World Day of Health and the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross: Two important celebrations with a significant meaning

World Day of Health and the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross: Two important celebrations with a significant meaning

World Day of Health and the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross:
Two important celebrations with a significant meaning

This year the World Day of Health, which has been designated to be celebrated annually on the 7th of April , falls on the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross. These two important days have a significant correlation in meaning.

On the Cross, our Lord “was despised and rejected by others; a man of suffering and acquainted with infirmity, and as one from whom others hide their faces he was despised, and we held him of no account.” On the Cross,he has borne our infirmities and carried our diseases, yet we accounted him stricken, struck down by God, and afflicted, but he was wounded for our transgressions… but by his wounds,  we are healed (Isiah 53:3-5). Christ identified Himself with Mankind’s afflictions and took them on as His own, providing healing though His philanthropic love. 

As we raise up the Cross on the Third Sunday of Lent, let us remember and pray for all those that are men and women of sorrow, those that are afflicted and with infirmity and disease. Let us remember those that bear their pain in loneliness; who feel despised and rejected. Let us remember that most of the world’s population does not have access to proper health treatments due to the growing impersonal industry of modern medicine and hospital care. In addition to this, let us remember all those who live in poverty and unhealthy conditions, that do not have adequate housing, clean drinking water and are not able to have a nutritious diet.

As we raise the Cross, let us remember that the Lord was wounded because of our transgressions; that, in the same way, we, as a whole, are responsible for the afflictions of our fellow human beings.

The Cross is our hope! Thus, let us remember that by way of the Cross, Christ took on our iniquities.  He showed us a new way of living and caring for one another. For although we continue to reject Him, He continues to love us. Through this love, He heals our wounds and illnesses. Our hope in the Cross is in His Crucifixion that leads us to His Resurrection. The Crucified Christ invites us to be crucified with Him by serving our fellow brothers and sisters in their time of affliction, to take up their iniquities and be witnesses to a new way of life through genuine human understanding and the sharing of pain (symponia). By doing this, the light of hope for life will be rekindled in our hearts and we will be resurrected by God’s grace.

+SK