Disabled Catholics - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 22 Aug 2022 08:44:29 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Disabled Catholics - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Disabled Catholics praise pope for using his wheelchair in public https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/08/22/disabled-catholics-pope-wheelchair/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 08:09:07 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=150863 Disabled Catholics

Disabled Catholics are praising Pope Francis's use of a wheelchair in public. "To see Pope Francis having relationships, doing his papal duties" using a wheelchair or a cane, "it just reminds me of the goodness of a weak body like mine, because this is one of the holiest people in the world able to love Read more

Disabled Catholics praise pope for using his wheelchair in public... Read more]]>
Disabled Catholics are praising Pope Francis's use of a wheelchair in public.

"To see Pope Francis having relationships, doing his papal duties" using a wheelchair or a cane, "it just reminds me of the goodness of a weak body like mine, because this is one of the holiest people in the world able to love and serve from a wheelchair," one says.

Francis has attracted a number of positive comments from other disabled Catholics since he adopted the wheelchair in May. He has been suffering from severe knee pain, making disability part of his visible identity.

Other world leaders have gone to significant lengths to avoid being seen in a wheelchair, There are rumours Queen Elizabeth II has been among them.

"There is this belief that physical weakness yields moral or elderly weakness," a disabled person says. "A lot of people, I have learned, view mobility aids as giving in or being lazy."

"There's just so much shame that keeps us in pain," she says. She'd like Francis to speak about his experience using mobility aids.

Another says there's "a lot of power in seeing people who look like you, and to know that you can be a leader in the church, and you can be an integral part of the church.

"But when you don't see disabled bodies, it's hard to imagine being a leader or having a role in the church."

She says because the lectern and raised sanctuary area in Catholic churches are frequently inaccessible, she has not been able to serve as a lector or a eucharistic minister.

Even participating in Mass makes her feel isolated because she has to sit at the edge of the church as there's no place for her wheelchair.

Rumours the pope's disability might force him to resign are upsetting disabled Catholics.

The speculation "does a disservice to people who acquire disability," says one.

"It can perpetuate this idea that if you have any kind of medical condition or disability, and you have to adapt to those circumstances, that you're basically going to become a shut-in, ... at death's door and must give up everything that you're passionate about."

The church may become more attuned to things like the language they use to proclaim the Gospel, one hopes.

She'd like words like 'lame' or 'crippled' be exchanged for 'unable to walk'.

"If churches are using offensive euphemisms, like 'special needs' or 'differently abled,' can they just use the term 'disabled'?

"'Special needs' implies that there are extra needs when in fact getting into the church is a basic need.

"The word 'special' can also imply it's optional."

Others hope the pope's public disability challenges the infantilisation of disabled people.

One aged 42 says a parishioner routinely pats her head after Mass "as if I were a child".

"I think this is an opportunity for the church to improve its understanding and relationship with its disabled members and move disability from a paternalistic charity-based model of thinking … into one that is based more upon solidarity."

Disabled Catholics praise pope for using his wheelchair in public]]>
150863
Pope says disabled Catholics have a right to the sacraments https://cathnews.co.nz/2020/12/07/disabled-catholics/ Mon, 07 Dec 2020 07:06:37 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=132990 disabled Catholics

Pope Francis marked International Day of Persons with Disabilities by insisting all disabled Catholics have a right to receive the sacraments. Francis also suggested that Catholic parishes make real efforts to welcome and train persons with disabilities to serve as catechists. "Creating a fully accessible parish requires not only the removal of architectural barriers, but Read more

Pope says disabled Catholics have a right to the sacraments... Read more]]>
Pope Francis marked International Day of Persons with Disabilities by insisting all disabled Catholics have a right to receive the sacraments.

Francis also suggested that Catholic parishes make real efforts to welcome and train persons with disabilities to serve as catechists.

"Creating a fully accessible parish requires not only the removal of architectural barriers, but above all, helping parishioners to develop attitudes and acts of solidarity and service toward persons with disabilities and their families," the pope said in his message.

"I strongly reaffirm the right of persons with disabilities to receive the sacraments, like all other members of the church.

All liturgical celebrations in the parish should be accessible to them. So that, together with their brothers and sisters, each of them can deepen, celebrate and live their faith."

"I reiterate the need to make available suitable and accessible means for handing on the faith," he said. "No one should be excluded from the grace of these sacraments."

Francis emphasized, by virtue of baptism, disabled Catholics are called to missionary discipleship as much as every other baptized person. He encouraged parishes to include them not only as "recipients" of pastoral ministry, but also as "active subjects."

The U.N. theme for the 2020 celebration of the international day was 'Building Back Better: Toward a disability-inclusive, accessible and sustainable post-COVID-19 world.'

Pope Francis said he was struck by the expression 'building back better'. It made him think of the Gospel story about a house built on rock or on sand.

When used in reference to the way society, and the church, treats persons with disabilities, he said, the rain, rivers and winds that threaten the house in the Bible story "can be identified with the throwaway culture widespread in our time."

To "build back better," he said, inclusion is key. Because "the strength of a chain depends upon the attention paid to its weakest links."

Sources

America Magazine

Angelus News

 

Pope says disabled Catholics have a right to the sacraments]]>
132990