The leadership of the bishops’ conference of Mexico has praised senior
citizens for their “invaluable contribution to the family and to
society,” criticizing negative views of the aged.
Cardinal Jose Robles Ortega, Archbishop of Guadalajara, speaking on
behalf of his fellow bishops, discussed the role of seniors in a message
for Mexico’s Senior Citizens' Day, celebrated Aug. 28.
The bishops noted the “great deeds” of older persons recounted in the
Bible, giving as examples Simeon and Anna, and in particular Moses, who
“was already old when God entrusted to him the mission of liberating his
people from slavery in Egypt.”
These examples, the bishops said, demonstrate the words of the Psalmist that “the just … shall bear fruit even in old age.”
However, they warned that “some nations, yielding to a mentality that
prioritizes immediate usefulness and productivity, have come to see old
age in a negative way, even relegating and forgetting about senior
citizens.”
They lamented the “scorn and abandonment” experienced by so many
elderly, citing also poverty, exploitation, and lack of health care
services available to them.
“Human fragility, which is more apparent in old age, shows us that we
all need each other and that we mutually enrich each other. Senior
citizens need young people and young people need senior citizens who, as
Pope Francis has said, communicate to the family 'that patrimony of
humanity and of the faith that is essential for all of society.'”
The bishops recommended the gift of faith, which helps all people “to
realize that they are never alone,” that “God is with them, giving
meaning to their lives and offering them such great and definitive hope
that makes all their efforts along the way worthwhile.”
Calling life “a pilgrimage towards our heavenly home,” Cardinal Robles,
on behalf of the bishops, said that “old age is the final leg of this
journey.”
“Although it is normal that seniors find this last step difficult, faith
gives them the certainty that those who believe in Christ 'will never
die.'”
This hope, the bishops added, “should strengthen them to continue giving
the best of themselves to others. They have so much to give to the new
generations, with their words, their actions, their example and their
prayer.”
“Let us strive to build a society that values, respects, includes, promotes and assists the elderly,” concluded the bishops.
“Let us recognize, thank and support those praiseworthy initiatives that
provide care for them and those that allow them to continue to be
physically, emotionally, intellectually, spiritually and socially
active.”