Make Text Larger Make Text Smaller Email this Article to a Friend Print this Article

Lourdes no Disneyland: Bishop

Published: September 17, 2008

Without the sick, Lourdes would become a "Catholic Disneyland", Lourdes Bishop Jacques Perrier says.

Bishop Perrier made his comments as Pope Benedict devoted his last Mass in Lourdes yesterday to the sick, reconfirming the priority that is conferred upon those suffering from handicaps or illness, The Irish Times reports.

In Lourdes there are red wheelchair lanes painted on the pavements. Men walk through the streets shouting "Les Malades, Les Malades" to clear the way for the sick, the paper says.

Hundreds of thousands of believers volunteer each year to be hospitaliers, those who care for a disabled person non-stop for several days.

"Without the sick," Bishop Perrier said, "Lourdes would become a Catholic Disneyland."

In his homily in a Mass for the sick, Pope Benedict concentrated on the smile of the Virgin Mary, "which is directed quite particularly to those who suffer, so that they can find comfort and solace therein."

Mary first taught Bernadette to know her smile, this being the most appropriate point of entry into the revelation of her mystery", the pope said, recounting the apparitions of 150 years ago.

"Within the smile of the Virgin lies mysteriously hidden the strength to fight against sickness . . . the grace to accept without fear or bitterness to leave this world at the hour chosen by God."

Pope Benedict then anointed 10 pilgrims in wheelchairs, including Clare Kirby (55), from Walshestown, near Mullingar in Ireland. 

Mrs Kirby suffers from multiple sclerosis. Although the disease was diagnosed 18 years ago, she was able to continue annual pilgrimages to Lourdes as a blue coated volunteer. "This is the first time I'm too ill to do it," she said. So when Fr Joe Gallagher of the Meath diocease was asked for the name of a sick Irish person, he immediately said: "It's Clare."

Mrs Kirby was told on Sunday night that she would be anointed by the Pope yesterday morning.

"I thought maybe I might be cured," she said. "Then I prayed to all the people who are dead, to my mother and father and a good lot of friends, and I asked them to whisper to Our Lady, so she might intercede with Our Father . . . "

"I'd put up with it if I'm left the way I am," Mrs Kirby told me. "I have bad pain in my back, but I still enjoy life. Sometimes I'm angry, but never with God. If I was feeling sorry for myself, I'd say I got a raw deal in life."

The Pope dabbed oil on her forehead and upturned palms, called her name and prayed for her in English.

"I need a cigarette!" Mrs Kirby exclaimed afterwards, rummaging through her handbag for a lighter.

Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop of Westminster, stopped to shake Mrs Kirby's hand.

SOURCE

Benedict's blessing a balm to the suffering (Irish Times, 16/9/08)

LINKS

Lourdes (Wikipedia)

ARCHIVE

No easy divorce: Pope (CathNews, 16/9/08)

 

 

Response to articles is welcome. Simply follow the prompts to post your comment. No posting of more than 250 words will be published. While critical comment on stories and issues is welcomed, postings that descend to personal attacks on or impugn the integrity of other commentators will be blocked. Please use your own name, or initials, eg John Brown, or JB, or JAB, or Johnny. You are also required to add your location to the end of your email - as in, Sunshine, Victoria. Please provide your email address in the line supplied, followed by your contact phone number. These are requested for identification purposes only and will not be published. If you have any problems, please email news@cathnews.com

Recent Comments

  1. Having visited Lourdes about this time last year, I have to admit that it was the experience of a lifetime.Fortunately the crass comercialism of the town does not extend across the bridge over the River Gave into the Shrine. It was peaceful, very peaceful.
    I have powerful memories of the experiences I had while there.
    I hope and pray that it is always segregated from the greed, corruption and secularism of the world outside the site.
    Gavin, Ayr QLD.

Delicious

More from this section

  1. Interfaith symposium defends Pius XII

    A Rome interfaith symposium organised by US Catholics and Jews has backed the record of Pope Pius XII with documents showing the World War II pope intervened publicly and privately to save Jews.

  2. Vatican to tighten up on Marian apparition claims

    Pope Benedict has requested the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to draw up new guidelines for the recognition of claims of apparitions of Our Lady.

  3. Christian Brothers fill Philippines education gaps

    Australian Christian Brothers have introduced new programs in the Philippines and in Kenya for high school aged teenagers who have dropped out of school.

  4. No easy divorce: Pope

    Addressing French bishops in Lourdes, Pope Benedict reaffirmed the Church could not recognise "irregular unions" of Catholics who divorce and remarry outside the Church.

  5. Parents to blame for prejudice: Pope

    Prejudices are either born or broken in the family home, Pope Benedict yesterday told the new Bosnia-Herzegovina ambassador to the Holy See.

Church Resources provides a range of services for the Church and not-for-profit sector, including aggregating buying power for a wide range of products and services used by health, welfare, aged care, education and parish organisations. More »

Subscribe

Receive CathNews headlines in your inbox daily.

News Feed

Subscribe to the CathNews RSS feed to get the daily edition automatically delivered to you.

Daily Prayer

Gospel Verse for 31 July 2010
...though [Herod] wanted to put [John] to death, he feared the people, because they held him to be a prophet. [Matthew 14:5]

View Podcast