PALLIATIVE CARE

A THEOLOGICAL FOUNDATION PALLIATIVE CARE IN THEOLOGICAL CONTEXT

Authors

  • George Beuken St. Andrew’s Hospice

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/hscc.v5i2.5

Keywords:

sacrament, Roman Catholic, annointing, pastoral care, hospice, palliative care

Abstract

This article seeks to explore the richness of meaning contained within the sacrament of the anointing of the sick. In circumstances where a person receiving palliative care is struggling against illness, the sacrament supports them in that struggle, and yet points beyond it towards a gradual acceptance of powerlessness. The author explores the themes of powerlessness and hope, and describes a powerlessness out of which hope may spring, because it is an entering into Christ’s own experience. It becomes therefore a prelude to resurrection hope. The sacrament of the sick encourages and engenders this hope, which is wider than the individual, and extends to the whole body of Christ. The sacrament is also an invitation to action; to a caring, a solidarity in suffering and a compassion which imply a deeper sharing in the very life of Christ.

Author Biography

  • George Beuken, St. Andrew’s Hospice

    George Beuken is Pastoral & Spiritual Director at St. Andrew’s Hospice , Airdrie

References

FLANNERY A. (ed.) 1992 GS 21. Vatican Council 11: the conciliar and post conciliar documents. Dublin.

KUBLER-ROSS E. 1975 Death, the final stage of Growth. Prentice Hall. USA.

MCKENNA M. 1997 Rites of Justice. Orbis. New York

MOLTMAN J. 1967 Theology of Hope. Harper and Row. New York

PARENT, L M 1991 Sacrament of the Present Moment. E. Paulines. Montreal

SOELLE D. 1975 Suffering. Fortress Press. Minneapolis

SOULEN R. (ed) 1975 Care for the Dying. John Knox Press, U.K.

Published

2013-05-31

How to Cite

Beuken, G. (2013). PALLIATIVE CARE: A THEOLOGICAL FOUNDATION PALLIATIVE CARE IN THEOLOGICAL CONTEXT. Health and Social Care Chaplaincy, 5(2), 5-10. https://doi.org/10.1558/hscc.v5i2.5