Homily for World Day of the Sick 
			Msgr. Joseph F. Schaedel, vicar general
			Delivered at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral in Indianapolis 
			(Download the audio of this homily) 
			Lourdes, France, a little village in the Pyrenees foothills:  One hundred fifty years ago today, Our Lady first  appeared to the teenager, Bernadette.  Miraculous  healings followed.  One reason Saint  Bernadette’s visions of Our Lady at Lourdes are  so well known is because of all places, Hollywood.  In 1943, 20th Century Fox produced  a film that really quite accurately tells the story, The Song of Bernadette.  Imagine:  a religious film that won four Academy  Awards.  The actress who portrayed  Bernadette, Jennifer Jones, won an Academy Award.  Lesser known is the book on which that movie  is based.  It has the same title:  The  Song of Bernadette.  The book was  written two years earlier by, of all people, an Austrian Jewish writer named  Franz Werfel.  He wrote the book to keep  a promise.  In 1940, the Jewish Franz  Werfel and his wife, Alma, escaped the Nazis in Germany.  They ended up in the little town of Lourdes, France.  While they were there in hiding—for seven  weeks—the Jewish couple were so touched by the care, the concern, the love of the  people at Lourdes.  The author, Werfel, read everything he could  about the apparitions, about Saint Bernadette.   And he asked for his own miracle.   Franz Werfel promised that if he ever escaped safely to the United  States, he would—in his words’’—“sing the  song” of the saint.  He did  escape.  And he kept his promise.  Franz Werfel wrote The Song of Bernadette in 1941, four years before he died of a  heart attack in California.  That book, that movie, helped make Lourdes the famous Marian  Shrine that it is.
			God’s compassion is the hallmark of Lourdes.  God’s healing mercy is Our Lady’s  message.  The loving concern of God is  what Our Lady brings.  Lourdes reminds us  that God is always with His People, especially those in need of  healing—physical or spiritual.  Six  million people visit Lourdes  every year.  People are cured.  At last count well over 7,000 unexplainable  healings.  But only about 70 who were  willing to undergo the rigorous testing to be certified by the Church as miraculous.  Yet there are more than miracles.  The compassion of God is alive there.  The loving concern a refugee Jewish couple felt  at Lourdes in  1940 is just one example.  The renowned  author and English convert, Robert Hugh Benson, went to Lourdes a skeptic.  But Benson ended up with these words about  what he felt there:  “I saw sights that would have saddened me elsewhere—apparent  injustices, certain disappointments, dashed hopes that would almost have broken  my heart; and yet that great Power was over all, to reconcile, to quiet, and to  reassure….Lourdes is soaked, saturated, and kindled by the all but sensible  presence of the Mother of God.”  Mary is our advocate.  No wonder the Litany gives her such titles  as:  Health  of the Sick, Refuge of Sinners, Comforter of the Afflicted.  Little children, when they are hurting, want  their mothers.  And the hurting human  race can turn to Mary.  She is our  mother.  Mary is God’s instrument, God’s  reminder of His healing power.
			Mary wants to lead us to her Son.  Mary’s purpose at Lourdes or anywhere else is to take us to  Jesus.  Mary, like the Church, is the way  to Christ.  When the Second Vatican Council taught about Mary, the Council did so in  the document on the Church.  The Council taught  that “Mary is a sign of sure hope and of  solace for God’s People in Pilgrimage.”  On May 13, 1992, the Feast of Our Lady of  Fatima, Pope John Paul II declared that today’s feast of Lourdes would also become the World Day of  the Sick.  He quoted that title for Our  Lady, “Health of the Sick.”  He called  her the “Mother of the Living.”  The Holy Father knew that Our Lady, the model  disciple, leads us to God Who is Love.   And she does.  If you go to Lourdes at pilgrimage  time, you experience vast Eucharistic Processions.  Crowds over 50,000 people wind in procession  with the Blessed Sacrament through the grotto grounds.  It’s like the whole population of the RCA  Dome at a sold-out Colts game turning out to adore the Eucharistic Christ.  At Lourdes,  in a visible, concrete way, Our Lady leads people to her Divine Son.  Mary knows that first we should come to know  Jesus truly present in the Eucharist.  That  makes it all the easier to recognize Him elsewhere:  in the hungry, the thirsty, in strangers, in  the sick, in the imprisoned.  Mary takes  us to her Son.
			Yet, seeing Christ in others is only a  beginning.  Once we encounter Christ in  the less fortunate, we have to act.  We  have to “do something” for the suffering Christ.  In proclaiming today World Day of the Sick,  Pope John Paul II said that illness is not necessarily just a negative  event.  He called sickness “an opportunity to release love, in order to  give birth to works of love toward (our) neighbor.”  Actions speak louder than words.  Timothy Dolan is the Archbishop of Milwaukee.  Archbishop Dolan recently recounted the story  of his friend, Patty.  Patty was  diagnosed with M.S.  She told the  archbishop her local parish checks in on her.   They call to ask her how she’s doing; she’s on their prayer list.  But one day, Patty confessed to Archbishop  Dolan that now she goes to the Baptist   Church.  He was shocked!  “Why?”   “Well,” Patty said, “my neighbors are Baptist.  They take me to the store; they pick up my  medicine at the pharmacy, cut my grass, shovel my snow; they take me to the  doctor.  Then they started taking me to their church.  The actions of these good people  mean more to me that just the words I get from my parish.”  Sad!   That’s no reason to abandon your Catholic Faith.  But we can see where the poor woman is coming  from.  World Day of the Sick is more than  talk.  Christ in the suffering calls us  to action, not just kind words.
			One hundred fifty years ago today, Our  Lady appeared to a simple French peasant girl, Saint Bernadette.  And for one hundred fifty years people have  come to her Shrine at Lourdes  to experience the healing presence of God.   Some episodes are quite dramatic; most of them are not.  But all of them are Mary leading people to  Jesus.  Sixty-eight years ago, a German  Jewish refugee found comfort there.  And  to thank God, he kept his promise to “sing a song” of the saint.  He wrote The  Song of Bernadette.  That book, the  movie that followed, told millions the story.   If you ever get the chance, go to Lourdes.  But even those who never go can find what  goes on there in serving others:   compassion, forgiveness, healing, mercy, understanding.  Today is the World Day of the Sick.  Recall those words of John Paul II:  “Illness need not be just a negative  event.  Sickness can be a “visit by God”—an opportunity—to “release  love, in order…to transform the whole of human civilization into a civilization  of love.”  Mary did it at Lourdes.   And she used a Jewish author, then the Hollywood  entertainment industry to help her.  Those  are two miracles in themselves!  Mary is  the model disciple.  She will lead us to  her Son.  Wherever she goes, that’s what  it’s all about.  Follow her.
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