Benedict XVI: "Medicine is not a profession, but a mission"
More than 400 doctors and nurses gathered at the Vatican from November 15-17 for the conference titled "The Hospital, Setting for Evangelization: a Human and Spiritual Mission."
JAIME BUITRAGO
Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers
"We
have achieved many goals. First off, we were able to reflect on our
duties, on our mission as pastoral agents in the difficult world of pain
and sickness. We bring people a bit of hope and calm during times as
challenging as the prelude to death."
Benedict XVI closed off the conference, welcoming the participants at the Paul VI Hall.
BENEDICT XVI
"Anyone
who chooses to work within the world of suffering, treating their work
as a human and spiritual mission, requires higher competence, that goes
beyond beyond academic titles. It is the Christian science of
suffering."
The Pope asked them not to
forget the value of dignity whenever they are with their patients. And
so, he asked them to provide auxiliary care.
BENEDICT XVI
"Only
by clearly focusing medical and healthcare activities on the well-being
of man at his most fragile and defenseless, of man who searches for
meaning in the unfathomable mystery of pain, can we conceive of
hospitals as a place in which care is a mission and not merely an
occupation."
Benedict XVI emphasized that
now, more than ever, good Samaritans are needed because, according to
him, "the measure of humanity is determined by its relationship to
suffering."
Posted with permission from: http://internationalfiamc.blogspot.com.es/2012/11/benedict-xvi-medicine-is-not-profession.html (November 19, 2012, Romereports.com)
Labels: human life; death, The study of contemporary issues in bioethics
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