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| prayers for healing
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
INSTRUCTION ON PRAYERS FOR HEALING
INTRODUCTION
The longing for happiness, deeply rooted in the human heart, has always
been accompanied by a desire to be freed from illness and to be able to
understand the meaning of sickness when it is experienced. This is a
human phenomenon, which in some way concerns every person and finds
particular resonance in the Church, where sickness is understood as a
means of union with Christ and of spiritual purification. Moreover, for
those who find themselves in the presence of a sick person, it is an
occasion for the exercise of charity. But this is not all, because
sickness, like other forms of human suffering, is a privileged moment
for prayer, whether asking for grace, or for the ability to accept
sickness in a spirit of faith and conformity to God's will, or also for
asking for healing.
Prayer for the restoration of health is therefore part of the Church's
experience in every age, including our own. What in some ways is new is
the proliferation of prayer meetings, at times combined with liturgical
celebrations, for the purpose of obtaining healing from God. In many
cases, the occurrence of healings has been proclaimed, giving rise to
the expectation of the same phenomenon in other such gatherings. In the
same context, appeal is sometimes made to a claimed charism of healing.
These prayer meetings for obtaining healing present the question of
their proper discernment from a liturgical perspective; this is the
particular responsibility of the Church's authorities, who are to watch
over and give appropriate norms for the proper functioning of
liturgical celebrations.
It has seemed opportune, therefore, to publish an Instruction, in
accordance with Canon 34 of the Code of Canon Law, above all as a help
to local Ordinaries so that the faithful may be better guided in this
area, though promoting what is good and correcting what is to be
avoided. It was necessary, however, that such disciplinary
determinations be given their point of reference within a well-founded
doctrinal framework, to ensure the correct approach and to make clear
the reasoning behind the norms. To this end, it has been judged
appropriate to preface the disciplinary part of the Instruction with a
doctrinal note.
I. DOCTRINAL ASPECTS
1. Sickness and healing: their meaning and
value in the economy of salvation
People are called to joy. Nevertheless each day they experience many
forms of suffering and pain. (1) Therefore, the Lord, in his promises
of redemption, announces the joy of the heart that comes from
liberation from sufferings (cf. Is 30:29; 35:10; Bar 4:29). Indeed, he
is the one "who delivers from every evil (Wis 16:8). Among the
different forms of suffering, those which accompany illness are
continually present in human history. They are also the object of man's
deep desire to be delivered from every evil.
In the Old Testament, "it is the experience of Israel that illness is
mysteriously linked to sin and evil. (2) Among the punishments
threatened by God for the people's unfaithfulness, sickness has a
prominent place (cf. Dt 28:21-22, 27-29, 35). The sick person who
beseeches God for healing confesses to have been justly punished for
his sins (cf. Ps 37; 40; 106:17-21).
Sickness, however, also strikes the just, and people wonder why. In the
Book of Job, this question occupies many pages. "While it is true that
suffering has meaning as punishment, when it is connected with a fault,
it is not true that all suffering is a consequence of a fault and has
the nature of a punishment. The figure of the just man Job is a special
proof of this in the Old Testament. . . And if the Lord consents to
test Job with suffering, he does it to demonstrate the latter's
righteousness. The suffering has the character of a test. (3)
Although sickness may have positive consequences as a demonstration of
the faithfulness of the just person, and for repairing the justice that
is violated by sin, and also because it may cause a sinner to reform
and set out on the way of conversion, it remains, however, an evil. For
this reason, the prophet announces the future times in which there will
be no more disease and infirmity, and the course of life will no longer
be broken by death (cf. Is 35:5-6; 65:19-20).
It is in the New Testament, however, that the question of why illness
also afflicts the just finds a complete answer. In the public activity
of Jesus, his encounters with the sick are not isolated, but continual.
He healed many through miracles, so that miraculous healings
characterised his activity: "Jesus went around to all the towns and
villages, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the Gospel of the
kingdom, and curing every disease and illness" (Mt 9:35; cf. 4:23).
These healings are signs of his messianic mission (cf. Lk 7:20-23).
They manifest the victory of the kingdom of God over every kind of
evil, and become the symbol of the restoration to health of the whole
human person, body and soul. They serve to demonstrate that Jesus has
the power to forgive sins (cf. Mk 2:1-12); they are signs of the
salvific goods, as is the healing of the paralytic of Bethesda (cf. Jn
5:2-9, 19-21) and the man born blind (cf. Jn 9).
The first preaching of the Gospel, as recounted in the New Testament,
was accompanied by numerous miraculous healings that corroborated the
power of the Gospel proclamation. This had been the promise of the
Risen Jesus, and the first Christian communities witnessed its
realization in their midst: "These signs will accompany those who
believe:. . . they will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover"
(Mk 16:17-18). The preaching of Philip in Samaria was accompanied by
miraculous healings: "Philip went down to a city of Samaria and
proclaimed the Christ to them. With one accord, the crowds paid
attention to what was said by Philip when they heard it and saw the
signs he was doing. For unclean spirits, crying out in a loud voice,
came out of many possessed people, and many paralysed and crippled
people were cured" (Acts 8:5-7). Saint Paul describes his own
proclamation of the Gospel as characterized by signs and wonders worked
by the power of the Holy Spirit: "For I will not dare to speak of
anything except what Christ has accomplished through me to lead the
Gentiles to obedience by word and deed, by the power of signs and
wonders, by the power of the Spirit" (Rom 15:18-19; cf. 1 Thes 1:5; 1
Cor 2:4-5). It would not be without foundation to suppose that these
signs and wonders, manifestations of the power of God that accompanied
the preaching of the Gospel, were constituted in large part by
miraculous healings. Such wonders were not limited to St. Paul's
ministry, but were also occurring among the faithful: "Does then the
one who supplies the Spirit to you and works mighty deeds among you do
so from works of the law or from faith in what you have heard
preached?" (Gal 3:5).
The messianic victory over sickness, as over other human sufferings,
does not happen only by its elimination through miraculous healing, but
also through the voluntary and innocent suffering of Christ in his
passion, which gives every person the ability to unite himself to the
sufferings of the Lord. In fact, "Christ himself, though without sin,
suffered in his passion pains and torments of every type, and made his
own the sorrows of all men: thus he brought to fulfilment what had been
written of him by the prophet Isaiah (cf. Is 53:4-5). (4)" But there is
more: "In the cross of Christ not only is the redemption accomplished
through suffering, but also human suffering itself has been redeemed. .
. In bringing about the redemption through suffering, Christ has also
raised human suffering to the level of the redemption. Thus each man in
his suffering can also become a sharer in the redemptive suffering of
Christ." (5)
The Church welcomes the sick not only as the recipients of her loving
care, but also by recognizing that they are called "to live their human
and Christian vocation and to participate in the growth of the kingdom
of God in a new and more valuable manner. The words of the Apostle Paul
ought to become their approach to life or, better yet, cast an
illumination to permit them to see the meaning of grace in their very
situation: ‘In my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church' (Col 1:24).
Precisely in arriving at this realization, the Apostle is raised up in
joy: ‘I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake' (Col 1:24). (6)"
It is a paschal joy, fruit of the Holy Spirit, and, like Saint Paul,
"in the same way many of the sick can become bearers of the ‘joy
inspired by the Holy Spirit in much affliction' (1 Thess 1:6) and be
witnesses to Jesus' resurrection." (7)
2. The desire for healing and prayer to obtain it
Presuming the acceptance of God's will, the sick person's desire for
healing is both good and deeply human, especially when it takes the
form of a trusting prayer addressed to God. Sirach exhorts his
disciple: "My son, when you are ill, delay not, but pray to God, who
will heal you" (Sir 38:9). A number of the Psalms also ask for healing
(cf. Ps 6; 37; 40; 87).
Large numbers of the sick approached Jesus during his public ministry,
either directly or through friends and relatives, seeking the
restoration of health. The Lord welcomes their requests and the Gospels
contain not even a hint of reproach for these prayers. The Lord's only
complaint is about their possible lack of faith: "If you can!
Everything is possible to one who has faith" (Mk 9:23; cf. Mk 6:5-6; Jn
4:48).
Not only is it praiseworthy for individual members of the faithful to
ask for healing for themselves and for others, but the Church herself
asks the Lord for the health of the sick in her liturgy. Above all,
there is the sacrament "especially intended to strengthen those who are
being tried by illness, the Anointing of the Sick."(8) "The Church has
never ceased to celebrate this sacrament for its members by the
anointing and the prayer of its priests, commending those who are ill
to the suffering and glorified Lord, that he may raise them up and save
them."(9) Immediately before the actual anointing takes place, in the
blessing of the oil, the Church prays: "Make this oil a remedy for all
who are anointed with it; heal them in body, in soul, and in spirit,
and deliver them from every affliction"(10) and then, in the first two
prayers after the anointing, the healing of the sick person is
requested.(11) Since the sacrament is a pledge and promise of the
future kingdom, it is also a proclamation of the resurrection, when "
there shall be no more death or mourning, crying out or pain, because
the old order has passed away" (Rev 21:4). Furthermore, the Roman
Missal contains a Mass pro infirmis in which, in addition to spiritual
graces, the health of the sick is requested.(12)
In the De benedictionibus of the Rituale Romanum, there is an Ordo
benedictionis infirmorum, in which there are various prayers for
healing: in the second formulary of the Preces (13), in the four
Orationes benedictionis pro adultis (14), in the two Orationes
benedictionis pro pueris (15), and in the prayer of the Ritus brevior
(16).
Obviously, recourse to prayer does not exclude, but rather encourages
the use of effective natural means for preserving and restoring health,
as well as leading the Church's sons and daughters to care for the
sick, to assist them in body and spirit, and to seek to cure disease.
Indeed, "part of the plan laid out in God's providence is that we
should fight strenuously against all sickness and carefully seek the
blessings of good health. . . "(17)
3. The "charism of healing" in the New Testament
Not only did wondrous healings confirm the power of the Gospel
proclamation in Apostolic times, but the New Testament refers also to
Jesus' real and proper transmission of the power to heal illnesses to
his Apostles and to the first preachers of the Gospel. In the call of
the Twelve to their first mission, according to the accounts of Matthew
and Luke, the Lord gave them "the power to drive out unclean spirits
and to cure every disease and illness" (Mt 10:1; cf. Lk 9:1), and
commanded them: "Cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, drive
out demons" (Mt 10:8). In sending out the seventy-two disciples, the
Lord charges them: "cure the sick" (Lk 10:9). The power to heal,
therefore, is given within a missionary context, not for their own
exaltation, but to confirm their mission.
The Acts of the Apostles refers in general to the wonders worked by
them: "many wonders and signs were being done by the apostles" (Acts
2:43; cf. 5:12). These were amazing deeds that manifested the truth and
the power of their mission. However, apart from these brief general
references, the Acts of the Apostles refers above all to the miraculous
healings worked by individual preachers of the Gospel: Stephen (cf.
Acts 6:8), Philip (cf. Acts 8:6-7), and, above all, Peter (cf. Acts
3:1-10; 5:15; 9:33-34, 40-41) and Paul (cf. Acts 14:3, 8-10; 15:12;
19:11-12; 20:9-10; 28:8-9).
In the conclusion to the Gospel of Mark, as well as in the Letter to
the Galatians, as seen above, the perspective is broadened. The
wondrous healings are not limited to the activity of the Apostles and
certain of the central figures in the first preaching of the Gospel. In
this perspective, the references to the "charisms of healing" in 1 Cor
12:9, 28, 30 acquire special importance. The meaning of charism is per
se quite broad - "a generous gift" - and in this context it refers to
"gifts of healing obtained." These graces, in the plural, are
attributed to an individual (cf. 1 Cor 12:9), and are not, therefore,
to be understood in a distributive sense, as the gifts of healing
received by those who themselves have been healed, but rather as a gift
granted to a person to obtain graces of healing for others. This is
given in uno Spiritu, but nothing is specified about how that person
obtains these healings. It would not be farfetched to think that it
happens by means of prayer, perhaps accompanied by some symbolic
gesture.
In the Letter of James, reference is made to the Church's action, by
means of the priests, directed toward the salvation - in a physical
sense as well - of the sick. But this is not to be understood as a
wondrous healing; it is different from the "charisms of healing" of 1
Cor 12:9. "Is anyone sick among you? He should call for the priests of
the Church and have them pray over him and anoint him with oil in the
name of the Lord and the prayer of faith will save the sick person and
will raise him up. If he has committed any sins, he will be forgiven"
(Jas 5:14-15). This refers to a sacramental action: anointing of the
sick with oil and prayer "over him" and not simply "for him," as if it
were only a prayer of intercession or petition; it is rather an
efficacious action on the sick person.(18) The verbs "will save" and
"will raise up" do not suggest an action aimed exclusively or
predominantly at physical healing, but in a certain way include it. The
first verb, even though the other times it appears in the Letter of
James it refers to spiritual salvation (cf. 1:21; 2:14; 4:12; 5:20), is
also used in the New Testament in the sense of "to heal" (cf. Mt 9:21;
Mk 5:28, 34; 6:56; 10:52; Lk 8:48); the second, while having at times
the sense of "to rise" (cf. Mt 10:8; 11:5; 14:2), is also used to
indicate the action of "raising up" a person who is lying down because
of illness, by healing the person in a wondrous fashion (cf. Mt 9:5; Mk
1:31; 9:27; Acts 3:7).
4. Prayers to obtain healing from God in the Church's tradition.
The Fathers of the Church considered it normal that believers would ask
God not only for the health of their soul, but also for that of their
body. With regard to the goods of life, health, and physical integrity,
St. Augustine writes: "We need to pray that these are retained, when we
have them, and that they are increased, when we do not have them."(19)
St. Augustine has also left us the testimony of a friend's healing,
obtained through the prayers of a Bishop, a priest, and some deacons in
his house.(20)
The same perspective is found in both the Eastern and Western
liturgical rites. One of the post Communion prayers of the Roman Missal
asks ". . . may the power of this heavenly gift take hold of our minds
and bodies."(21) In the liturgy of Good Friday, Christians are invited
to pray to God the Father Almighty that he "may keep diseases away. . .
and grant health to the sick."(22) Among the texts that are most
significant is that of the blessing of the oil of the sick, in which
God is asked to pour forth his holy blessing so that all "those who are
anointed with it may receive healing, in body, soul and spirit, and be
delivered from all sadness, all weakness and suffering."(23)
The expressions used in the prayers of the anointing of the sick in the
Eastern Rites are very similar. For example, in the anointing of the
sick in the Byzantine Rite, there is the prayer: "Holy Father, doctor
of souls and bodies, you who sent your only begotten Son Jesus Christ
to cure every sickness and to free us from death, heal also your
servant from the infirmity of body and spirit that afflicts him, by the
grace of your Christ."(24) In the Coptic Rite, the Lord is invoked to
bless the oil so that all who will be anointed with it will obtain
health of spirit and body. Then, during the anointing of the sick
person, the priests make mention of Jesus Christ who was sent into the
world "to heal all sicknesses and to free from death" and ask God "to
heal the sick person of the infirmities of body and to grant him the
right path."(25)
5. The "charism of healing" in the present-day contest
In the course of the Church's history there have been holy
miracle-workers who have performed wondrous healings. The phenomenon
was not limited to the Apostolic period; however, the so-called
"charism of healing," about which it seems appropriate to offer some
doctrinal clarifications, does not fall within these phenomena of
wonder-working. Instead, the present question concerns special prayer
meetings organized for the purpose of obtaining wondrous healings among
the sick who are present, or prayers of healing after Eucharistic
communion for this same purpose.
There is abundant witness throughout the Church's history to healings
connected with places of prayer (sanctuaries, in the presence of the
relics of martyrs or other saints, etc.). In Antiquity and the Middle
Age, such healings contributed to the popularity of pilgrimages to
certain sanctuaries, such as that of St. Martin of Tours or the
Cathedral of St. James in Compostela, as well as many others. The same
also happens today at Lourdes, as it has for more than a century. Such
healings, however, do not imply a "charism of healing," because they
are not connected with a person who has such a charism, but they need
to be taken into account when we evaluate the above-mentioned prayer
meetings from a doctrinal perspective.
With respect to prayer meetings for obtaining healing, an aim which
even if not exclusive is at least influential in their planning, it is
appropriate to distinguish between meetings connected to a "charism of
healing," whether real or apparent, and those without such a
connection. A possible "charism of healing" can be attributed when the
intervention of a specific person or persons, or a specific category of
persons (for example, the directors of the group that promotes the
meetings) is viewed as determinative for the efficacy of the prayer. If
there is no connection with any "charism of healing," then the
celebrations provided in the liturgical books, if they are done with
respect for liturgical norms, are obviously licit and often
appropriate, as in the case of a Mass pro infirmis. If the celebrations
do not respect liturgical law, they lack legitimacy.
In sanctuaries, other celebrations are held frequently which may not be
aimed per se at specifically asking God for graces of healing, but in
which, in the intentions of the organizers and participants, the
obtaining of healing has an important part. With this purpose in mind,
both liturgical and non-liturgical services are held: liturgical
celebrations (such as exposition of the Blessed Sacrament with
Benediction) and non-liturgical expressions of popular piety encouraged
by the Church (such as the solemn recitation of the Rosary). These
celebrations are legitimate, as long as their authentic sense is not
altered. For example, one could not place on the primary level the
desire to obtain the healing of the sick, in a way which might cause
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament to lose its specific finality, which
is to "bring the faithful to recognize in the Eucharist the wonderful
presence of Christ and to invite them to a spiritual union with him, a
union which finds its culmination in sacramental Communion."(26)
The "charism of healing" is not attributable to a specific class of
faithful. It is quite clear that St. Paul, when referring to various
charisms in 1 Corinthians 12, does not attribute the gift of "charisms
of healing" to a particular group, whether apostles, prophets,
teachers, those who govern, or any other. The logic which governs the
distribution of such gifts is quite different: "All these are activated
by one and the same Spirit, who distributes to each one individually
just as the Spirit choses" (1 Cor 12:11). Consequently, in prayer
meetings organized for asking for healing, it would be completely
arbitrary to attribute a "charism of healing" to any category of
participants, for example, to the directors of the group; the only
thing to do is to entrust oneself to the free decision of the Holy
Spirit, who grants to some a special charism of healing in order to
show the power of the grace of the Risen Christ. Yet not even the most
intense prayer obtains the healing of all sicknesses. So it is that St.
Paul had to learn from the Lord that "my grace is enough for you; my
power is made perfect in weakness" (2 Cor 12:9), and that the meaning
of the experience of suffering can be that "in my flesh I complete what
is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is,
the Church" (Col 1:24).
II. DISCIPLINARY NORMS
Art. 1 - It is licit for every member of the faithful to pray to God
for healing. When this is organized in a church or other sacred place,
it is appropriate that such prayers be led by an ordained minister.
Art. 2 - Prayers for healing are considered to be liturgical if they
are part of the liturgical books approved by the Church's competent
authority; otherwise, they are non-liturgical. 27
Art. 3 - § 1. Liturgical prayers for healing are celebrated
according to the rite prescribed in the Ordo benedictionis infirmorum
of the Rituale Romanum (28) and with the proper sacred vestments
indicated therein.
§ 2. In conformity with what is stated in the Praenotanda,
V., De aptationibus quae Conferentiae Episcoporum competunt (29) of the
same Rituale Romanum, Conferences of Bishops may introduce those
adaptations to the Rite of Blessings of the Sick which are held to be
pastorally useful or possibly necessary, after prior review by the
Apostolic See.
Art. 4 - § 1. The Diocesan Bishop has the right to issue norms for
his particular Church regarding liturgical services of healing,
following Can. 838 § 4.
§ 2. Those who prepare liturgical services of healing must follow these norms in the celebration of such services.
§ 3. Permission to hold such services must be explicitly
given, even if they are organized by Bishops or Cardinals, or include
such as participants. Given a just and proportionate reason, the
Diocesan Bishop has the right to forbid even the participation of an
individual Bishop.
Art. 5 - § 1. Non-liturgical prayers for healing are distinct from
liturgical celebrations, as gatherings for prayer or for reading of the
word of God; these also fall under the vigilance of the local Ordinary
in accordance with Can. 839 § 2.
§ 2. Confusion between such free non-liturgical prayer
meetings and liturgical celebrations properly so-called is to be
carefully avoided.
§ 3. Anything resembling hysteria, artificiality,
theatricality or sensationalism, above all on the part of those who are
in charge of such gatherings, must not take place.
Art. 6 - The use of means of communication (in particular, television)
in connection with prayers for healing, falls under the vigilance of
the Diocesan Bishop in conformity with Can. 823 and the norms
established by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in the
Instruction of March 30, 1992.(30)
Art. 7 - § 1. Without prejudice to what is established above in
art. 3 or to the celebrations for the sick provided in the Church's
liturgical books, prayers for healing - whether liturgical or
non-liturgical - must not be introduced into the celebration of the
Holy Mass, the sacraments, or the Liturgy of the Hours.
§ 2. In the celebrations referred to § 1, one may
include special prayer intentions for the healing of the sick in the
general intercessions or prayers of the faithful, when this is
permitted.
Art. 8 - § 1. The ministry of exorcism must be exercised in strict
dependence on the Diocesan Bishop, and in keeping with the norm of can.
1172, the Letter of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of
September 29, 1985,(31) and the Rituale Romanum (32).
§ 2. The prayers of exorcism contained in the Rituale
Romanum must remain separate from healing services, whether liturgical
or non-liturgical.
§ 3. It is absolutely forbidden to insert such prayers of
exorcism into the celebration of the Holy Mass, the sacraments, or the
Liturgy of the Hours.
Art. 9 - Those who direct healing services, whether liturgical or
non-liturgical, are to strive to maintain a climate of peaceful
devotion in the assembly and to exercise the necessary prudence if
healings should take place among those present; when the celebration is
over, any testimony can be collected with honesty and accuracy, and
submitted to the proper ecclesiastical authority.
Art. 10 - Authoritative intervention by the Diocesan Bishop is proper
and necessary when abuses are verified in liturgical or non-liturgical
healing services, or when there is obvious scandal among the community
of the faithful, or when there is a serious lack of observance of
liturgical or disciplinary norms.
The Sovereign Pontiff John Paul II, at the Audience granted to
the undersigned Cardinal Prefect, approved the present Instruction,
adopted in Ordinary Session of this Congregation, and ordered its
publication.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, September 14, 2000, the Feast of the Triumph of the Cross.
+ Joseph Card. RATZINGER
Prefect
+ Tarcisio BERTONE, S.D.B.
Archbishop Emeritus of Vercelli
Secretary
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