When I was younger, I
didn't understand the phrase "Judeo-Christian tradition." Now I
understand a little better. Both Jews and Christians have some common
directives, like visiting the sick. (Other religions that trace their common
origin to Abraham, including Islam and the Baha’i faith, also tell their people
to visit the sick.)
This past Monday, Sept.
29, in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
there was a beautiful, beautiful article on visiting the sick. The article explained
how this tradition is a holy mitzvah (good deed/duty/ commandment)
of the Jewish faith.
The two Jewish women
interviewed for the article explained that visiting the sick provides sacred
moments when they are called “to see God’s countenance, his fingerprint, on
each person.” Julie Frank, one of the two women, said, “The more you’re there
for each other, the more God sheds his presence on you. And that’s what Judaism
is all about – passing the light onto others.”
I happened to read this
article right after returning from a visit to my mother-in-law, who has
Alzheimer's disease. Occasionally people ask me why we should bother visiting
someone who doesn't know who we are, who can't communicate.
My answer is simply:
"That's what we do."
Growing up in the
Catholic faith, I was taught the corporal works of mercy, which include
visiting the sick. This good deed/duty/ commandment is derived from a reading of
Matthew 25:41-46 in the Christian scriptures. Those verses explain that we please
God and have eternal life if we help God’s people, no matter how unimportant
they seem – by feeding the hungry, giving drink to the thirsty, welcoming the
stranger, clothing the naked, and visiting those who are sick and imprisoned.
I thought the most
touching part of the article in the Journal Sentinel was the
notion that visiting the sick is not
charity. Indeed, the true giver is Rosalee Pemberton, who technically is
the "sick" person being visited by Julie Frank and her friend Barbara
Grande. By opening her home to members of her congregation so they can visit
her, she presents a gift to them - the opportunity to "make themselves
right with God."
Until I read the
article, I hadn't thought of it in those terms, but I have often felt that I
received something by visiting my mother-in-law who does not know me and cannot
communicate. She is the true giver. She provides me the opportunity to visit
her. There is purpose in her life.
[The photo above is from a year ago, when my mother-in-law was visited by her sister Mary Jane and her brother Dennis.]
Thanks, Gail, for the spirited insight.
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome, Skip!!
ReplyDelete