Friday, 7 March 2025

Jubilee of the World of Volunteering

On Sunday 16 May 1999, Pope St John Paul II preached at a celebration of Mass to mark the World Meeting "Reconciliation in Charity"

 I am very pleased today to welcome you, dear brothers and sisters, who have come in such large numbers for the Day of Charity organized by the Pontifical Council “Cor Unum”. I am very happy to celebrate the Eucharist with you and for you, remembering all the “witnesses of charity” who in every part of the world dedicate themselves to eliminating the injustice and poverty which unfortunately still exist in so many obvious and hidden forms. I am thinking here of the countless faces of volunteer service, of those whose work is inspired by the Gospel: religious institutes and associations of Christian charity, organizations for human development and missionary service, groups involved in the civil sphere, and organizations for social, educational and cultural work. Your activities embrace every area of human life and your actions reach countless people in trouble. I express my esteem and gratitude to each of you....

How could we fail to emphasize [the] divine source of service to our brothers and sisters? Yes, love of neighbour conforms to Christ's mandate and example only if it is joined to the love of God. Jesus who gives his life for sinners is the living sign of God's goodness; at the same time, through their generous self-giving Christians enable the brothers and sisters they meet to experience the merciful and provident love of the heavenly Father. 

 The world of volunteering has many different expressions. There can be very informal occasions for volunteering (eg the person who looks out for the needs of their neighbour and might occasionally shop for them); there are those situations where people volunteer to support a one-off kind of event (eg the Olympic Games or a World Youth Day); there are situations where an individual regularly spends time supporting a small scale initiative (eg helping on a weekly soup run in an inner city). There are also situations where an individual regularly commits a period of time within a more organisational context (eg volunteering within a formally established charity or visiting in a hospital or prison). And, in some instances, there is a kind of "professionalised" volunteering (eg by way of a placement or paid employment with a charity or non-governmental organisation). 

Whilst some will involve themselves in these activities from the kind of Christian inspiration described by Pope St John Paul II, many will do so without any specifically religious intention, and this is a feature to be borne in mind when we reflect on the world of volunteering. The United Nations, for example, marks an International Day of Charity on 5th September each year, the date chosen because it is the anniversary of the death of Mother Theresa.

The invitation to the Jubilee of the World of Volunteering, to be marked 8th-9th March 2025, reflects this variety:

Volunteers from all associations, members of non-profit organizations, NGO workers and social workers are especially invited to this jubilee event.

A Vatican News report ahead of the event can be read here: 25 000 pilgrims to gather in Rome for Jubilee of Volunteers.

There is an interesting dimension to some of these volunteering opportunities. In volunteering in a hospital, for example, or in port chaplaincy and ship visiting, the volunteer brings their religious inspiration (or at least a level of commitment to human dignity) into encounter with a professional context. In their activity, the volunteer needs to achieve a competence in the practices of the relevant professional context alongside their goodwill as a volunteer. 

A hospital volunteer needs to respect the processes of a hospital ward or department (infection prevention and control, for example), develop the skills to meet with patients experiencing different medical conditions and understand how their role exists in relation to the roles of clinical staff. A ship visitor needs to respect the security and safety requirements specific to docks and ships, and to have an understanding of the circumstances of seafarers who may spend many months of the year away from home but only a few hours in each port before sailing again. Prison visiting or industrial chaplaincy equally need a volunteer to engage with a specific professional competence.

One paragraph of the Jubilee Prayer can speak particularly to the World of Volunteering:

May your grace transform us into tireless cultivators of the seeds of the Gospel. May those seeds transform from within both humanity and the whole cosmos in the sure expectation of a new heaven and a new earth, when, with the power of Evil vanquished, your glory will shine eternally.