Pope Francis, MD: Using medical metaphors to provoke, explain

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis has proven to be a master
of metaphor and, as fall approached, he increasingly turned to the field of
medicine to make his points.

Of course, probably his most famous medical metaphor is his
repeated description of the church today as a “field hospital.”

In his 2013 interview with the Jesuit journal La Civilta
Cattolica, he said: “I see the church as a field hospital after battle. It
is useless to ask a seriously injured person if he has high cholesterol and
about the level of his blood sugars! You have to heal his wounds.”

At his early morning Mass Sept. 22, he showed that while
triage might be his specialty, he is familiar with a range of ailments.

Speaking about people who have done evil and know it, Pope
Francis said, they live “with a constant itch, with hives that don’t leave
them in peace.”

But his strongest words were about the sins of vanity and
pride. “Vanity is like an osteoporosis of the soul: the bones seem good
from the outside, but on the inside they are all ruined.”

The 79-year-old pope also referred to a medical
ailment — “rheumatism of the soul” — during his speech Sept. 16 to
new bishops, many of whom are still in their 40s and 50s.

Talking about the need for and the attractive power of
mercy, Pope Francis said that when people in need sense a merciful person is
passing by, they will reach out. “They are fascinated by (mercy’s)
capacity to stop when so many walk on by; to kneel when a certain rheumatism of
the soul keeps many from bending down; to touch wounded flesh when a preference
for everything to be sterile prevails,” he said.

Another medical problem afflicting souls diagnosed by Pope
Francis is “spiritual Alzheimer’s,” a condition that renders some
people incapable of remembering God’s love and mercy for them; a clear sign of having
the condition is being unable to show mercy to others.

When a Christian does not recognize his or her own failings,
it is easy to be scandalized by God’s mercy toward other sinners, he said in a video
message broadcast Aug. 27 to church leaders from North and South America
meeting in Bogota, Colombia, for a continental congress for the Year of Mercy.

Being shocked, scandalized and judgmental sets in when a person
suffers from “spiritual Alzheimer’s,” the pope said. The disease is
obvious “when we forget how the Lord has treated us, when we begin to
judge and divide people up” into “groups of good and bad, saints and
sinners.”

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden.

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