Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Good morning, and compliments on your courage in coming out to the Square in this cold. Many compliments.
I wish to complete the catechesis on the Creed developed
during the Year of Faith, which concluded last Sunday. In this
catechesis, as well as the next, I would like to consider the subject of
the resurrection of the body, by seeking to grasp a deeper
understanding of two of its aspects as they are presented in the Catechism of the Catholic Church; i.e. our dying and our rising in Jesus Christ. Today I shall consider the first aspect, “dying in Christ”.
1.
There is commonly among us a mistaken way of looking at death. Death
affects us all, and it questions us in a profound way, especially when
it touches us closely, or when it takes the little ones, the defenseless
in such a way that it seems "scandalous". I have always been struck by
the question: why do children suffer? why do children die? If it is
understood as the end of everything, death frightens us, it terrifies
us, it becomes a threat that shatters every dream, every promise, it
severs every relationship and interrupts every journey. This occurs when
we consider our lives as a span of time between two poles: birth and
death; when we fail to believe in a horizon that extends beyond that of
the present life; when we live as though God did not exist. This concept
of death is typical of atheistic thought, which interprets life as a
random existence in the world and as a journey toward nothingness. But
there is also a practical atheism, which is living for one’s own
interests alone and living only for earthly things. If we give ourselves
over to this mistaken vision of death, we have no other choice than to
conceal death, to deny it, or to trivialize it so that it does not make
us afraid.
2. However, the “heart” of man, with its desire for the infinite,
which we all have, its longing for eternity, which we all have, rebels
against this false solution. And so what is the Christian meaning of death?
If we look at the most painful moments of our lives, when we lost a
loved one – our parents, a brother, a sisters, a spouse, a child, a
friend – we realize that, even amid the tragedy of loss, even when torn
by separation, the conviction arises in the heart that everything cannot
be over, that the good given and received has not been pointless. There
is a powerful instinct within us, which tells us that our lives do not
end with death.
This thirst for life found its real and true and reliable response in
the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus’ Resurrection does not only
give us the certainty of life after death, it also illumines the very
mystery of the death of each one of us. If we live united to Jesus,
faithful to him, we will also be able to face the passage of death with
hope and serenity. In fact, the Church prays: “If the certainty of
having to die saddens us, the promise of future immortality consoles
us”. This is a beautiful prayer of the Church! A person tends to die as
he has lived. If my life was a journey with the Lord, a journey of trust
in his immense mercy, I will be prepared to accept the final moment of
my earthly life as the definitive, confident abandonment into his
welcoming hands, awaiting the face to face contemplation of his face.
This is the most beautiful thing that can happen to us: to contemplate
face to face the marvellous countenance of the Lord, to see Him as he
is, beautiful, full of light, full of love, full of tenderness. This is
our point of arrival: to see the Lord.
3. Against this horizon we understand Jesus’ invitation to be ever
ready, watchful, knowing that life in this world is given to us also in
order to prepare us for the afterlife, for life with the heavenly
Father. And for this there is a sure path: preparing oneself well for death,
staying close to Jesus. This is surety: I prepare myself for death by
staying close to Jesus. And how do we stay close to Jesus? Through
prayer, in the Sacraments and also in the exercise of charity. Let us
remember that he is present in the weakest and most needy. He identified
himself with them, in the well known parable of the Last Judgment, when
he says: “for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you
gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you
clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came
to me.... ‘as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you
did it to me’”. (Mt 25:35-36, 40).
Therefore, a sure path comes by recovering the meaning of Christian
charity and of fraternal sharing, by caring for the bodily and spiritual
wounds of our neighbour. Solidarity in sharing sorrow and infusing hope
is a premise and condition for receiving as an inheritance that Kingdom
which has been prepared for us. The one who practices mercy does not
fear death. Think well on this: the one who practices mercy does not
fear death! Do you agree? Shall we say it together so as not to forget
it? The one who practices mercy does not fear death. And why does he not
fear it? Because he looks death in the face in the wounds of his
brothers and sisters, and he overcomes it with the love of Jesus Christ.
If we will open the door of our lives and hearts to our littlest
brothers and sisters, then even our own death will become a door that
introduces us to heaven, to the blessed homeland, toward which we are
directed by longing to dwell forever with our Father, God, with Jesus,
with Our Lady, and with the Saints.
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