcome exclusively through the means offered by the progress of science and technology.

Illness and suffering no doubt remain a limit and a trial for the human mind. In the light of Christ's Cross, however, they become a privileged moment for growth in faith and a precious instrument to contribute, in union with Jesus the Redeemer, to implementing the divine project of salvation.

5. In the page of the Gospel referring to the Last Judgement, when "the Son of man comes in his glory with all his angels" (Mt 25:31), the criteria on the basis of which the sentence will be pronounced are indicated. As we know they are summarized in the solemn concluding affirmation: "Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to men (Mt 25:40). Among these "least of my brothers" are the sick (cf. Mt 25:36), who are often alone and marginalized by society. To make opinion sensitive to them is one of the main goals of celebrating the World Day of the Sick: to be dose to those suffering so that they will be able to make their suffering fruitful, also by way of the help of those who are at their side to provide care and assistance—this is the commitment the World Day is calling for.

Following the example of Jesus, as "Good Samaritans" we must approach suffering man. We must learn to "serve the Son of man in men", as Bl. Luigi Orione said (cf. Scritti, 57, 104). We must be able to see the sufferings of our brothers and sisters with the eyes of solidarity, not "pass by", but "become a neighbour", pausing at their side, with acts of service and love aimed at the integral health of the human person. A society is characterized by the attention it devotes to those suffering and by the attitude it adopts towards them.

May this World Day be a moment of evangelization

Too many human beings in the world in which we live remain excluded from the love of the family and social community. In appearing in Fatima to three poor little shepherds to make them announcers of the Gospel message, the Blessed Virgin renewed her liberating Magnificat, speaking on behalf of "those who do not accept passively the adverse circumstances of personal and social life, and are not victims of 'alienation' —as is said today—but who with her proclaim that God is 'the avenger of the humble' and, if necessary, 'puts down the mighty from their thrones"' (Homily at the Shrine of Zapopan, 30 January 1979, n. 4, Insegnamenti II/I [1979], p. 295, L'Osservatore Romano English edition, 19 February 1979, p. 3).

6. On this occasion, too, I thus renew a forceful appeal to public leaders, international and national organizations in the health field, health-care workers, volunteer associations, and all men of goodwill, that they join in the commitment of the Church, which, in adhering to Christ's teaching, seeks to announce the Gospel through the witness of service to those who suffer.

May the Blessed Virgin, who has dried so many tears in Fatima, help everyone to transform this World Day of the Sick into a distinctive moment of the "new evangelization".

With these wishes, as I invoke the maternal protection of Mary, Mother of the Lord and our Mother, for the initiatives undertaken in connection with this Day, I willingly impart my affectionate Blessing to you, dear people who are ill, your relatives, health-care workers, volunteers, and all who in a spirit of solidarity are close to you in your sufferings.

From the Vatican, 18 October 1996.

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