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The richness of the disabled person is a constant challenge to
the Church and to society, to open to the mystery present.
The disabled person is the place of the wonders of God and a person
rich in humanity.
Disability is not a punishment, indeed it is a privilege which
God uses to manifest his love and crown all with the glory of
the resurrection.
This preparation intends to help the biblical-theological discovery
of this truth and reality.
It is in this spirit that we entrust this preparation to all of
you, in view of the full integration and insertion of disabled
persons in the life of the Church and society, to valorize the
gifts they bring, to reconcile ourselves with them for failings
in their regard in the spirit of the Great Jubilee and to encourage
an attitude of caring, assistance and solidarity.
LIVING MAN IMAGE OF GOD
"
I look at your heavens, made by your fingers,
at the moon and the stars you set in place -
ah what is man that you should spare a thought for him
the son of man that you should care for him?
Yet you have made him little less than a god
You have crowned him with glory and splendour. (Ps 8)
Man, male and female, the greatest of God's creatures, has been
'crowned' by God with his love. The greatness, dignity and value
of humanity lies in the fact that it is part of the mystery of
God, who is "Love". The "Father's love is forever"
(Is 9,6), it is the 'crown' of man and clothes him in transcendence.
Alongside with such greatness, glory and honour we experience
pain, sickness and limitation. One of these limitations, with
all its queries, is mental or physical disability or a combination
of both.
God said: "Let us make man in our own image and likeness
God created man in the image of himself, in the image of God he
created him, male and female he created them". (Gn 1,26-27)
"At the time when the Lord made earth and heaven there was
a yet no wild bush on the earth nor had any wild plant yet sprung
up, for God had not sent rain on the earth, nor was there any
man to till the soil. However a flood was rising from the earth
and watering all the surface of the soil. God fashioned man of
dust from the soil. Then he breathed into his nostrils a breath
of life and thus man became a living being" (Gn 2,4-7)
Characteristics of this image
As living beings created in the image and likeness of God
we are united with Him and, like God, humanity is surrounded by
mystery. Man is an extraordinarily rich reality: his values surpasses
that of any other created reality because the fact that he is
unique and unrepeatable, guarantees his original dignity.
The human person, the living being, beyond all exterior appearances,
reflects Love who created him with the ability to love and be
loved, with his being, his faculties and his freedom. Every person
has in their constitution the honour, glory and dignity of God.
Man is the being with whom God speaks intimately in the "garden
in the evening" (Gn 3,8) he is the reality which God created
for himself, in order to pour into it the fullness of his own
life, to be in communion with this reality, which he has given
the ability and responsibility of love for others and of communion
with others in freedom.
The mystery of our limitations
Man in the beginning, created in the image and likeness of God,
uses his freedom negatively for an alternative plan of mistrust,
alienation, violence, dominion (cfr Gn, the successive passages
of Cain, the Deluge and Babel).
The image of God, given and entrusted to man, contrasts with human
freedom which did not confide in God, but isolated itself from
Him, from others and from the cosmos.
Falsehood, envy, jealousy and sin cause fear of loving, hiding
from God, rejection of dialogue with God as his creature, division
from Him, from others and from the cosmos (Gn 3, 1-7). This creates
violence, abuse, lack of life, which in turn disrupt God's plan
of love for humanity and for creation.
From this stems the sense of limitation, finitude, fear, lack
of interpersonal communication. Indeed the whole world experiences
"slavery to decadence" (Rm. 8,20).
Fragility, sickness, pain, disablity, solitude and death are seen
as acts of injustice by God, but it is precisely sin - the abuse
of freedom - which causes these dramatic limitations.
We must say however, that the sin of our first parents with all
its consequences and responsibilities had the power to dim, although
not eliminate, this image, which God blessed from the beginning.
"God saw that it was good" (Gn 1 passim).
A feeling of limitation
Therefore also in our limitations the splendour of God is revealed
in his greatness and glory, since, because of the human dignity
with which each of us is endowed, we all, despite our limitations,
manifest the glorious face of God.
Our limitations were assumed by Jesus with his Incarnation and
in absolute annihilation and solitude, in being considered nothing
but horror, he revealed authentic love which is always and only
a gift. With the Incarnation and Redemption, Jesus transfigures
humanity's historic weakness and fragility endowing human limits
with new contents: "restoring to mankind the likeness of
God, deformed at the beginning because of sin' (GS 22).
God's compassion
"God created man in his own image
male and female he created them
God blessed them
(Gn 1,27-28)
"I have seen the miserable state of my people in Egypt. I
have heard their appeal to be free of the slave-drivers. Yes,
I am well aware of their sufferings.
I mean to deliver them" (Es 3, 7-8).
God has never withdrawn his blessing from those whom he created
in his image and likeness, even when He appears to forget them,
or when the image, affected by some disablity or out of free choice,
no longer seems to correspond. Indeed he continues to seek, with
his tender and universal love, all of them, but especially those
who are weak, limited and voiceless, those most affected by limitations
in their bodily or mental capacities.
God 'comes down" from his inaccessible solitude to draw near
to the human condition.
"God so loved the world as to give his only Son" (Jn
3,16). God's compassion is set in the vision of love, all that
is marked by sin, fragility, limitation becomes, in the 'weakness'
of the Son, a vehicle of new life and resurrection.
This is why God prepares through the centuries the path towards
the Incarnation in history of his Son, in order to show once again
the splendour and greatness of what was created in his image and
likeness.
JESUS: God's compassion
"God so loved the world as to send his only Son"
(Jn 3,16)
He took upon himself our infirmities, he bore our sickness"
(Mt 8,17; Is 53,4).
"The truth is that only in the mystery of the Incarnate
Word does the mystery of man take on light. For Adam, the first
man, was a figure of Him who was to come, namely Christ the Lord.
Christ, the final Adam by the revelation of the mystery of the
Father and His love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes
his supreme calling clear" (GS 22).
He is "the image of the invisible God" (Col 1,15).
The image and likeness of God, obscured in its beauty by sin,
is restored to its splendour by Jesus who, being "born of
the Virgin Mary has truly been made one of us, like us in all
things except sin" (GS 22).
This he did taking upon himself human history, solitude, decadence
and limitations, living them voluntarily to the extreme in order
to transform them from within and fill them with new significance
(cfr Rom 15,3; Heb 5, 7-10)
The mystery of humanity limited, fragile and disabled, is at the
centre of his attention "Are you the One who is to come or
must we wait for another?" John's disciples asked and Jesus
replied recalling the prophecy of Isaiah "Go and tell John
what you hear and see: the lame walk, the lepers are healed, the
deaf hear, the dead rise, to the poor is announced the good news
(Mt 11,3-5)
The whole mystery revolves around the fact that He sought the
company of persons who, for various reason, were forced to live
on the edge of society (cf Mk 7,37). These were the ones whom
he made the objects of his care and attention, saying that the
last shall be first and the lowly shall be exalted in the Kingdom
of his Father (cf Mt 20,16; 23,12).
Seeing the man born blind, Jesus rejects and breaks the automatic
connection between illness and sin. "Neither he nor his parents
have sinned, but it was so that God's works might be manifested
in him" (Jn 9,3).
With the Passion and Cross he experiences and shares to the full
the greatest drama of the disabled person: extreme solitude and
rejection-exclusion on the part of others, experiencing injustice
and abandonment. Indeed, the knowledge of the human limitation
of death "the final enemy" (1 Cor 15,26), fragility
and finitude, frighten and terrify him to the point that he sweats
blood (Lk 22,44) and experiences the human questioning about the
presence of God in this mystery (Ps 32; Mt 27,46; Mk 15,34; cfr
Job 16, 9. 12-14; 17, 13-14).
At the same time however he renews his trust (Ps 31,15), hope
and obedience towards God creator and saviour, (Ps 21) who is
always present with man, in the One to whom Job says "I know
you can do everything and that nothing for you is difficult "
(Job 42,2).
From the Cross Jesus gives his Spirit, both by returning to the
Father, and by sending the Comforter to fortify men faced with
their fragility, weakness, sense of bewilderment, solitude and
to reassure them that disability is a place "where God works"
(Jn 9,3; cfr Lk 1,49) and it is also a place of authentic love,
which gives itself constantly and reveals the mystery of God and
of man to man himself.
And it is on the Cross that the Son of God reveals himself, definitively
and fully, (Mk 15, 39) giving the hope/certainty of God's concern
for man.
In obedience of the Cross he is exalted (cf Phil 2,8). The Cross
becomes the icon of the resurrection. The resurrection is the
Father's answer to the choice of the Son who trusted in Him even
on the Cross. The final goal of the reconstruction of the glorious
image of God given to mankind, is the resurrection: "He who
has raised Jesus Christ from the dead will also give life to your
mortal bodies because of his Spirit living in you" (Rom 8,11)
and "we will be like him because we will see him as he is"
(1 Jn 3,2).
THE CHURCH: Compassion of Christ
The Church continues the revealing mission of Christ manifesting
these riches to society often indifferent to the cry of disabled
persons.
Society often tends to solve this problem with indifference or
by reacting to disability with violence eliminating the disabled
person because they disturb its parameters of egoism, hedonism
and fear, which it, society, bases on profit and dominion of others
with no concern for improving the life of the disabled. The Church,
to be truly the Bride of Christ, must consider the disabled and
those around them, as theological places where "God works
his wonders", realizes his love for mankind and invites the
community to conversion and to discernment of Gospel values.
TESTIMONY OF LIFE
Testimony from Claudio
Claudio is a spastic, unable to walk, or speak, he uses a
wheelchair. In 1986 he wrote a letter to the Cardinal of Bologna.
At the time he was 24 years old and he wrote the letter with a
typewriter pressing the keys with his nose. Here are a few excerpts
of the letter.
The joy of the Risen Lord be with you! The most beautiful gift
the Lord has given me is life. Giving me life, the lord gave me
himself because the Lord is life.
Life is not static it is dynamic: it is going to live in the house
of the Lord where there is everlasting joy and eternal life.
To live in the house of the Father is, in this period, the thing
which attracts me most, because I am sure that the Kingdom is
near, nearer than we think.
We only need to open our eyes, closed by our sins, and lift our
heads: then we will see life conquer death, joy conquer sadness,
love conquer hatred, truth conquer falsehood; but above all we
will see the Lord conquer the evil one.
If our eyes are closed, we cannot see and consequently we are
blind; and the blind can only imagine reality.
Jesus is the only one who can say to me, to you, to everyone:
"Talita Kum" because Jesus is life. Nothing can separate
us from Him, not even death. "Great things you have done
O Lord for us, you have filled us with joy"(Ps 125,3).
Communities of life
In various parts of the world there are communities which welcome
the disabled and treat them with equality, as healthy people.
These valorize to the full the mystery of the Cross in the life
of the disabled person exalting it however in the power of the
resurrection, in many forms of living and various initiatives,
collective and individual, in which disabled persons reach a high
grade of humanity.
These communities are based first of all on the value of accepting
those who are different, who risk being excluded, in the mystery
of the Cross which is before us, in its urgency and absoluteness
and which we cannot reject. "Treat each other in the same
friendly way as Christ treated you" (Rom 15,7)
They develop gradually in a plan of life given by the participation
of volunteers, professionals, families, with the impulse which
sharing the life of the disabled person creates as a process of
liberation and transfiguration of personal and collective ills.
The examples of the lives of some disabled persons transfigured
by the power of the Lord's resurrection are enlightenment for
choices of vocation and Christian commitment for others.
"Handicapped persons, sustained effectively, are capable
of exceptional energy and values of great utility for the whole
of humanity" (John Paul II, March 31, 1984)
This is what these communities of life with disabled persons testify
to the world, anticipating in some way, the Kingdom of God.
(By Committee for the Jubilee day of the community of disabled
persons in preparation for the jubilee day, 3 december 2000)
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