BY: SUZY FARREN
Ms. Farren is manager, corporate communications,
SSM Health Care, St. Louis.
Catholic health care at the dawn of the new millennium
is beset by unprecedented challenges. Declining reimbursement,
costly regulatory procedures, managed care, and intense marketplace
competition are pushing Catholic hospitals to the financial
brink, threatening even their ability to care for the poor.
These business pressures, coupled with a decline in the presence
of women religious, have prompted the ministry's leaders to
question how their organizations can remain true to their ministerial
roots and, at the same time, differentiate themselves from others
in the marketplace. How, when the majority of its employees
may not even be Catholic, can a Catholic hospital bring the
Kingdom of God to everyone it serves?
Sixteen years ago, when I was new to Catholic
health care, I heard a woman religious tell the story of Jesus'
healing of the leper. She contended that, by touching the leper,
Jesus had performed a radical, countercultural act. She used
the story to argue that those of us who are involved in Catholic
health care must touch everyone in some way, not necessarily
literally, and that we must be "radical" in our healing. Hearing
her put this admonition into a biblical context was fascinating
and wonderful to me. Could it be that Catholic health care had
deeper meaning, that it was more than a mere job? As a middle-class
woman from no particular faith tradition, I was deeply touched.
If I, as an outsider to Catholic health care, could find such
hope in it, the story obviously had potential to give meaning
to others.
I believe that, as Catholic health care's leaders
struggle to keep the ministry true to its heritage, the story
of Jesus' healing of the leper can serve as a model to bring
about the Kingdom of God in the 21st century.
Leprosy in the Time of Jesus
Life in Jesus' time was grim for people with leprosy.
Lepers were forced to exist outside the community, separated
from family and friends and thus deprived of the frame of reference
and sense of identity that family and friends help provide.
Leviticus 13:45-46 tells us that lepers were to wear torn clothes,
let their hair be disheveled, and live outside the camp. These
homeless individuals were to cry "Unclean, unclean!" when a
person without leprosy approached them. The ostracism experienced
by a leper could be as devastating as the skin lesions.
Jesus Heals the Leper
As told in Mark 1:40, the leper appears abruptly
in front of Jesus: "A leper came to him, begging him and kneeling."
Obviously, word about Jesus' miraculous powers has gotten around,
even to the reviled and outcast leper.
"If you choose, you can make me clean," the leper
tells Jesus. In approaching Jesus and kneeling before him, the
leper has violated the Levitical code. By saying, "If you choose,
you can make me clean," the leper not only indicates his absolute
faith in Jesus' ability to cleanse him of his disease, but also
actually challenges Jesus to act. As an outcast, the leper has
no right to speak to Jesus. Yet it is not difficult to infer
why he ignores Levitical law. What could be worse than his leprous
and outcast condition? What does he have to lose by begging
Jesus to cleanse him?
Jesus undoubtedly has a lot on his mind when
the leper confronts him. Before encountering the leper, he has
gathered his disciples, cured many people, and is now in the
midst of proclaiming throughout Galilee the coming of the Kingdom
of God. He has already angered religious leaders by healing
a man with an unclean spirit on the Sabbath — in the temple!
Yet despite all that is on his mind, Jesus is
present to the leper and gives the man his full attention. Here
is a person whom religious leaders and all other members of
society shun, and yet Jesus is there for him.
Most English translations of the New Testament
say that Jesus was "moved with pity" when he encountered the
leper. However, the Revised English Bible says that Jesus
was "moved to anger." Western culture undoubtedly prefers a
compassionate Jesus moved by pity, but if indeed Jesus was
moved by anger, his anger would not have been at the leper but
rather at a system that excluded certain people.
One could argue that when pity is the dominant
emotion, one relates on a very personal, compassionate level
to the person involved. When anger is the ruling emotion, one
may indeed reach out to heal. But the emotion of anger is also
likely to prompt the person experiencing it to challenge a system
that excludes those who are ill or suffering.
In either case, Jesus sees the person behind
the disease and the potential for wholeness that exists in the
leper. He is deeply moved and acts immediately: He stretches
out his hand and touches the leper, saying, "I do choose. Be
made clean."
Jesus touches the leper, and the Kingdom of God
is realized. In the ancient Mediterranean world, touching a
leper was a radical act. By touching a reviled outcast, Jesus
defies Levitical law — the law of his time — and by so doing, he
openly defies the power structure.
Once Jesus touches the leper, the leprosy immediately
vanishes and the man is made clean. The fact that this man is
now cleansed of his disease will have a huge impact on his future
because he is restored to his proper relationship with his family,
his community, and God. Jesus has helped the man regain hope
and meaning in life. He has demonstrated that illness can, as
America's bishops have suggested, be an occasion on which God's
love for his people is shown, rather than a sign of punishment.1
What Does the Story Mean to Us?
What relevance does the story of the leper have
for Catholic health care today? What does it tell us?
Even though Jesus had a lot on his mind when
the leper appeared suddenly in front of him, he was fully present
to the suffering man. If Catholic health care models its actions
on the Gospel, caregivers must also be fully present to the
persons they serve. Just as Jesus took time to see the societal
outcast as a human being, today's caregivers must never become
so immersed in their own concerns that they fail to see every
person as sacred.
Fr. J. Bryan Hehir, ThD, the noted theologian
and current president/CEO of Catholic Charities USA, suggests
that people who come to Catholic health care organizations must
find "a social attitude that radiates from institutions."2
In our high-tech age, physicians, nurses, receptionists, technicians — indeed,
everyone in Catholic health care — must look into each patient's
face and see the human being behind the suffering, the person
behind the disease.
In the moment of intimate human contact when
caregiver and patient come together, the potential exists for
each to find meaning and to be healed. In that moment of naked
truth, the Kingdom of God is present to caregiver as well as
patient. In an article in America magazine, Clark Cochran
writes, "Sacraments are meeting places where we limited human
beings taste unlimited love."3 The Catholic health
ministry must be a sign of unlimited love and hope to everyone
it serves; Catholic health care institutions must be a sacramental
presence.
When Jesus reached out and touched the leper,
he challenged the laws of his times. The leper begged him, saying,
"If you choose, you can make me clean." Jesus, in effect, said,
"I will not be stymied by a system that isolates and excludes
people." His action says that in the quest to bring about the
Kingdom of God, Catholic health care leaders must not be afraid
to challenge the status quo. As Catholic health care strives
to heal the poor, the hurting, and the suffering, it must be
willing to call attention to injustice and demand change. It
must, for instance, advocate a comprehensive health policy that
ensures the right of all people to adequate health care. It
must encourage its employees to educate themselves about public
policy issues and to make known their views.4 To
continue its tradition of providing care for the poor, Catholic
health care must advocate fair reimbursement. And it must pay
all employees a living wage.
When Jesus healed the leper, he was certainly
dealing with a societal "outsider." The example of his action
compels the Catholic health ministry to find creative ways to
serve the vulnerable and needy. Even as it strives to change
the conditions that sustain poverty, the ministry must serve
the special needs of the poor.
The fact that Jesus risked infection by touching
the leper calls Catholic health care to restore right relationships
by creatively reaching out to people who may not know how to
gain access to health care or are afraid to come to a hospital.
It must extend itself into communities and be willing to get
its hands dirty, to take risks, to be a radical healer.
The AIDS epidemic, especially in its early days,
was seen by some as a litmus test for Catholic health care.
Today, violence in our nation has reached epidemic proportions,
and Catholic health care must work tirelessly to end the conditions
that breed it. In communities across the country, the ministry
must participate in conversations about gun control, child abuse,
and spousal abuse and must heighten awareness about the economic
conditions that lead to violence. The U.S. bishops have called
on Catholic health care to exercise a "penetrating" influence
in the health field.5 Jesus was willing to expose
himself to contamination. To what is Catholic health care willing
to expose itself to bring about the Kingdom of God?
In cleansing the leper, Jesus not only cured
him of his disease but also healed him by helping him find hope
and meaning. There are numerous opportunities today for Catholic
health care to restore people to this kind of right relationship.
Because frail elderly persons fear dying alone and in pain,
they sometimes look to euthanasia as a solution. Catholic health
care must reach out to these people by linking with parish ministries
that can offer companionship and conversation to those who are
alone. Ideally, Catholic health care should tap into and learn
from the wisdom of these elders. Adequate pain management and
compassionate care of the dying must be offered in every Catholic
hospital and long-term care center. Hospice programs are a wonderful
way to bring holistic care to people who are dying. When we
alleviate the fears of the elderly, connect them with parish
volunteers, and — most important — make them feel that they are
of value, we help restore such people to right relationship.
The principles that underlie Catholic health
care — human dignity, respect for life, social justice — must "'find
flesh,' become incarnate, in words, gestures, and ambiance"
in Catholic health facilities.6 Catholic health facilities
must demonstrate a sensitivity to patients' needs that is an
expression of the Catholic way of doing things.7
If Catholic health care is to remain vibrant,
its employees must understand that it exists to bring about
the reign of God. That means that Catholic health care leaders
must tell the stories of the Gospel, the stories of the sisters
who founded the ministry's organizations, and — no less important — the
stories of the women and men who are today's heroes. The nurse,
the technician, and the physician must understand that their
touch is the healing touch of Jesus. That is, their touch is
sacred. They must know that even when they cannot cure their
patients, they can help them find meaning in illness. The late
Cardinal Joseph Bernardin wrote, "Whatever Catholic health care
does should be done in a manner that allows us to be a sign
of hope."8 When hope is restored, the suffering person
is restored to right relationship.
With more than 500 hospitals across the country,
Catholic health care as an institution has a good deal of power
to effect change. The ministry must serve as an advocate for
society's poor and powerless. As Fr. Hehir puts it:
In this society, institutions will not do everything,
but they will fundamentally shape the quality and character
of life. . . . If one seeks to influence . . . and enrich a
complex industrial complex, it cannot be done simply by the
integrity of individual witness. It is done by institutions
that lay hands on life at the critical points where life can
be injured or fostered, where people are born or die, where
they are cured and healed, and where they are assisted when
in trouble.9
To bring about the Kingdom of God, Catholic health
care must be tireless in its pursuit of justice. It must use
its power as an institution to change systems that exclude or
are unjust.
Not long after I first heard the story of Jesus
healing the leper, I happened to travel to Philadelphia. It
was a frigid night shortly before Christmas. Because it was
so cold, I found myself walking quickly down the street. In
the midst of the hustle and bustle of Christmas shoppers, a
woman stood in the middle of the sidewalk wearing a sign that
said she was homeless. I'm sure that I would have given her
money even if I hadn't just heard the story of Jesus and the
leper, but I thought of the story as I approached her. Instead
of merely placing a dollar in her cup, I also touched her gloved
hands and looked into her eyes. "You must be cold," I said.
She looked directly into my eyes. "I am. Bless you," she replied.
In that briefest of moments, I understood what Catholic health
care is all about. In her face, I saw the face of God.
In Catholic health care, it is not enough to
merely put money in the cup. The ministry must find the face
of God in everyone it serves.
NOTES
- National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Health and
Health Care: A Pastoral Letter from the American Bishops,
U.S. Catholic Conference, Washington, DC, 1982, p. 1.
- J. Bryan Hehir, "Identity and Institutions," Health
Progress, November-December 1995, pp. 17-23.
- Clarke E. Cochran, "Another Identity Crisis: Catholic Hospitals
Face Hard Choices," Commonweal, February 25, 2000,
p. 16.
- National Conference of Catholic Bishops, p. 12.
- National Conference of Catholic Bishops, p. 7.
- Cochran, p. 15.
- Cochran, p. 15.
- Joseph Bernardin, "What Makes a Hospital Catholic: A Response,"
America, May 4, 1996.
- Hehir, p. 7.