Solid, ethical values that respect and support human life predate the Christian faith. Coming from 5 centuries before Christ, the Hippocratic Oath is one of the oldest binding documents in history. Written in antiquity, its principles are modern and sacred: to treat the sick to the best of one's ability, to preserve patient privacy, to care for patients and to do nothing to harm them or cause their death. The oath demands respect for life and making sacrifices in caring for sick people. It pays attention to personal factors: self-control, dignity, reserve. Under the title of "Illustrissimi," Pope John Paul II wrote an imaginary letter to Hippocrates, a contemporary of Socrates. The Pope spoke of the Greek physician as "the author of a famous oath...of an ethical code of unending worth." Even today doctors swear by this oath to prescribe suitable treatment for their patients. They pledge to care for their patients. In his teaching on the value of human life, Pope John Paul II referred to the "ancient and ever relevant Oath of Hippocrates, according to which every medical doctor is called upon to be committed to absolute respect for human life and its sacredness"(Evangelium Vitae, 89). The Vatican Library houses an unusual medieval manuscript. The document contains the Hippocratic Oath transcribed in Greek in the form of a cross. On July 7, 1999, Cardinal Angelini, then President of Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers, remarked, "Nobody had ever sought to put a cross&on the works by Aristotle-works which even such an outstanding theologian as Thomas Aquinas adjudged precursors of Christian thought. Nor had anyone ever sought to do likewise with the works of Cicero, a figure whom Tertullian called 'anima naturaliter christiana.' But such an act was performed by an enlightened medieval scribe." The Hippocratic Oath in the form of a cross. What a profound truth we can infer from this! There is an undisputed continuity between the content of the Hippocratic Oath and the Cross. This continuity lies in the value of all human life, in a shared commitment to promote and to defend, to cherish and to care for human life from its conception to its natural ending. Where suffering and pain and death are acknowledged and understood in their human and Christian meaning, the sick and dying will find comfort in their pain and dignity in their frailty of mind and body. Illness and suffering are not experiences only about our body, but all that we are in our entirety, as body and soul. Jesus not only went about doing good, but he gave his disciples "authority over unclean spirits with power to cast them out and to cure all kinds of diseases and sickness' (Mt 10:1). Greater than a cure of the body will always be the healing of the soul from the evil of sin and lack of love. Our victories over sickness and death last but a moment. But our triumph over selfishness through patient care of others lasts forever. Human life is sacred to God. Jesus once said, "Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart from the will of your Father. Even the very hairs of your head are all numbered. So don't be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows" (Mt 10:29-30). Are we not worth more protection from our courts than even a cow?







