|
ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II
TO THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON CANCER AND HORMONES
Saturday, 26
April 1986
Dear Friends,
I greet most cordially the participants in the International Congress on Cancer
and Hormones. You have gathered at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
during these days for the purpose of deepening your understanding of
endocrinology and malignancy. In this way, you hope to improve the therapeutic
treatment which you are able to offer to your patients. I am pleased that you
have wished to include this audience in the programme of your Congress for it
offers me the opportunity to express my great esteem for you and your colleagues
in the medical profession and to assure you of my encouragement and support in
your efforts to care ever more effectively for those who suffer from cancer.
Your presence here today also speaks of your awareness of the important ethical
and religious dimensions of medical research and practice. The medical
profession exerts a great impact on the quality of life of the human family.
Every advance which you make is aimed at promoting human well-being and thus has
moral and humanitarian implications. In the course of your research and
practice, it is inevitable that difficult ethical questions should arise,
questions which do not lend themselves to quick and easy solutions. As you face
these, I assure you of the Church’s desire to listen to you and learn from your
medical expertise and experience, and, at the same time, to share with you her
own rich heritage of ethical teaching. Such dialogue becomes increasingly
important as scientific advancement brings about an ever larger number of
specialised areas of research. It can ensure that such research will truly
contribute to the welfare of the person as a whole and to the integral
development of society.
May the Lord of life give you strength and courage in all your worthy
endeavours, and may he bless you and your families with his joy and peace.
© Copyright 1986 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
|