Yesterday those who went to mass were told by the priest
or deacon as he marked their foreheads with ashes, “for dust you are and unto
dust you shall return.” (Genesis 3:19) Anyone who is not Catholic might consider this
a terrible pronouncement of the uselessness of this life.
However, there is the day after Ash Wednesday
when all of us begin to focus on the day we will all rise again in our bodies, transformed
from that dust to a newness made for eternity without death.
So BUCK UP, people!
As Catholics we live in hope, not despair and gloom, knowing that this
life indeed does have a purpose---to prepare us for the next. Yes, we die, but we know that Christ
conquered Death and we will rise again when he returns.
One could ask why would we need a body, why isn’t our
soul enough at that point? The Catechism
of Trent says,
“….as the soul is immortal,
and has, as part of man, a natural propensity to be united to the body, its
perpetual separation from it must be considered contrary to nature. But as that which is contrary to nature, and
offers violence to her laws, cannot be permanent, it appears congruous that the
soul should be reunited to the body; and, of course, that the body should rise
again.”
The Catechism continues,
“…the soul should be
reunited to the body, in order, as the partner
of her crimes, or the companion of her virtues, to become a sharer in her
punishments or her rewards.”
I interpret that
to mean your body is a party to all the things you do which are either
righteous or evil and the body too must stand in judgment at the end of
time.
The most vivid picture of what that day will be like can
be found in 2 Thessalonians 1:6-10.
6) It is only just that God
will repay with suffering those who make you suffer 7) and grant relief to you
who are suffering, and to us as well.
This will take place when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with
his mighty angels.
8) He will come in blazing
fire to inflict punishment on those who do not know God and do not obey the
gospel of our Lord Jesus. 9) They will
suffer the penalty of eternal destruction, excluded from the presence of the
Lord and from the majesty of his power
10) on that Day when he comes to be glorified by his holy ones and to be
adored by all believers, among whom you will be present since you believed the
testimony we offered to you.
The Catechism says,
“..when reanimated, they
shall all, without distinction of good and bad, be invested with immortality. This admirable restoration of nature is the
result of the glorious victory of Christ over death; as it is written, ‘He
shall cast death down headlong for ever;’ (Isaiah 25:8) and ‘O Death! I will be
thy death;’ words which the Apostle thus explains, ‘and the enemy death shall
be destroyed last.’
I expect anyone reading this would necessarily want to be
in the company of those judged to be among the good. What will happen to us at that time? We will be rewarded with four “qualities”
that will distinguish us and endow us with abilities we do not enjoy in this
life.
These qualities are, Impassibility,
which will put us, according to the Catechism, “beyond reach of pain or
inconvenience of any sort. Neither cold
nor the glowing intensity of heat can affect them. The bodies of the damned, though incorruptible,
shall not be impassible.”
The second quality is Brightness, by which the Catechism says, “the bodies of the saints shall
shine like the sun; according to the words of our Lord recorded in the Gospel
of St. Matthew: ‘The just shall shine as the sun, in the kingdom of their
Father.’ An example of this Brightness
is shown to us in the Transfiguration (Matthew 17:2), “his face shone like the
sun, and his clothes became dazzling white.”
The third quality is Agility
which will allow us “the capability of moving with the utmost facility and
celerity, wherever the soul pleases.”
And the last quality we will enjoy is Subtility, “a quality which subjects
the body to the absolute dominion of the soul, and to an entire obedience to
her control: as we infer from these
words of the Apostle; ‘It is sown a natural body, it shall rise a spiritual
body.’ (1 Cor. 15:44)
In other words, nothing material, such as a wall will
prevent our movement because our body will do whatever our soul directs it to
do.
These things have been revealed to us so we can look
forward to the most amazing gifts imaginable, as the Catechism tells us,
“which God will bestow on his faithful servants
after the resurrection, now proposed as rewards; [we] must find in the
reflection the strongest inducement to lead virtuous and holy lives. On the other hand, nothing will have greater
effect in subduing the passions, and withdrawing souls from sin, than
frequently to remind the sinner of the miseries and torments with which the
justice of God will visit the reprobate, who, on the last day, shall rise to
the resurrection of judgment.” (John 5:29
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