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19

ANOINTING THE

SICK AND THE DYING

THE SACRAMENT OF ANOINTING OF THE SICK IS THE

SECOND OF THE SACRAMENTS OF HEALING

—CCC, NOS. 1499-1532

I CAN SAY IN ALL SINCERITY

THAT I AM AT PEACE

In 1996, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, Archbishop of Chicago, was told by

his doctors that he had pancreatic cancer and did not have long to live.

He did in fact die in November of that year. He was born in South Carolina

in 1928, the son of Italian immigrants. His father was a stonecutter; his

mother, a seamstress. At age thirty-eight, he became the youngest bishop

in the United States. He served as president of the National Conference of

Catholic Bishops from 1974 to 1977 and was elevated by Pope John Paul II

to the College of Cardinals in 1983. He is remembered for a significant num-

ber of achievements, but the manner in which he faced his forthcoming

death remains one of his most memorable gifts to all people.

At an earlier stage of his illness while he was undergoing treatments,

Cardinal Bernardin reached out to other patients, especially those who

were terminally ill. He met many of them at the hospital waiting room, took

down their names and addresses and phone numbers, and stayed in

touch with them by phone and mail. He offered them his love, his prayers,

and his encouragement and in some instances was able to give them the

Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick.

He called death “a friend”: “While I know that humanly speaking I will

have to deal with difficult moments, and there will be tears, I can say in all

sincerity, that I am at peace. I consider this as God’s special gift to me at

this particular moment in my life.”