100%(1)100% found this document useful (1 vote) 680 views204 pagesLife Everlasting
Author - MOST REV. TIHAMER TOTH
TRANSLATED BY V. G. AGOTAI
Edited by REV. NEWTON THOMPSON, S.T.D.
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LIFE EVERLASTING
A Course of Sermons
BY
MOST REV. TIHAMER TOTH
‘TRANSLATED BY
Vv. G. AGOTAI
EDITED BY
REV. NEWTON THOMPSON, S.T.D.
B. HERDER BOOK CO.
15 & 17 SOUTH BROADWAY, ST LOUIS, MO.
AND
33 QUEEN SQUARE, LONDON, W.C
1940ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Printed in U. S. A.
NIHIL OBST AT
Sti. Ludovic
die 20. Sept., 1940
F. J. Holweck,
Censor Librorum
IMPRIMATUR
Sti, Ludovici, die 21. Sept., 1940
ols Joannes J. Glennon,
Archiepiscopus
Copyright 1940
B. HERDER BOOK CO.
Vail-Batlou Press, Inc., Binghamton and New YorkCONTENTS
CHAPTER
J. Bevrer in Live Evervastinc. . . . .
If. Exisrence or tae Souw. 2 2 ew we
If. Tie Teacune or Reicion.
IV. ReasonaBveness oF Bewier tN Lire Evervastine
V. Frurr or Betrer in Live Evervasrinc. . . .
VI. Tne Gate or Lire Evertasrinc . 2. 8s
VIL. Deatn Vicrorious . . . .
VUE Dearu rue Teacuer. 2 2 ee ee es
IX. Te Warninc or Dear 2...
X. Tue Sosenine Facr or DeatH. 2. Lek
XL Deare te Guwe «we eee
XIL Dear tHe Comrorres. . .
XII. Deatu rue Vanquisuep. 2 2 2. ee
XIV. Puncarory. © . 2. 2 2. ee we
XV. Erernat Perortion 2. 2. 2 ee es
XVI. Evernat Buss. 2 2 2. 1 1 we
Inpex 2. . ee ee
PAGE
12
35
48
7
- 108
19
. 129
- 142
+ 154
- 181
+ 1951
BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING
‘Tus declaration is not only the conclusion of our Creed and
crown of our belief, but also its foundation and support. “I
believe in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting.”
With this triumphant assurance the Christian Creed ends. On
this also the whole Christian religion is erected.
Life everlasting. What a promise and hope beyond imagi-
nation! Unsurpassed bliss! How much encouragement, how
much consolation, how much strength and energy emanate
from this belief!
Life everlasting. If there really is life everlasting, then it
is not such a dreadful tragedy, that my earthly life is con-
tinual pain and suffering. If there is life everlasting, then it
is not such an insupportable burden, that I have to live my
earthly life misunderstood and unloved. If there is life ever-
lasting, then I am not appalled that death should deprive me
of this earthly life. If there is life everlasting, then in this
earthly life only one thing is important: to insure by my
present life that blissful life everlasting. O yes, if there is life
everlasting.
But what if there is none?
Is it certain that there is? Can we say the last words of the
Creed with absolute certainty: “I believe in life everlasting” ?
Is this not a mere fancy? Is it not a deceptive dream? An
unfounded longing ?
I should now like to consider the problem of life everlast-
z2 LIFE EVERLASTING
ing in all its details because in this way earthly life will be
seen in quite another light, and its every manifestation will
gain quite a different meaning.
‘The King of eternal life, our blessed heavenly Father, grant
that in the souls of all who reflect with us upon the question
of life everlasting, this belief may become unfaltering. And
may He grant that we attain a blissful eternity by the good-
ness of our earthly lives so that the inscription on the tomb-
stone of a great French Catholic writer, Louis Veuillot
(1813-1883), composed by himself before his death, may be
applicable to all of us.
When I have breathed my last in prayer,
A cross erect upon my grave;
And on my tombstone write these words:
“He lived believing; now he knows.”
I
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE QUESTION
A. If we consider the history of the human mind, we see
that since earliest times two opposing views of life have di-
vided mankind into two main groups.
1) These two groups are so opposed to each other that they
can never hope to reach an agreement.
“Enjoy yourself to the fullest, for life is short and after it
there is nothing.” This is the motto of one group. “What doth
it profit a man if he gain the whole world and suffer the loss
of his own soul?” (Matt. 16: 26.) This is the motto of the
other. And all of us must decide which motto to choose.
Our decision—on which side to take our stand—will affect
our whole life. If there is no world to come, no eternal life,
then we are foolish to deny ourselves anything whatever on
this earth. If there is no world hereafter, then let us enjoyBELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING 3
this brief span of earthly life to the utmost. St. Paul said:
“IE in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all
men most miserable” (I Cor. 15: 19). On the other hand, if
we look forward to a world to come and a life everlasting,
we must do everything to attain life: that everlasting life,
that blissful everlasting life.
2) The great Pascal was right when he said: “The im-
mortality of the soul is so important, it touches us so deeply,
that we cannot remain indifferent to this question unless we
have lost all interest in life. According as we have or have
not hope of eternal blessings, all our acts and thoughts are
directed into such divergent channels that in all common
sense we cannot pursue our way without determining its
direction from this highest point of view.”
‘This is indeed the one and only decisive question for all
men: Is there a world to come or is there none? A decisive
question which we cannot evade. We cannot do what a cer-
tain soldier did who, poor fellow, had not learned to pray
at home. But on the battlefield, amid a hail of bullets, he
began to pray thus: “Dear God (if there is a God), save my
soul (if I have a soul) that J may not go to hell (if there is
a hell) but to heaven (if there is a heaven).” No, dear breth-
ren, we cannot do this. We must all choose: Is there life ever-
lasting or is there not?
B. How different our whole life will be if we believe in the
hereafter; and how different it will be if we do not believe!
1) How different this carthly life will be! If we believe
that this life is only a beginning and that before God’s judg-
ment seat the continuation of it awaits us, then there are no
more insoluble life problems for us, earthly injustice does not
crush us, we can endure even the hardest struggles. Yes, this
earthly life has a purpose only if it has a continuation in life
everlasting.4 LIFE EVERLASTING
But if we do not believe in the next world? Then, like a
thousand sphinxes, disaster and trials and sickness and death
will grin at us in this life. Without belief in a life hereafter,
our present life is unbearable torment. It is like a runaway
locomotive rushing along the rails without any goal, until
somewhere it plunges off the tracks and comes to a sudden
and disastrous stop. Consider man as an immortal creature,
and everything about him becomes great, everything is un-
derstandable. But take him as a being without immortal
destiny, and dark clouds envelop his aimless paths.
2) If we believe in life everlasting, how different death is
from what it is if we do not believe!
Death comes to the unbeliever as well as to the believer;
but in the death of the two is all the difference between earth
and heaven. The unbelicver clutches frantically at fleeting life
with a pitiable, hopeless, spasmodic gesture of his trembling
fingers. And the believer? As he approaches the end of his
life, he becomes calmer and quicter; in his last confession
he once more sets in order his account with almighty God
and thus awaits the last solemn moment.
In the year 1890 when the great English convert, Cardinal
Newman, felt that death was imminent, he sent everybody
from his room with these words: “I can meet my end alone.”
What faith, what strength, what will-power! It is a real
“euthanasia,” “a good death,” when we can say with the
psalmist: “Though I should walk in the midst of the shadow
of death, I will fear no evils, for Thou art with me” (Ps. 22: 4).
“Hail, brother Death,” St. Francis of Assisi cried trium-
phantly when he was told that he had not long to live. Truly
above such a deathbed the tender light of the life to come
already dawns gently, the light that makes Murillo’s famous
picture, “The death of St. Clare,” so touchingly beautiful.BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING 5
Dante once wrote that “life is a hastening toward death”
(Purgatorio, canto 23). This is true: life is continual death;
only in the last hour of life do we cease to die. This last
moment comes also to him who has not believed in life ever-
lasting. But, alas, then he is overtaken by “the deathbed
tragedy” of which Jean Paul speaks. Because in that hour such
a man fares as does a speculator on the Stock Exchange, who
takes the latest report into his hand after a sharp decline in
stocks, and is startled to sce that all his shares have become
worthless.
3) How different is our consolation in affliction if we be-
lieve in life everlasting! Sometimes consolation is utterly
empty, banal. “I also had a mother, she died, too.” Is this
a consolation for us? Or: “Time will case your sorrow.” “We
shall not forget her memory.” “His death was so peaceful;
he just fell asleep.” No, no! Only the belief in life everlasting
consoles us: that our dear one continues to live and that we
shall see each other again. Thus we feel that “blessed are
they that mourn”—that mourn like this—“for they shall be
comforted” (Matt. 5:5).
O yes, this is consolation. How truly the renowned physi-
cist of the past century, Robery Maye, writes: “A strong,
scientifically founded faith in the individual continuation of
the life of the soul and of the direction of human destiny by a
higher power was my greatest comfort when I held the cold
hand of my dying mother between my hands.”
This is surely the truest philosophy of life: to appraise life
from the viewpoint of death, and to view death by the light
of life everlasting. Thus death becomes life’s great regulator.
To the sad and afflicted it says: Be patient; it will not last
much longer. To the frivolous it says: Beware, everything
comes to an end quickly. To the arrogant boaster it says:6 LIFE EVERLASTING
Only wait; you will soon see what becomes of you. And to
the conscientious struggler it says: Endure; in the end you
will gain the reward of virtue.
After this, dear brethren, I need not further discuss whether
our question is important or not.
pig
MANKIND'S BELIEF IN A FUTURE LIFE
Let us note the interesting fact that never has a people
lived on this earth, that did not believe in a future life.
A. However far back, even into prehistoric times, scholarly
investigation extends, where we find traces of man we also
find evidence of his belicf in a life beyond the grave. What
aroused this belief in a life after death? Undoubtedly the
word of God resounding in the human soul. And what nour-
ished this belief? The countless imperfections, injustices, and
miseries of earthly life, to which only the perfection of eternal
life can give the solution.
The extensive labor expended on the preparation of the
tombs of prehistoric man speaks eloquently of this belief.
Prehistoric man did not regard a corpse merely as something
loathsome, to be hurriedly cast by the wayside and left to
itself; on the contrary, it was an object of reverent care. That
they lacked a clear idea of the soul and did not reflect upon
it with the knowledge possessed by Christians, does not mili-
tate against the fact that the most primitive peoples believed
in the reality of life after death. Therefore they placed food
and weapons in the graves and sometimes killed the wives
and slaves of the dead, that there should be someone to serve
them in the next world.
B. If we consider the great historic races, we find every-BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING 7
where belief in a life after death, of course in various and
sometimes fantastic forms.
The Egyptian pyramids, sarcophagi, and inscriptions, pre-
pared with much care and artistic feeling, speak of this belief.
The Babylonian memorials, and the Olympus and Tartarus
of the Greeks, speak of this, too.
“Death ends everything? What a pagan way of speaking,”
we say. But it is not a pagan way of speaking; the pagans
did not speak like that.
Listen to Socrates reply when his friend Crito questions
him before his death: “Have you any wish that we can ful-
fil? How shall we bury you?” “What do you say?” replied
Socrates. “You will bury me? You can bury my body. But me
you cannot bury.” This reply calls to mind what is written
on the cross on Gardonyi’s grave in the citadel at Eger: “Only
the body.”
Cicero wrote a whole book on the immortality of the soul
(De immortalitate animae). In one of his other works he
reasons, with psychological insight, in this manner: “The
greatest proof that nature herself silently acknowledges im-
mortality is that the question of what will come after death,
lies close to everyone’s heart, indeed it lies very close to every-
one’s heart. . . . I wonder what all our great men can have
thought, those great men who died for their country? Did
they think that at the end of their carthly lives even their
names would disappear? Without the hope of a continuation
of life after death, not one of them would have died for his
country. . . . Rooted in the soul, somehow or other, is the
premonition, who would be so foolish as to live in continual
weariness and among continual dangers? If, on the one hand,
the general opinion is the voice of nature, and on the other
hand, everyone in the world is agreed that there is something8 LIFE EVERLASTING
that has reference to those who have departed this life, then
we ought to make this opinion our own” (Tusc. Disp., I, 14).
Are these not interesting words from pre-Christian times?
C. We find the same opinion among the people living
today. It is a fact well established, that we do not find a single
people without a belief that death is but a gateway beyond
which life in some form continues. If we consider the most
distant peoples—the Lapps, the Eskimos, the Hottentots, the
Zulus, the Patagonians—we find that cach believes this truth
in some form: on this earth we are pilgrims toward another
home, where we shall live eternally.
Today we often hear that the Chinese are the least religious
people in the world. But among them belief in life after
death is so strong that almost their entire religion is con-
nected with veneration for the spirits of deceased ancestors.
The sensual Mohammedan and the pious native of India,
the highly educated Greck and the materialistic Roman, the
primitive Teuton and the barbarous Scythian, the serious
American Indian and the lighthearted South Sea Islander,
the hot-blooded negro and the hardheaded Australian, the
despised Hottentot and the uncivilized Fuegian: all of them
believe in a future life and look forward to a reunion in the
world to come.
What has ever been the universal belief of mankind springs
from the depths of the human soul; it is the result of the
primitive philosophy of the human mind.
No one can rightly object that for a long time mankind
believed that the sun revolves round the earth. Man did, in-
decd, believe this, because his senses testified that such was
the case; his senses deceived him. But when man believes in
a future life, he believes despite his senses: he believes al-
though his senses tell him nothing of all this; on the contrary,
they seem opposed to it.BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING 9
m
IS THERE A WORLD BEYOND?
We can, however, go still further with this argument.
A. Let us suppose, although it is not so, but let us suppose
that we who believe in the next world cannot support our
belief with stronger arguments than the arguments adduced
by those who deny it. For the moment let us suppose that
both assertions are equally uncertain and that, not even by
a hairsbreadth, is it more certain that there is life everlasting
than that there is none. Now I ask: Does not human wisdom
demand that I should rather take my stand for belief in the
world to come? Is it not wiser to reckon with a danger, even
if it never happens, than to ignore it although it may happen?
People insure themselves against many things, do they not?
They insure against fire. Do they insure because their house
will certainly be burnt down? Of course not. They take out
an insurance policy because their house may burn down, and
in that case it is well for them to have it insured. They insure
against accidents, against hail-storms, against theft. Are they
certain that an accident will happen to them, that hail will
damage their crops, that burglars will break into their house ?
No. But these things may happen.
Well, dear brethren, if we were in this position with re-
gard to the next world: it may be that there is one, it may
be that there is none—we are not, in fact, in this position;
but let us suppose that we are—then would not sober com-
mon sense demand that we live our lives as though there were
a world to come?
B. You must allow me to reason in such a very material
way, because some people are impressed only by such argu-
ments.10 LIFE EVERLASTING
Let us take the worst case: ] have lived as if there were a
world beyond. I have taken great care of my morals, of my
honor. Then I die. And then, in fact, there is nothing after
this life. What have I lost? At best, I have lost the very doubt-
ful joys of sinful earthly pleasures; but even then I have en-
joyed the exalting sensation that accompanies one on the path
of honor. If, on the other hand, there is a world to come, then
I have gained everything.
Now let us take the other case: I have lived as if there were
no world beyond, frivolously sipping life’s sinful pleasures. I
die. And it appears that really there is nothing beyond the
grave. What have I gained? The long-forgotten deceptive
joys of sinful pleasure. But if it appears that there is a world
to come? What have I lost then? Everything! Everything!
Forever!
“Dear Christian, how deceived you are, if heaven is a fairy
tale,” an unbeliever once said mockingly to a believer. But
the latter replied: “O, dear atheist, how deceived you are, if
hell is no fairy tale.”
Yes, brethren, to live honestly is the smallest loss and the
greatest gain. But to live in sin is the smallest gain and the
greatest loss. Then ought we not to take our stand for the
world to come, even if our arguments for it were as weak as
the arguments of those that deny it?
But such is not the case. That death is not the terminus of
life, but only a gateway through which we must pass and
beyond which a more beautiful, more colorful, never-ending
life awaits us, is equally witnessed to by the general convic-
tion of mankind, by man’s reasoning mind, and by divine
revelation. So many and such strong arguments testify to
this that we should have to deny the ability of the human
mind to recognize truth, were we to doubt the reality of life
beyond the grave.BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING a
My dear brethren. Ever since man has lived upon the earth
he has always striven to prolong his life, if only by a short
span. With what passionate cagerness he sought the elixir that
would give him unending life! A Chinese legend relates that
a certain emperor built a tower reaching to the skies; on the
roof of the tower he erected a golden staff with a golden cup
on its tip. With the clear dew thus gathered, he mixed a
powder that was composed of precious jewels. He then drank
this mixture, in the expectation that he would never die. What
a vain experiment! What a foolish endeavor!
How much research has been undertaken by man in the
study of this question! We have striven to know how we
should nourish ourselves, how we should clothe ourselves,
how we should construct our houses, how we should regulate
our daily lives, merely that we may live longer. Yet, after
all our endeavors, we have not been able to save our lives
from the grave. Today the words of Job are still true: “Man
born of a woman, living for a short time, is filled with many
miseries. Who cometh forth like a flower and is destroyed and
flecth as a shadow” (Job 14:1 f.).
Yet there is one marvelous and quite certain “life-length-
ener,” if I may coin a word, not valid for a few years only or
for a hundred or for a million, but forever: our holy Chris-
tian faith,
Non omnis morior (“I do not die entirely”) said the great
Latin poet Horace, writing of his own literary fame. But what
he meant with regard only to his fame, we feel in the instinc-
tive desire of all mankind for immortality, for life. I do not die
entirely. I shall live after death. I believe in the resurrection
of the body. I believe in life everlasting. Amen.Il
EXISTENCE OF THE SOUL
Tue Catholic Creed concludes with these triumphant words:
“I believe in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting.”
With the most unwavering firmness, we Catholics believe in
the next life. Let us see upon what grounds we believe. What
arguments support our contention? On two subsequent occa-
sions we shall consider what Divine revelation and human
reason have to say. But today let us examine the assertions
of those who deny life everlasting because they deny that
man has a soul.
Do some people, really, not believe in the existence of a
soul ?
Are there some whose faces are turned always earthward?
Whose eyes are blindfolded, as it were? Who wander so
hopelessly and aimlessly? And are such people to be found
in large numbers?
Half a century ago such an attitude was common. At that
time a benumbing tendency, that of materialism, held sway
in natural science, in physics, unwilling to acknowledge any-
thing in the world except matter, and endeavoring to explain
everything in terms of matter. “There is no soul, only matter,”
was the refrain. “What until now has been called soul and
spiritual phenomena consists of nothing but matter’s most
subtle manifestations, What is not material, does not exist.
Therefore what we cannot perceive with our senses, that is,
what we should have to believe, does not exist.”
At that time the world resounded with such assertions.
12EXISTENCE OF THE SOUL. 3
Since then, however, much water has flowed under the
bridges; and materialism, as a world-philosophy, belongs to
the things of the past. That beside the material world—meas-
urable, perceptible, and tangible to our senses—a wonder-
fully rich spiritual world also exists, transcending the ma-
terial, is today denied only by those whose knowledge has
remained on the plane of half a century ago.
But I am sorry to say, some such people may still be found.
Now and then you may hear a remark about life everlasting
that plainly comes from the rusty arsenal of materialism. To-
day, then, we will consider that science does not deny the
existence of the soul, and that sound reasoning demands its
existence.
I
THE ATITTUDE OF SCIENCE
Whoever asserts anything, may rightly be required to prove
his assertion. Christianity asserts the existence of a world to
come, a life beyond the grave. We shall see how many argu-
ments there are to support this assertion. But what arguments
are adduced by those who deny the existence of such a world?
Those who deny a future life generally refer to “science”
with a superior gesture. “Belief in the existence of the soul and
of a life beyond the grave is in opposition to science,” they
say with abounding self-confidence.
A. Surely we may ask them to tell us which science it is
that contradicts this doctrine of our faith, that the human
soul is immortal, Which science does this?
1) Perhaps the science of law? If the soul is immortal, if
there is life after death, then do the laws of justice collapse,
or do they not receive their highest sanction precisely through
this belief?4 LIFE EVERLASTING
2) Or philosophy? Perhaps by denial of life hereafter, we
may more easily solve the enigmas of the world ? Great truths,
felt instinctively, seen clearly, considered certain, although
man cannot prove them, lie latent within him, In this way he
senses immortality. Mankind unanimously believes in life
after death, although it cannot prove this by mathematical
methods.
If, indeed, the belief in immortality, this belief which is
rooted in the depths of the human heart, that immortality
for which we yearn most eagerly from childhood to the grave,
if this belief is nothing but a fancy, a fairy tale, and not truth,
then no truth is to be found on earth.
3) Which science contradicts the belief in life everlasting?
History? Mathematics? What law opposes the continued life
of the soul? Someone replies: “Natural science. Natural sci-
ence has proved that man consists of a body only; he has no
soul. What we commonly call spiritual phenomena are noth-
ing but functions of the brain. If, therefore, man has no soul,
nothing is there to live on after the death of the body.”
Those “modern” people who today still argue that biology
can explain every spiritual phenomenon by the material proc-
esses of the body and that therefore man has no soul, do not
realize that they are not at all modern and up-to-date, that
they are behind the times. People spoke that way a few dec-
ades ago, at a time when a flood of material misconception
denying the soul’s existence inundated the scientific world.
But let us, by way of example, quote a few lines from a recent
number of an esteemed medical periodical (Jo egeszseg, 1931,
pp- tor £.).
“Let us imagine that science already enables us to look into
the living, functioning brain and that we can not only meas-
ure its temperature but, in consequence of some wonderful
progress made by science, we can also make the brain’s mo-EXISTENCE OF THE SOUL 15
lecular movements visible or at least calculable, and so take
delight in observing their order and harmony. Even in such
an event, however marvelous the sight would be, in no part
of it could we find thought itself. We might possibly see
vibrations, the change of position made by the molecules,
the order of different movements, but thoughts, feelings, de-
sires, plans, and the active, colorful life of the soul itself we
could not see. Nor anything that even distantly resembles it.
The anatomy of the brain does not show even a trace of
thought.”
And the same periodical continues: “According to Claude
Bernard, the famous biologist, to assert that thought is a secre-
tion of the brain, signifies just as much as if one were to say
‘time is a secretion of the clock.’
“Tf the ego were nothing more than a mass of brain, if
thought, determination, project, enthusiasm, joy, sorrow,
judgment, knowledge, art, poetry, were nothing but bio-
logical circular motions of the atoms of the brain, then science
would know which group of brain molecules thinks, which
chemical group of atoms feels, which plans, which judges,
which fears, which rejoices. In no way can anyone show how
an immaterial spiritual something, such as thought and the
entire colorful and variable spiritual life, originates from mere
matter.”
Yes, this is the up-to-date scientific way of thinking. We
will now examine how thinking man came to this conclusion.
Th
THE ATTITUDE OF REASON
“No life exists beyond the grave because, after the death
of the body, nothing remains to live; no such thing as a soul
exists. No one has ever yet held a soul in his hand. Man has16 LIFE EVERLASTING
not a soul; only a brain. What we call soul is the functioning
of the brain. A child’s brain is small: its thoughts are also
small. A man’s brain is diseased: his thoughts are also sickly.
A man’s brain is old: his thoughts are also old. A man’s brain
dies: his thinking also dies.” Those who deny the existence
of the soul argue thus and do not realize how many errors
they have uttered in one breath.
“No one has ever yet held a soul in his hand.” Well, well,
have you ever held a sunbeam in your hand? Have you ever
held truth in your hand? Have you ever held an electric
current in your hand?
“T have never actually held an electric current in my hand,”
you may say, “but I feel that it exists, because it heats and
lights, and gives me a shock; I do not sce the current, indeed,
but I perceive its functioning.”
Ah, then we are on the right path. Neither do we actually
sce the soul, but we perceive its functioning. That man is able
to think and to will is a complete refutation of the arguments
brought forward by those who deny the existence of the soul.
A. First, man’s thinking faculty refutes them. Brain is soul,
they say.
1) But what is brain? A mass of matter that can be weighed
on the scales. And what is thought? What is love, enthusiasm,
virtue, anger, sin, and the many other manifestations that we
call the function of the soul? A spiritual something. Now
solve the riddle if you can: how can matter bring the spiritual
into existence? Who that denies the soul can answer this?
There is no spiritual soul in us, only matter. Then who
understands our spiritual thinking faculty? If I fill a sack
with matter, let us say with apples or with potatoes, however
large the sack it will at length be full and will hold nothing
more, because it is matter. But my soul, my thinking faculty,EXISTENCE OF THE SOUL 7
can receive impressions of the external world into itself with-
out limit, and it will never be full, because it is not matter.
During the functions of my soul in earthly life it has need
of my body as of an implement. On the other hand, it has
reflective functions that cannot be explained as mere processes
of matter. Who can explain, in material terms, the abstract
and universal concepts, during the creation of which the soul
completely withdraws from things perceptible to the senses,
and forms universal ideas that cannot be found in reality? Or
when it establishes laws that are valid in the material world,
but that have nothing material about them. J even construct
entire branches of science—for instance, mathematics—that
are of an altogether immaterial nature. Man is able to do this
only because in him lives a sou! that is not matter, but spirit.
I confess I could never believe—yet those who deny the exist-
ence of the spiritual soul must believe—that, for instance,
when Michelangelo created his matchless statue of Moses or
designed the cupola of St. Peter’s, only his hand, his pencil,
and his chisel were at work. Only these, and nothing more.
On the contrary, I believe that a much more important work
was accomplished by the artist’s soul that conceived and
worked out the idea of the masterpiece.
2) My logical thinking faculty raised me above all the
creatures of earth. How magnificent are the brilliant stars
on a quiet summer evening! But a single human thought is
worth more than a whole galaxy of stars. Only man, this
little part of the universe, creates abstract ideas, rises in
thought to transcendental heights, and reflects upon the in-
finite. Yet he could not think of the infinite unless something
infinite lived in him, his soul; just as the eye could not per-
ceive light unless it were created for light.
3) “We have no soul, only a brain.” How this is disproved18 LIFE EVERLASTING
by human consciousness! If it were true, then man could not
utter that magnificent, enigmatical, immeasurably profound
word “I.” The conscious sense of the ego, self-consciousness,
designates man as a person and raises him above every other
creature of earth.
How much time we might spend in reflecting on this little
word “I”! Who is this “I” in me? Does my head think? No.
But I think. Does my heart love? No. But I love. Who is this
I? Has anyone seen it? No. No one. Has anyone heard it? No
one. Yet it exists. From whom is it? From whom is this mys-
terious I in me? From the eternal I who said of Himself: “I
am who am” (Ex. 3:14), that is, whose essence is “to be.”
The “I” is always the same in me, yesterday, years and
years ago, therefore every conscious phenomenon in me must
have a permanent basis. This feeling of the “I” is something
of the consciousness that cannot be explained away by nerves
and brain-substance.
4) “But without the brain there is no spiritual function-
ing,” you may be told. And this is true in this earthly life. The
brain plays the part of a telephone exchange. Every nerve
leads to it, and there sits the operator that receives and sums
up impressions. But in the telephone system, the wire is not
what produces the thoughts, the conversations that pass over
it. If the wire is faulty, the functioning of the telephone is
faulty, too. Even though the operator may be sitting in the
exchange, you cannot telephone. Nor can you if the operator
leaves the exchange, even though the apparatus remains there.
In like manner if our soul leaves our body, no longer will any
thought be there, yet the brain remains where it was.
You see this little instrument before me. It is the micro-
phone into which I am now speaking. An electric current
runs through it, receives my every word, and broadcasts it
into the ether. The microphone is the brain, I am the soul.EXISTENCE OF THE SOUL 19
Brain is needed, the soul also is needed. But if this micro-
phone is damaged, then I should speak in vain; no one outside
the church would hear my words. I cannot communicate my
thoughts to it. But can I say that the thoughts you now hear
expressed are manufactured by the microphone? Most de-
cidedly not.
Just so I cannot reach my distant listeners without the mi-
crophone. If the microphone is impaired, let us say if it is
“4ll,” they may hear my voice, but only faintly or accompanied
by crackling noises. So if a man’s brain is decrepit or ill, then
it is able to transmit the soul’s thoughts only in a faulty man-
ner. On the other hand, even a healthy brain is useless if the
soul leaves it; just as the best microphone might be here, but
if I go away from it, it will not transmit my voice. With poor
tools not even the best sculptor can work well: nor can he
without any tools at all. Yet who would say that the tool is
the artist? But that is what is said by those who declare that
brain is soul.
“But you know,” someone may say, “the behavior of these
infantile, sickly, or aged brains still confuses me. The train
of thought of these persons with undeveloped brains or with
brains that have become diseased, is so foolish and sickly that
we must explain everything with the brain. Where is the
soul in these cases?”
Yet it is there, my brethren: a normal soul, not infantile or
sickly human soul, is there. But it cannot express itself. Listen
to this analogy. Two persons are seated in the same room.
The onc has the ear pieces of a simple detector radio-receiver
on his head; in front of the other stands a six-tube super-
radio. The room is full of the waves of hundreds and hun-
dreds of broadcasting stations which knock and ask for ad-
mittance at both apparatuses. The one who has a delicate
receiving apparatus hears many of them; but the man with20 LIFE EVERLASTING
the crude detector sits there and hears nothing of the whole
colorful mass of sound; at most he may hear a local station.
Why does he hear nothing else? Because his receiving appa-
ratus is weak. The infantile, undeveloped, or diseased brain
can be compared to a weak radio receiver. There beside it is
the transmitter, a soul neither infantile nor diseased; but it
transmits the most beautiful programs in vain if no machine
is at hand to receive them.
B. The contention of those who deny the existence of the
soul is refuted, and the spirituality of the soul, that is, its im-
mortality, is proved by its spontaneous activity.
1) Man is capable of willing in opposition to his desires
of a material nature. He is able to renounce what his senses
eagerly desirc, and he is able to do what his whole material
being protests against. This splendid privilege is the true
charter of man. Therefore we honor especially those who
practice this, because from this issue humanity’s most beau-
tiful virtues: unselfishness, loyal friendship, self-sacrificing
love toward one’s fellow man and one’s country. As long as
these virtues flourish on earth we shall always have decisive
proof that the soul is not matter, but more than matter, dif-
ferent from matter: spirit. If the soul were matter, if matter
constituted the essence of the soul, then all this would be im-
possible: the soul could not act in opposition to its own nature.
We feel: the soul in us is one thing, and the body another.
Or are they not different? From where, then, comes my self-
reproach if I have done wrong? Is it not from the soul?
Whence comes a feeling of sadness even when I have satis-
fied all my material needs and my body is suffering no ail-
ment? Is it not from the soul?
2) “Man has no soul, only brain.” But then I should have
to believe an impossibility, namely, that all general abstract
ideas and all the moral decisions that I make in opposition toEXISTENCE OF THE SOUL ar
matter, are of material origin. Then I must believe that the
prodigious will power of a Caesar, a Charlemagne, a Na-
poleon, the genius of a Michelangelo, a Raphael, a Leonardo
da Vinci, the world-encompasing spiritual strength of an
Aristotle and of a St. Thomas, the sclfimmolating love for
humanity of a St. Francis of Assisi and of a St. Elizabeth—
that all this is nothing but the vibration of material atoms. I
must believe that the soldier’s dauntless fove of country, that
the self-sacrificing vigil of a mother beside her child’s sick-
bed, that all holy enthusiasm and performance of duty is
nothing but the dance of corporeal molecules, their mingling
and electrical vibration.
3) “Man has no soul, only brain.” Then what evolves the
marvelous strength that enables a dying person to keep him-
self alive sometimes for hours, or even for days? Who has not
heard of cases which are clear signs that the soul kept life in
the body that had already begun to die. I read of a mother
whose death was imminent, but she did not want to die until
her two sons had arrived, the one from the distant North, the
other from the South. They arrived, and ten minutes later
her heart ceased to beat. Who can explain this if man has no
soul ?
4) “Man has no soul, only brain.” Then who can explain
the not uncommon phenomenon, that persons who have been
out of their minds for many years, regain their sanity shortly
before death? This is a well-known fact in medical science.
It is perhaps sufficient if I mention one famous case, the
mother of Emperor Charles V, “mad” Johanna, whose brain
was clouded for forty-nine years; on the day of her death,
April 5, 1555, she entirely recovered her senses and died with
a prayer on her lips. To recover one’s senses just when the
brain is steadily becoming weaker, is possible only if the brain
is not all, but the soul, and this soul at the moment of death22 LIFE EVERLASTING
frees itself from the fetters of matter and in its functioning
has no more need of matter.
This is explicable only if we believe that all these phenom-
ena are the first signs of life of the soul preparing to leave the
chrysalis of the body, and first movement in the egg of the
little bird preparing for flight, which must first break the
shell of the egg that it may achieve this new form of life.
There is an empiric truth in the words of Victor Hugo:
“You say that the soul is only the expression of bodily forces.
But then how comes it that my soul becomes more radiant as
my bodily forces prepare to leave me?” Truly, who could
understand what so frequently happens, that the bodily life
and bodily force of the dying often give evidence in the final
moments of surprising, perhaps till then unknown, spiritual
abilities?
If Socrates could say that the beginning of philosophy is
to know that we know nothing, then today we could add that
the conclusion of philosophy is to know that we must believe.
My dear brethren. Today’s sermon was intended in the
first place for those who do not believe in eternal life. But
is it not an interesting fact that not even such persons can free
themselves from the thought of life beyond the grave? Nor
can those who would gladly do so. Nor even those who say
that they do not concern themselves with this question.
Because this is a question that cannot leave anyone uncon-
cerned. It is a question that springs from the innermost depths
of the soul: What becomes of us after death? Is everything
annihilated or does something of us remain? Is death the end
of life, or the beginning of a new life?
How right Plato is when he makes the dying Socrates say
to those around him: “It is truly worthy of man’s remem-
brance. If the soul is immortal then we must provide not onlyEXISTENCE OF THE SOUL 23
for the span of this earthly life, but for all time, and only then
does the danger of neglecting the soul appear in all its dread-
fulness. If in any case death meant parting from everything,
then to die would be gain to the wicked man because by do-
ing so he would be parted from his body, his soul, and also
from his wickedness. However, as the soul appears to be im-
mortal, there is for him no other escape from evil, than the
endeavor to be as good and as sensible as possible. For the
soul takes no other property with it to the next world than
the self-discipline it has expended upon itself, with which it
nourished itself and of which we assert that immediately
upon the arrival of the deceased it will be of the greatest ad-
vantage or harm to him.” What noble words from the lips
of a genius who did not know the light of Christ! Amen.Il
THE TEACHING OF RELIGION ABOUT LIFE
EVERLASTING
Curistiantry has a joyful, triumphant word that often recurs
in the liturgy. This word is “Alleluia.” Alleluia! Praise the
Lord! Rejoice!
Whence comes this triumphant fervor? From the fact that
Christianity is the religion of victory. In Christianity love has
overcome hate, belief unbelief, the Son of God sin, and, what
perhaps gives us most cause for rejoicing, life has overcome
death. Alleluia! Rejoice, for life has overcome death!
We all die. No difference of opinion exists about that. But
what comes afterward? This is the starting-point of discus-
sion. That the great Swiss artist, Bécklin, painted his picture
“The Isle of the Dead” from the uttermost depths of hu-
man sorrow, is acknowledged by everyone. But somehow we
feel that in spite of all its artistic value the picture is incom-
plete, something is lacking.
We acknowledge that this picture makes one shudder.
A steep rock rises defiantly out of the sea, like inevitable fate.
A few cypresses stand dolefully upon it. In the wall of the
rock yawn the mouths of caves: the dwelling-places of death.
Black clouds lower in the heavens. The waves murmur as if
in unceasing lament. A small boat is just arriving at the shore;
it brings a coffin; a white-shrouded figure bends reverently
over the coffin. And the black mouths of the yawning chasms
24THE TEACHING OF RELIGION 25
seem to say: Today this one has come to us. Tomorrow will
come another. And some day you will come. Quite surely you
will also come.
Truly a startling picture, an artistic painting, yet in some
way deficient. Something is lacking in it. What is there be-
hind the cave’s mouth and what awaits us after death? This
is lacking.
And here the immense superiority of Christianity is seen
when it proclaims with triumphant certainty that behind the
sad Isle of the Dead the ocean of life everlasting awaits us.
The thought of eternal life was not first given to the world
by Christianity. With the infallible power of Jesus’ words,
Christianity strengthened and exalted to unconditional cer-
tainty the desire and longing and instinctive premonition
that has always dwelt in man about the continuation of
earthly life, about the new form of life that follows upon
death.
In today’s sermon let us consider what Christianity teaches
about life everlasting. Let us see how our Lord proclaimed
eternal life, and how the idea of God is surety for it.
I
THE TEACHING OF CHRIST
We turn the pages of the Gospel. Not one thought do we
find reiterated so many times and in so many different ways
as the doctrine of life everlasting, the belicf in the world to
come. From this thought Christ starts out, and to this He re-
turns. One thought is the basis of His every teaching: Save
thy soul. But why, if there is no hereafter?
A. Let us examine our Lord’s teaching, let us see how many
times and with what emphasis He repeats that this earthly26 LIFE EVERLASTING
life is only a beginning, only a time of probation, only a pref-
ace, but the book itself comes in life everlasting.
1) How varied our Lord’s words about this life everlast-
ing!
“Be you also ready, because at what hour you know not the
Son of man will come” (Matt. 24: 4). “Watch ye therefore
because you know not the day nor the hour” (Matt. 25: 13).
But why should we be prepared and why should we watch if
with death there is an end to everything?
“Labor not for the meat which perisheth, but for that which
endureth unto life everlasting” (John 6:27). “If any man
eat of this bread, he shall live forever” (John 6:52).
“Wide is the gate and broad is the way that leadeth to de-
struction, and many there are who go in thereat. How narrow
is the gate and strait is the way that leadeth to life, and few
there are that find it” (Matt. 7: 13, 14).
Here are the Savior’s words emanating a profound love:
“God so loved the world as to give His only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in Him may not perish, but may
have life everlasting” (John 3: 16).
Let us note how He prepares His Apostles for persecutions:
“Fear ye not them that kill the body, and are not able to kill
the soul; but rather fear him that can destroy both soul and
body in hell” (Matt. 10: 28).
We know what He promised on the cross to the repentant
thief: “This day thou shalt be with Me in paradise” (Luke
23: 43).
And let us hear His great promise to each of us: “He that
eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood hath everlasting life,
and I will raise him up in the last day” (John 6: 55).
How many listen uncomprehendingly to these words! I
will raise him up. The dead will live? Is this possible? Is it
not an audacious exaggeration ? How many shrug their shoul-THE TEACHING OF RELIGION 27
ders unbelievingly! How many laugh at Christ for saying
them!
Laugh at Him? During His lifetime they once laughed at
Him. When He bent over Jairus’ dead daughter, saying to
the mourners who were rending their clothes and weeping in
impotent despair: “Why make you this ado and weep? The
damsel is nor dead, but sleepeth. And they laughed Him to
scorn” (Mark 5: 41), and she arose and walked.
See how often and in how many ways Christ taught that
there is a continuation of earthly life, there is life ever-
lasting.
2) The same thing is taught by His parables, one more
beautiful than the other, and by His similitudes.
The laborers wished to uproot the cockle that grew among
the wheat, but the goodman said they should leave it until
the harvest, then reap it and burn it (Matt. 13: 30).
The fishermen sorted the fish in their nets and threw away
the worthless ones. “So shall it be at the end of the world;
the angels shall go out and shall separate the wicked from
among the just” (Matt. 13: 49).
On another occasion a rich man speaks to his steward thus:
“Give an account of thy stewardship” (Luke 16: 12).
The bridegroom says to the five foolish virgins: “I know
you not” (Matt. 25: 12).
Christ says to His faithful servant: “Well done, good and
faithful servant . .. enter thou into the joy of thy Lord”
(Matt. 25: 21).
If we sum up all this, we can truly say that our Lord’s
whole mission, His entire life, His suffering, and His death
are built upon the belief in life eternal. Therefore He so often
and so decisively contrasts between earthly life and the life
of the world to come. Therefore He emphasizes that the latter
is the real, the true, the strong, and beautiful life. Every word28 LIFE EVERLASTING
that He uttered, every one of His acts, every commandment
that He gave, every prohibition that He made, all presume
life in the hereafter.
B. It was from our Lord’s teachings that St. Paul was able
to describe the resurrection so magnificently.
1) He says: “In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye,
at the last trumpet: for the trumpet shall sound and the dead
shall rise again incorruptible, and we shall be changed. For
this corruptible must put on incorruption; and this mortal
must put on immortality. And when this mortal hath put on
immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is writ-
ten: Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy
victory? O death, where is thy sting?” (I Cor. 15: 52-55.)
The dead sleep in the earth, as the carth itself sleeps in win-
ter; but they both await the spring.
The dead are motionless in the coffin, just as the chrysalis
is motionless in the cocoon, but they await the colorful life of
the butterfly.
The dead molder in the grave just as the seed molders in
the earth: but both await the renewal of life in spring.
2) We shall also arise, just as Christ arose from death.
Christ’s soul again united with His body. But what became of
that tormented, slain body? ‘The body glorified in resurrec-
tion is no longer subject to the laws of matter. It passes
through the window like a sunbeam and does not break it.
It appears in a room, without the door opening to admit it.
It comes and goes among us, the Apostles see it now in one
place, then in another. It ascends into the heavens and has no
need of elevating forces. Then I shall be like that after my
resurrection. Glistening and beautiful and radiant and sub-
ject no longer to pain, knowing no limitations of space and
time. But that my soul may once gain such a final and perfectTHE TEACHING OF RELIGION 29
triumph over my body, I must do everything now in earthly
life to insure a glorious resurrection.
Do we rise again? Yes. We shall all rise, but not all of us
shall rise to life everlasting. Only those rise again to life eter-
nal who, properly speaking, never ceased to live. This is so
in all nature. In spring the grass grows again because its roots
in the earth were living even in winter’s great graveyard.
The leaf of a tree shoots forth anew because it lived in the
bud. And that man grows and rises again whose soul lived
a life of faith and morality. Those who live in sin, who have
died in their lifetime, how shall they live after death?
Yes, this is the Christian conception of life everlasting that
we gain from our Lord’s teaching.
1
THE IDEA OF GOD
If, however, we reflect upon the idea of God in our Chris-
tian faith, besides our Lord’s clear doctrine we find many
other arguments that prove the reality of life hereafter. If
God exists, there must also be life hereafter, for such a life
is demanded by God’s sublimity, His goodness, and His jus-
tice.
A. Life continuing after death is demanded by God’s
sublimity.
1) Only life hereafter and the judgment rendered then
will justify God in everything. Here on earth sinners are so
audacious, they tread God’s laws underfoot with such pro-
vocative daring, that the good and the honorable often cry
out: “Lord, canst Thou overlook even this? Wilt Thou not
punish this either?” Then there must be another life where
the sublimity of the offended God receives satisfaction and30 LIFE EVERLASTING
where everyone will discover that no one rebels against God
with impunity.
2) The wisdom of divine Providence ordering everything
for the best, will here be seen. In the confused and painful
happenings of this earthly life we have difficulty in perceiving
the guiding finger of Providence. Many rebel against God’s
plans and commands because in world events they see such
terrible confusion, just as when one looks at the reverse side of
a large Persian rug. So there must be another life, another
place, where we sce not the reverse side of history’s gigantic
carpet as has been the case in this earthly life, but its surface.
With humble homage we shall then perceive the sublime
plans of divine Providence that orders all things for the best
and always for our good.
Either there is no sublime God or there is a life everlasting.
B. Life beyond the grave is likewise demanded by God’s
goodness. There is no life hereafter? Then God is not our
benign Father. Could He have created man only to make
him miserable?
1) How much man suffers! More than any other living
thing in the world. Man knows his sorrow beforehand, he
expects it and thus increases it. Then he bemoans it and tears
open his wound. Other creatures dic, but they know nothing
of it beforehand; man knows beforehand and shudders at it.
And what is still more dreadful, we have spiritual sufferings:
anxiety, grief, when others whom we love have to suffer or
die and we are unable to help them.
Man suffers; yet he was not created for suffering, but for
happiness. He seeks happiness and longs for it, but in vain:
the happiness that he finds in life makes him only more eager.
He secks beauty, but sees that destruction overtakes it; he
secks wealth, well-being, honor, glory: all in vain.
2) If, therefore, I believe in God, I must also believe in lifeTHE TEACHING OF RELIGION 3r
everlasting. Because God has implanted in me the desire that
cannot be gratified here, and that continually cries within
me: “To live. To live. And not to die.” How the longing for
perfect happiness burns within us! And no one finds it in this
life. How we strive for perfect light of sight! And no one finds
it in this life. We long for peace; and there is no peace.
For rest; and there is no rest. For answers to so many ques-
tions; and there is no answer. For truth; and there is no
truth. How many plans we make; and nothing comes of
them. How many things we hope for; and none of our hopes
are realized.
My Lord, is it for this Thou hast created man? That he
should eat out his heart? Whatever other creature I consider,
I see that its desires and the means of attaining them are in
proportion the one to the other. An animal satisfies its hun-
ger and is content. But I? I thirst, and earth has no draught
that can satisfy my thirst. I need life, I need perfect Beauty,
absolute Truth, undisturbed Happiness. And if no such things
are attainable? No undisturbed happiness, no life everlasting ?
Then why hast Thou implanted these desires in me? If truly
I was born only to die, then why do I shudder at the thought
of dying? Lord, if I may never see Thee, why hast Thou al-
lowed me to know Thee? Why hast Thou created such a
void in my heart, that nothing in the world can fill it except
Thou thyself, great God ?
But I believe that God has not planted deceptive longings in
my soul. I believe that, although through thorny paths of
suffering, He leads me to eternal life, for God is infinitely
good. Either there is no good God, or there is life everlasting.
C. Life hereafter is demanded by God’s justice. This belief
gives moral world-order its value.
1) How interesting it is to travel on one of the great express
trains crossing the continent! What a variety of passengers ig32 LIFE EVERLASTING
to be seen! A stout merchant is in one of the seats, a thick
gold watch-chain adorning his vest; he has a fragrant cigar
in his mouth, in his hands is a notorious illustrated paper, and
he laughs boisterously as he looks at the pictures. Beside him
a priest softly murmurs his breviary: “Gloria Patri et Filio et
Spiritui Sancto.” A third passenger, a society woman travel-
ing to a pleasure resort, lays aside her novel every half-hour,
takes out her mirror and rouges and powders her face. Oppo-
site to her sits a pretty young mother with her two children;
she is full of gentleness, full of love. And the train rushes on,
rushes on without stopping.
These all arrive at their destination. But those with whom
the train of life is rushing on, we human beings squeezed side
by side on earth, I wonder if we all reach the same goal. Do
we come to the moldering grave, however we have lived on
this earth? Then God would not be just. If with death every-
thing is at an end, where do those receive their reward who
here on earth endured in honor and in virtue at the price of
immense sacrifice? If with death everything is at an end,
where do those receive their punishment whom in carthly
life the world knew as good and respectable, who were
praised and exalted, but in reality their whole lives were full
of secret sin and wickedness?
2) O yes. There must be another life where every sin re-
ceives its punishment. Here on earth sin often triumphs and
gains the victory. But from the lips of embittered and ag-
grieved individuals we hear this consolation: “Every sin
avenges itself. Only wait. A just God will repay.”
Is it not this belief that consoles us for all the injustice we
have to suffer?
“A just God will repay.” Long ago we often heard this
said, but perhaps there was never so much to be paid for on
earth as today. At other times honesty and sin also stroveTHE TEACHING OF RELIGION 33
together; but immorality never flaunted itself with such cyni-
cal arrogance, and honesty never vegetated so sadly as in
many manifestations of present-day life.
“A just God will some day repay everything.” But where
will He repay if there is no continuation to earthly life? If
the grave envelops the innocent and the sinner, the Godfear-
ing and the blasphemer, the murderer and his victim in the
same way, if the grave is the end of everything, what then?
Can we bear this thought? Must this life not be followed by
another, where every sin receives its punishment?
3) And must not God provide another life, where every
virtue receives its due reward? Here on earth the world judges
unjustly; often the good are humbled and the honest op-
pressed. They find deep consolation in the thought of God’s
future realm, where everything will be measured by a very
different standard.
How many worthy, respectable men are justified in saying
of their earthly lives: I never succeed in anything here. If I
start out upon a journey, I am certain to take the wrong turn.
If I take part in a game, I am certain to lose. My friends are
certain to deceive me. My enemies are certain to attack me.
My wine is certain to be watered. My joy is certain to be
turned to gall. And were I to dip my pen in my fate, with
what black ink I should be able to write!
How many could say that!
How greatly, therefore, God’s justice requires that there
should be another world where God, as the Savior says, “will
render to every man according to his works”! (Matt. 16: 27.)
Truly, either there is no just God or there is life everlasting.
As my conscience within me and my consciousness of be-
ing and every star in the heavens and every flower in the
meadows proclaim that God is, so God’s wisdom, goodness,
and justice proclaim that I have an immortal soul and life34 LIFE EVERLASTING
everlasting is. Belief in God and belief in life eternal belong
inseparably together.
My dear brethren. In the Campo Santo at Genoa this sub-
lime epitaph of three words can be deciphered on an ancient
tombstone: Occido cum sole (“I set like the sun”). What a
comforting thought: Do not weep hopelessly at my death.
Who mourns the setting sun at eventide? We know that next
day it will rise again in the splendor of dawn. And I, too,
have only gone to the grave in this way. I have gone to rest
like the sun, and like the sun I shall rise again.
Now we understand what is lacking in Bécklin’s famous
picture, “The Isle of the Dead.” We understand why this
picture has a disturbing, depressing effect upon the beholder,
in spite of its artistic value. It is because the drooping branches
of the mournful cypresses on it are not raised aloft by con-
soling faith. Because the lowering black clouds are not irra-
diated by the rays of life everlasting. Because the yawning
mouths of the caverns irretrievably swallow the dead, and the
words of Christ’s promise do not glow above them.
What words? Those which Christ said for the first time at
Lazarus’ grave to console Martha mourning for her brother,
but which since then resound through the world as a divine
solace that strengthens our souls mourning our dear dead or
trembling at the thought of our own death. “I am the resur-
rection and the life: he that believeth in Me, although he be
dead, shall live: and everyone that liveth and believeth in
Me shall not die forever” (John 11: 25, 26).
Occido cum sole. | go to rest like the sun, and like the sun
I too shall rise again.
This I believe, this is my sacred conviction, this is my con-
solation, this is my guide in life. God grant that this may be
the reward that J attain. Amen.IV
REASONABLENESS OF BELIEF IN LIFE
EVERLASTING
Tuere is no European country so rich in natural beauty as
Switzerland, the land that abounds in mountains, forests,
glaciers, brooks. Among these natural beauties a prominent
place is taken by the Tamina Gorge, the source and bed of
the Tamina River. One can go right up to the source, deep in
the interior of an immense mountain. Who could say for how
many thousands of years this warm water thundered in the
depths of the mountain until it hollowed out that gigantic
path for itself? There the little rivulet dashes against the
subterranean rocks and some irresistible power draws it
downward, out of the mountain. At the opening in the meun-
tainside a spa has been erected, Bad Pfaffers. Rheumatic in-
valids who can hardly move begin to walk again there. And
when the water has forced its way through this, it at last
reaches the open, the warm sunshine, and, as if reborn, con-
tinues its way toward its mouth, toward the river Rhine.
So it is with human life. Through long decades we live here
on earth; we dash and bruise ourselves against its stones and
rocks and hollow a path for ourselves through the mountain.
Some irresistible power draws us constantly nearer to the
opening, where death’s mysterious spa awaits us. Here we
cast off all earthly heaviness, lay aside material life’s every
support, and soar with fresh impulse in the sunshine of eternal
light on the pinions of eternity toward the eternal God.
3536 LIFE EVERLASTING
The German language expresses this clearly when it says
that death is not an Untergang but an Ubergang, not destruc-
tion but a crossing over; it is not more than when, going from
one room into another, we step across the threshold. Death
is the crossing of a threshold.
This belief, the belief in a future life, has always been the
common property of mankind. It is plainly proclaimed by
our blessed Lord, as well as by the idea of God. To establish
this truth by sheer logical reasoning is the task that awaits us
in today’s sermon.
Today we shall examine those arguments that prove to the
philosophical man what the races always believed and what
Christianity plainly teaches: there is an immortal soul, there
is life everlasting.
The arguments may be divided into three groups: That
there is a life hereafter, an immortal soul, is proved by man’s
mind, by his will, and by his heart.
1
THE TESTIMONY OF REASON
A. Our lives have an object only if there is life everlasting.
1) Everything in the world has some object. That is why a
little child asks continually: Why? Why is this so, papa?
Why is this so, mamma? But do not tell him that it is for no
reason. Because then he will ask: “But if it is for no reason,
then why is it at all?”
St. Francis of Assisi once asked a stone-mason:
“What are you doing, brother?”
The man replied: “I am working all day.”
“And why are you working?”
“In order to earn money.”
“And what do you need money for?”REASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 37
“That I may have bread.”
“And why do you want to have bread?”
“Hal! that is interesting. That I may live.”
“And why do you live?”
Yes, this is the great question, the final question: Why do I
live? What is the object of my life? Everything in the world
has an object. Could only man have none? In me every mus-
cle, nerve, vein, sinew, molecule has its important object.
Could only the whole have none? So I must have some object,
must J not? Then what is my object?
2) If there is no world to come, my object is evidently here
on earth. But what is this object? What is the purpose of my
life?
Perhaps to gain wealth? Now is that a worthy object for a
clever man? Why, however much I earned, I must leave ev-
erything to my heirs, “the laughing heirs,” as one often hears
them called. And can everyone be wealthy? No indeed. Then
why have those lived who could not become rich? Those
who have attained their object are at peace; but have those
who are wealthy no more desires? Ah, nonsense. They are
never at peace. Certainly wealth cannot be the purpose of
life.
Then perhaps it is pleasure and enjoyment? No, it cannot
be these, because then the greater number of men would never
attain their object, so little enjoyment and pleasure is vouch-
safed them. And the nearer a being comes to his object the
more perfect does he become; but does man become more
perfect the more pleasures he enjoys? On the contrary: he be-
comes so much the more dissatisfied, iff-humored, disspirited.
Then what is man’s object? Perhaps to acquire honor and
a great name for himself?
O yes, this would be a finer thought than the preceding
ones, but it is still not sufficient. How would all those nameless38 LIFE EVERLASTING
millions attain their object, who, unknown and unsung,
quietly do their duty all their lives?
But then what is the object of life? To struggle for sixty,
seventy, cighty years and then to disappear, leaving no trace?
Can man’s reason accept and submit to this? I cast a stone
into the water: rings are formed, then everything becomes
calm and the water is smooth again. If the stone is a large one,
the ripples last for a longer time, but then it also becomes
smooth. Can you bear the thought that human life is nothing
more than this?
When man, thus tormented, seeks the purpose of life, but
finds it nowhere on earth, he raises his eyes beyond earthly
things and at once everything becomes clear to him. It is
natural that I do not find my purpose on earth. Why? Be-
cause God did not create me for this world. This earthly life
is but a preface to the book of eternity. In death the body dis-
integrates, the outer covering falls off; and the undying, eter-
nally living soul remains.
B. But is this possible? Is it possible that we live even after
the death of the body?
Christianity’s great philosopher and scholar, St. Augustine,
relates a Carthaginian doctor’s remarkable dream. Genadius
—this was the doctor’s name—had doubts as to how man
could continue to live after the death of the body. In a dream,
a radiant youth appeared to him and said:
“Genadius, are you now asleep or awake?”
“I am asleep,” replied the doctor.
“Do you see me?” inquired the youth.
“Yes, I see you.”
“With what do you see? With your bodily eyes?”
“No, not with them, they are closed. I do not know with
what I see you.”REASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 39
But the youth continued to question him: “Genadius, do
you hear me?”
“Yes.”
“With what do you hear? With your ears?”
“No, not with them. I do not know with what I hear.”
And again the youth asked. “Genadius, are you now speak-
ing to me?”
“Yes, Iam.”
“With what do you speak? With your lips?”
“No, not with them, I do not know with what I speak.”
“Now you see,” said the angel, “your senses are at rest, yet
you see, hear, and speak. And when the hour comes that your
senses will rest forever, that is, when you die, then too you will
continue to see, to hear, to speak, and to feel.”
C. Continuing this thought, we perceive that a new form
of life awaits not only our souls in the hereafter, but that not
even our bodies are finally destroyed ; they too will rise again.
The body dies, it is true, but it does not remain dust forever.
1) Were it to remain dust, then the Almighty’s most beau-
tiful thought would remain incomplete. Is the human body
not worthy to be raised from death by the Creator? Among
all created material things, the human body is the Creator’s
most beautiful work. The May sunshine is glorious; but can
it be so radiant as the tender smile of a human being? Dawn
in spring is beautiful; but is not the angelic glance of a pure-
souled youth more beautiful? The starry sky enchants us;
but what is it compared to the clear eyes of a child? Birds trill
delightfully; but what is that compared to the voice of man?
How beautiful man must have been when he left his Maker’s
hands and still radiated his likeness to God, how beautiful he
must have been, if even now, defiled by sin, he so greatly sur-
passes everything around him!40 LIFE EVERLASTING
2) Now tell me: is it credible that God allows this work of
His to be annihilated for all time? The stars have been shin-
ing for thousands of years, and their brilliance has not ex-
pired. How many thousand springtimes the earth has already
seen, and its fertility is not exhausted. Wells bubble, valleys
blossom, mountains tower aloft, everything lives on. Can only
man’s fate be a few brief years and then the grave, silence, and
a crumbling to dust?
Should even man’s own works outlive him? Here around
us stand the old houses of this city. They were built, some of
them, a hundred years ago, and still stand. But where are
their builders? In our public squares we sce statues that were
made decades ago. They stand, and those who carved them
died long ago. But are those sculptors annihilated? A man
paints his own portrait. Does this copy live longer than the
original, who was created by almighty God Himself? No. I
cannot believe this.
3) Rather do I think, if I may use a comparison, that as the
insect creeping in the dust winds itself into its cocoon, enclos-
ing itself in a motionless tomb, afterward to emerge with new
strength in a beautiful new body, and the gaudy butterfly then
no longer descends to the dust, but alights only on flowers,
so the heavy, awkward, sick body made of dust first descends
to the grave, but afterward loses all heaviness, and when it
rises it is noble, spiritual, it can no longer suffer, and it is more
radiant than the stars of heaven.
Yes, there is a great difference between the man moldering
in the grave and the man who lives eternally. But is there not
a great difference between the chrysalis lying motionless in
its cocoon and the gaily colored butterfly? Yet the butterfly
was once a motionless chrysalis.
“There will be no resurrection because we cannot under-
stand how the next life would be,” say doubters. But do youREASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 4r
understand how this first life came to be? Who understands
this? And if God was able to give life that had not been, can
He not give back that which had once already been?
Truly, the reality of life everlasting is proved by man’s rea-
soning mind. But it is also proved by man’s will.
I
THE TESTIMONY OF MAN’S WILL
A. With an elemental urge we long for justice. This is so
deeply rooted in our natures that even a four-year-old child
becomes sad, without knowing why, when it hears of the
unjust suffering that Cinderella had to endure from her
wicked stepmother.
1) But where is justice to be found on this earth? On all
sides we see honor trampled upon and evil triumphant. Yet
we cannot bear the thought that evil triumphs over good.
Earthly life is filled with discord, but we feel that somewhere
things will be equalized. No dramatist would venture to end.
his play with the triumph of evil. The spectators would say,
and rightly: “The play is not finished.” In modern music
there is dissonance, but at last every dissonance must dissolve
into harmony.
2) But life must not end with the triumph of sin. Can de-
ception triumph? Can wickedness triumph? Can evil tri-
umph? Can he who tramples God’s laws underfoot triumph?
Yet if there is no hereafter, the wicked triumph. If there is no
hereafter, then however people have spent their lives, their
fate is the same: to molder in the grave. But who can bear this
thought?
A sister of mercy is dying. Her whole life has been an un-
ceasing sacrifice of love toward her fellow men. Now she is
dying of the typhoid fever contracted while nursing typhoid42 LIFE EVERLASTING
patients. And an old voluptuary is dying too, who has wal-
lowed in sin all his life and is now dying impenitent after the
most dreadful dissipation. Can the same fate await both of
them? Can anyone in sober sense bear this thought?
B. The longing for eternal life is so deeply rooted in men’s
souls that not even the foes of Christianity can free themselves
from it. History abounds with examples of how the defiant
voice of the atheists is stilled in moments of mortal danger.
When cholera raged in France in the year 1835, even the
so-called “enlightened” freethinkers walked barefoot in the
streets of Paris with lighted candles in their hands, beating
their breasts and praying: Parce, Domine! (“Have mercy,
Lord!”),
And did not the monster of the French Revolution, Camille
Desmoulins, write to his wife before being led to execution:
“Not concerned with my torments, I believe that God exists.
Lucille, we shall meet again.”
mH
‘THE TESTIMONY OF MAN’S HEART
What we conclude from the functions of mind and will by
mere human reasoning—life everlasting beyond the grave—
must also be inferred from the different manifestations of
the human heart.
A. The human heart yearns with elemental force for hap-
piness. We are thus created: we long to be happy. Do you not
hear the unceasing cry of millions for happiness? Do you not
see the restless striving of millions to attain happiness?
1) But where on this earth is happiness? Where can you
find complete, imperishable, undisturbed happiness? Man
seeks happiness, turning night into day with self-sacrificing
work, as the ancients sought “the philosopher’s stone”; andREASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 4B
man does not succeed in finding it, just as they did not suc-
ceed,
We need complete happiness. Give every earthly treasure
to man; for a day he is happy, but then he asks: “Is that all?”
Even Alexander the Great, at the very zenith of his triumphs,
began to weep as he said: “There are still the stars. Those I
cannot add to my conquests.”
And we need imperishable happiness. The happier man is,
the more dreadful is the thought: This is transient, everything
is transient.
2) If there is no hereafter, God is but playing with us. He
has planted a desire in us, the desire for happiness, which we
can never attain. Why has God given us this consuming long-
ing for perfect justice, for imperishable happiness, if this
longing is never to be gratified?
If the natives of mountainous districts come to the plains,
they feel a homesickness for the snowy heights where they
were born. Thus, too, our souls respond to all that is beauti-
ful, good, and true, because their true home is another realm
where perfect Beauty, Goodness, and Truth are enthroned.
3) “With death everything is at an end. Life is at an end,
all happiness is at an end.” These words are easily said. But
try to believe it when you stand at the deathbed of your be-
loved wife or your precious child, Try to believe it at the
funeral of your mother.
Maternal love. There is no word on earth that rings more
warmly, no more trustworthy, blessed loyalty. Never, never
could J believe that when her dear earthly remains were low-
ered into the grave, I lost my mother forever. Lost the love
with which she nursed me in my infancy, which accompanied
me when I became a grown man? Lost forever? No. This I
will never believe.
B. But man longs not only for happiness, but also for jus-44 LIFE EVERLASTING
tice. Since the first man gazed up questioningly, searchingly
at the stars, an unappeasable thirst for truth beset the human
race.
1) But how much truth do we find on this earth? What
tiny grains of it! What fragments of it! What is it then in us
that thirsts so longingly for complete truth? Where shall we
find this, if not in that realm which Newman refers to in his
epitaph: Ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem (“From shad-
ows and symbols he passed to the realm of truth”).
Man always feels his imperfection, always seeks something
better, something greater. We are travelers; somewhere a
destination awaits us.
Man seeks life. But we possess life. Ah, nonsense! What we
possess here on earth is only a tiny crumb of life, only a
shadow of life. A bud not yet unfolded. A drop of nectar for
whose source we yearn.
2) Human life here on earth is never consummated, we
never finish with ourselves. Therefore there must be another
life, a life of consummation, of perfection. How affecting is
the confession of that genius, Michelangelo who, after ninety
years spent in creating the most beautiful works of art, said
two days before his death: “I regret only two things: that I
did not care more for the salvation of my soul and that I must
die just when I am beginning to stammer the first words of
my art.”
Or there are Victor Hugo’s words: “I draw nearer and
nearer to my end and hear around me ever more clearly the
deathless symphony of the worlds that call to me. It is such a
wonderful and simple thing! For half a century I have written
down my thoughts in prose and poem. I have tried every-
thing, but I feel that I have not said a thousandth part of what
lives within me.”REASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 45
You know perhaps the legend of the mother whose son
was deaf and dumb. The boy died without having been able
even once to speak his mother’s name. The woman lived for
many long years, silently bearing the grief in her aching
heart. She became old and died. And see, at the gates of
heaven her son met her with the joyful cry of: “Mother! My
own dear Mother!”
Always, with instinctive certainty, mankind has felt that
there must be a place where our noblest desires are realized,
the desires that dwell within us but are never realized here
on earth.
3) But is this eternal longing within us only vain imagin-
ing? Does this instinctive feeling of ours delude us?
With the first cold autumn wind, the swallows become
restless, An irresistible instinct drives them toward the south
where they find warm nests and a certainty of food, when
here with us the chill of winter covers the earth and the insects
hide away. The little swallow hatched here this season, which
has never yet seen a winter, goes too. The swallow hatched in
a cage that has never had to seck its food, becomes restless and,
if we free it, it goes away too. Whither do they fly? Far away,
toa southern world, that they have never seen, that they have
never heard of. What takes them? Natural science says they
are impelled by instinct.
Well and good. Nature has given them this instinct. And
if they were deceived? If no warmth awaited them down
south, but icy cold and death? Would this instinct have any
meaning? No. Nature would have deceived them. But nature
is not in the habit of deceiving her creatures. If the swallow
could think, it would say: “It is quite certain that there is
another world, for my instinct says there is.”
The swallow cannot think. However, I can and I say:46 LIFE EVERLASTING
“There must be a hereafter, because my reason, my will, and
my heart all say that this life has a continuation, a consumma-
tion; there is life everlasting.”
My dear brethren. Deep thinkers feel as though they were
walking in shadow here on earth: everything is only a be-
ginning, everything is half-accomplished work, always some
dissatisfaction drives them. They feel that there should be a
place where the sunshine is perfect and where the song that
we sing will be perfect, as in the story of the violinist.
There once lived a violinist who determined to learn to
play the most beautiful melody to be found on earth. He often
went to the forest to hear the song of birds. Then of a sudden
he was able to play so charmingly that people thought they
heard the lark and the nightingale singing. It was beautiful,
but for our violinist it was not beautiful enough.
So he sought the soft zephyr and listened to its tender mel-
ody. He stood in the raging storm and listened to its wild
roaring. And he learned this too. His violin sang like a softly
murmuring breeze among the leaves, then thundered like the
storm that bends great oaks at its will. It was sublime: but for
our violinist it was not yet beautiful enough.
‘Then he observed the waters and with his violin he imitated
the frenzy of mountain torrents, the thundering of the surf,
the rippling murmur of some purling little brook. It was
beautiful; but our violinist was still dissatisfied.
Then he went among men. He played all the joyous songs
of youth, lively dances, and mournful melodies; he played
religious tunes too. Now and again his heart beat quicker at
an air welling up from the depths of the human soul. But the
most beautiful song, the song that he had restlessly longed for
all his life, he still could not find.
Meanwhile he had become gray, old, and sick unto death.
As he lay awaiting his last hour, see, suddenly from a greatREASONABLENESS OF OUR BELIEF 47
distance wonderful music fell upon his car. That is it! That
is the song he sought all his life: the most beautiful, the most
sublime song. Gathering together the last remnants of his
strength, he seizes his violin, his hand shakes, his fingers
tremble, yet he plays the song, the most beautiful song sought
for and presaged all his life. And as he ended the last note of
the song, all four strings of his violin snapped, and he fell
back on his pillows—dead.
He found the most beautiful song in God’s eternal king-
dom. Amen.Vv
THE FRUIT OF BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING
In grape-growing districts a strange thing is spoken of by
the vinedressers. They say that in spring, when the force of
new life rises in the branches and the vines begin to sprout,
the wine in the depths of the cellars becomes disturbed, fo-
menting and seething in the casks as if some mysterious con-
nection existed between it and the vine from which it came;
it is as though the wine rejoiced that new life is sprouting in
the vine on which its grapes once grew.
Perhaps the whole thing is only imagination. No imagina-
tion, however, but sacred fact is the truth that, as often as our
souls turn in thought to the eternal home where they will
some day return, a restless holy joy fills us. We feel the urge
and encouragement that earthly life receives from the thought
of life everlasting.
Of course I am thinking of those who are consistent to their
principles, whose whole manner of life shows that they be-
lieve in eternal life. Because, regrettably enough, some who
accept this theoretically and even avow belief in life everlast-
ing, do not accept it in their hearts. We see just as little of it
in their lives as in the lives of those who are altogether un-
believing.
We sometimes say that a certain matter “must be taken to
heart.” By this expression we mean not only that a truth must
be believed and understood by the mind, but that it must also
be accepted in the heart, that is, we must accept it so that it
48‘THE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 49
permeates our entire being and directs our thoughts, our feel-
ings, and our wills. Today I wish to bring the truth of life
everlasting to your hearts and point out that belief in life ever-
lasting gives an impulse to life, strength in temptation, and
courage in suffering.
I
SPIRITUAL POWER
The earthly existence of a person who does not believe in
life everlasting may be compared to a bridge that has col-
lapsed part way across the river and does not reach the oppo-
site bank. On the other hand, a believer gains wings with
this belief, wings that enable him to rise to heights unattain-
able by unbelievers. A certain sociologist says that belief in
the immortality of the soul is “the greatest cultural factor in
all history” because this belief gives a purpose to man’s life
and thus completely transforms his life.
A. Christianity’s importance and value, its sublime im-
pulse, its splendid activity, spring from the belief in life ever-
lasting. This is the goal that we must attain.
1) Those who do not live the religious life of an earnest
believer have no idea what a source of spiritual endeavor is
derived from belief in life everlasting. Believers fervently
pray for this and strive for it. With this end in view, they
practice much self-denial and perform many good deeds.
This is the reason for the sacraments and various devo-
tional practices, for sacrifice and renunciation, fasting and
self-discipline, churches, reason for the unceasing conflict
with our sinful natures. This is the reason for the serious ac-
ceptance of our Lord’s words: “Strive to enter by the narrow
gate, for many, I say to you, shall seck to enter, and shall not
be able” (Luke 13: 24).50 LIFE EVERLASTING
2) We sometimes hear the reproach that Christianity
lowers the value of earthly life because it always speaks of the
life hereafter, of the world to come. The very opposite is true:
belief in life everlasting increases the value of earthly life.
Since eternal life depends wholly on a well spent earthly
life, the value of earthly life grows to gigantic proportions.
From belief in life eternal springs our love of work. This is
apparently a contradiction. Yet the wearing, monotonous
work of everyday life, upon which all human culture has
been erected and on which it depends, can be accomplished
only by a humanity on whom its belief has impressed a sense
of duty, a feeling that, by fidelity to the tasks of carthly life,
life everlasting is to be gained.
3) Again, only belief in life everlasting keeps the instinc-
tive desire for earthly work and carthly wealth within right-
ful bounds. Whoever does not believe in the continuation of
earthly life naturally scrapes together money and treasures
with all his ten fingers, not allowing another to enjoy any-
thing of his possessions, trampling upon everyone in this pur-
suit of greed. Whereas he in whom belief in life everlasting
is a guiding principle regards earthly life as something tran-
sient and does not concentrate all his desires and labors on
such fleeting things.
Whatever the world gives to such a man, it is not enough
for him. He wants eternal happiness, eternal life. His ideal is
St. Philip Neri who, when told that the pope intended to
make him a cardinal, threw his hat into the air and cried out:
“Paradise is what I want, not the purple.”
For such a man, the sort of “eternal” life proclaimed by
unbelief is not sufficient: “Your atoms will circulate eternally
in the cosmic void because nothing is ever lost”; “your
thoughts continue to work”; “you will be honored by a splen-THE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 51
did statue.” This is not sufficient for me. If I am dead, do not
write my biography in dead letters, on dead paper; do sot
carve any statue of me that a facsimile of my figure may stand
in dead stone or cold bronze silently and blindly by the way-
side. I need life after death, real life, life everlasting. He who
created me for earthly life, shall now give me new life, but
more beautiful, happier, life that never ends. This is the
stupendous goal before which belief in life everlasting
places me.
B. In placing this exalted end before us, Christianity trans-
forms our whole earthly life.
1) On one occasion the Greek philosopher Zeno asked the
oracle what he must do to live a virtuous life. The answer was
merely these few words: “Ask the dead.”
Those who are accustomed to ask the dead—which in
Christian language means that they are in the habit of think-
ing of the next life—will view earthly life and all its happen-
ings in quite another light. Sub specie aeternitatis (“from the
viewpoint of eternity”); they will weigh everything against
the thought of eternal life, their every project, thought, desire,
will be imbued with the breath of eternity, ennobling and
refining them.
In life they will strive to keep God’s laws and the laws of
the Church, because they know that everything—attendance
at mass, the use of the sacraments, prayer, fasting, self-disci-
plinc—all serve this eternal life.
They also work hard for a livelihood, for advancement in
their earthly career, but in every endeavor the Lord’s words
are before them: “What doth it profit a man if he gain the
whole world and suffer the loss of his own soul?” (Matt.
16: 26.)
They also try to secure a respectable livelihood. But in face52 LIFE EVERLASTING
of temptation to acquire wealth by unjust means, they remem-
ber the Lord’s words: “Thou fool. This night do they require
thy soul of thee, and whose shall those things be which thou
hast provided?” (Luke 12: 20.)
In a word, those who seriously consider life everlasting,
who not only believe in it but also take it to heart, will judge
earthly life from the standpoint of eternity and will live it
accordingly. They will stand firmly on the earth, because
they must live here; but their hearts will beat heavenward,
their heads will be uplifted to the stars.
2) Some wonder whether life everlasting is worth so much
toil, so much self-denial.
A thousand times more. For what is life everlasting? We
use phrases whose meaning we never fully grasp. Per omnia
saecula saeculorum, we pray. But no one can fully under-
stand what this means. Here on earth we are enclosed in space,
time, matter, but the next life has no space, no time, no mat-
ter, there time is not composed of minutes and hours. There
is no past and future, only present. There is no yesterday and
tomorrow, only today. There is no morning and evening,
only noon. There the ocean has no shore, there a line has no
end. That is, we cannot measure eternity with a line, but
rather with a circle, because a line, however much prolonged,
has an end somewhere, but a circle has no end anywhere,
every part of it is both the beginning and the end.
Here the truth of St. Augustine’s words becomes evident:
“Ye poor, what do you lack if you possess God? Ye rich, what
do you possess if you lack God?”
Here we understand Gardonyi’s words: “If you possess
God, you possess everything; but if you have no God, you do
not possess anything and never will possess anything.”THE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 53
Oo
BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING GIVES STRENGTH IN.
TEMPTATION
Belief in life everlasting not only marks an exalted goal
for earthly life; it is also strength against temptations that
would keep us from our eternal goal.
A. Our Lord so often mentions the serious thought of life
everlasting in order to make us capable of sacrifice.
1) Sacrifice everything to gain life everlasting. This is
Christ’s doctrine and exhortation. Yes, even if one of your
hands or one of your eyes is lost in the struggle. Starvation
and prison, suffering and martyrdom in this world do not
count, if you gain the world to come. This voice cries from
the cross: You fight a life and death struggle: here you must
not fall.
That this life everlasting is no lottery prize that falls unex-
pectedly into our hands, but must be won by contending he-
roically all our lives, is a matter of course. “Fight the good
fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life; keep the command-
ment without spot” (I Tim. 6: 12, 14), writes St. Paul to
Timothy.
2) Keep the commandment, for to be good is so beautiful
and tranquillizing. Sometimes this reasoning is sufficient. But,
alas, sometimes temptation assails us so mightily that noth-
ing helps us to withstand it except the belief in life everlast-
ing, the fear that we may spoil forever our lives hereafter.
A father was loudly disputing with some friends, saying
that he did not believe in heaven and in hell. His wife, point-
ing to their little girl playing in a corner of the room, whis-
pered:
“Do not talk like that before the child.”
The father waved her aside: “She does not understand54 LIFE EVERLASTING
what I am talking about.” Then he turned to the child saying:
“Do you understand what papa is saying?”
The child’s eyes shone triumphantly as she said proudly:
“Yes,”
“Well, what did I say?”
“That nobody needs to be good.”
How right the child was! What restrains, if anything at all
restrains our youth from dissipation, from dishonorable deeds,
except the thought of life everlasting? And those who sin and
begin to slip downhill, what do they forsake first? Belief in
life everlasting. What gives a person strength to perform his
duty when others neglect theirs? What gives strength for the
struggle to preserve our moral integrity in poverty, when by
merely closing our eyes to one or two little things we might
achieve success at once in this world ? What gives strength for
honest work when we might go farther with deception? Be-
lief in life everlasting.
B. Life everlasting is a powerful warning in times of temp-
tation.
1) When St. Paul was a prisoner in Caesarea, the Roman
governor Felix brought the Apostle before him to question
him. All the power of the Roman Empire was behind Felix.
Before him stood the prisoner in chains, between armed
soldiers. Yet Holy Writ notes that when St. Paul began to
preach to him of justice and chastity and of the judgment to
come, Felix was terrified (Acts 24: 25). Belief in a life beyond
the grave, the thought of a reckoning to be made, may well
terrify not only the Roman governor, but everyone else.
2) If only we were to think of this often! Especially when
alluring temptations assail us.
A certain chief of police in Paris had an interesting method
in his campaign against the noise made in the streets by in-
toxicated persons. He simply had a film made of them, andTHE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 55
showed it to them when they had become sober. The effect
was amazing. In a sober state they were utterly ashamed of the
foolish actions and coarse language they had used while in-
toxicated.
An immense film runs round the world, God's all-embrac-
ing knowledge. On this film appear our every word, every
deed, every desire, every plan, every secret. Alas, what a dis-
grace it will be when this film is produced on judgment day,
when by the glow of cternal light we shall sce in our sober
senses what we foolishly committed in the intoxication of
earthly life!
3) Iam sorry to say that people do not like to think of this.
They are engrossed by earthly cares. On the day of judgment
they will fare as a famous historian fared who was exploring
the country of the Nile. While crossing the river, he began
talking to the boatman.
“Are you acquainted with the Sanscrit language?” he asked.
“No, sir,” answered the boatman.
“Can you recognize the stars?”
“No, sir.”
“Do you know anything of the history of this earth?”
“T do not, sir.”
“Man!” cried the scholar; “you have lost half your life.”
Suddenly a great storm of wind arose, and the boisterous
waves upset the boat.
“Sir,” shouted the boatman; “do you know how to swim?”
“T do not.”
“Then you have lost your whole life, sir.”
The boatman reached the shore with difficulty, but the
scholar was drowned.
Many people are interested in various things here on earth,
in many things, but not in life everlasting. Many superfluous
things they acquire in their lives, but they do not sce to it that56 LIFE EVERLASTING
they know how to swim when the storm of the last judgment
breaks.
mt
BELIEF IN LIFE EVERLASTING IS ENCOURAGEMENT IN
SUFFERING
Belief in life everlasting gives us courage in suffering. How-
ever human life is perfected here on earth, suffering will
always be the lot of man: calamities of nature, privation, ill-
ness, pain, and there will always be death.
If the grave is the last act in life, then life is a great tragedy.
But what suffering, catastrophe, disaster, affliction I can bear
if I believe in life everlasting!
A. “T believe in life everlasting.” What a source of strength
this belief is in the struggle of life! What endurance in suffer-
ing! Have you ever noticed the blind? Their faces are always
turned upward. If this world is dark about me, the next world
gives me light.
In time of suffering the greatest men have derived strength
from their belief in life everlasting. Thus it was with those
two luminaries of human genius, St. Augustine and Dante,
when their souls were assailed by gnawing pangs of suffering.
Do you know what strengthened these two stupendous in-
tellects for battle? Flaming love for the eternal home, the fiery
vision of life everlasting, the power of the thought of life here-
after that superseded every other thought and desire.
So it was with Sir Thomas More, the great English chan-
cellor, when he refused to approve the divorce of Henry VIIL
and consequently was deprived of his high office and was sent
to the Tower. Neither promise nor threat could shake him.
Finally his wife and weeping children visited him in prison.
Throwing herself on her knees, his wife implored him:THE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 57
“Think how long we could live happily together. Why will
you die so young?”
“How long might we expect to live?” More asked.
“For twenty years at least,” replied his wife.
“Twenty years. For the sake of twenty years shall I give up
my eternal life, my eternal happiness?”
And after seventeen months of imprisonment, he cou-
ragcously laid his head upon the executioner’s block on July 6,
1535.
Belief in life everlasting gives courage in suffering.
B. But only if this belief is truly living in me. The inspired
word says: “Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth
before the time of affliction come .. . and the dust return
into its earth from whence it was, and the spirit return to
God who gave it” (Eccles. 12: 1, 7).
St. Paul says: “We have not here a lasting city, but we seek
one that is to come” (Heb. 13: 14). Brethren, do you believe
this?
St. Paul underwent great and many sufferings. Yet he is
almost beside himself with joy and can hardly find words in
his enthusiasm when he thinks of the resurrection: “One is
the glory of the sun, another the glory of the moon, and an-
other the glory of the stars. For star differeth from star in
glory. So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in
corruption, it shall rise in incorruption. It is sown in dishonor,
it shall rise in glory. It is sown in weakness, it shall rise in
power. It is sown a natural body, it shall rise a spiritual body”
(I Cor. 15: 41-44).
Tell me, do you believe this? In the midst of suffering can
you comfort yourself with such joyful certainty as St. Paul
comforted himself with? “We faint not. . . . For that which
is at present momentary and light of our tribulation, worketh
for us above measure exceedingly an eternal weight of glory”58 LIFE EVERLASTING
(II Cor. 4: 16, 17). “For we know, if our earthly house of this
habitation be dissolved, that we have a building of God, a
house not made with hands, eternal in heaven” (II Cor. 5: 1).
But tell me, brethren, do you believe this? Do you believe it,
not only “perhaps,” “eventually,” “it may be,” “it would be
beautiful if it were so”? No. But do you believe it so that your
whole life, your every plan and desire, are permeated and di-
rected by this belief?
Newton, the renowned scientist, was once asked this ques-
tion: “Man’s body becomes dust. If the resurrection really
takes place, who will collect the millions and millions of dis-
persed grains of dust to make a new body for the soul?”
Newton did not reply. He seized a handful of iron filings,
mixed them with sand and then asked: “Who will collect
these dispersed filings again?” And when no one could an-
swer him, he seized a magnet and held it above the mixture.
At once a stir and motion began in the sand, and the tiny
particles of iron flew to the magnet and clung to it. The
master then said earnestly: “Can He who gave this power to
dead matter not give still greater power to our souls when,
from the glorified dust, they will have need of garments?”
This I believe. And this belief of mine is the object of my
life, strength in temptation, and encouragement in all suffer-
ing.
My dear brethren. You know the splendid courage of Chris-
topher Columbus which enabled him to start out to find a
new continent never before seen or discovered by anyone.
Novum desidero mundum, he cried, “I seek a new world.”
And however much his companions grumbled, however
little faith they possessed, whatever difficulties he had to
contend with, he persevered. He persevered until he landed
at that other shore that he had never seen.
We do not see the next world, at least not with our bodilyTHE FRUIT OF OUR BELIEF 59
eyes. But we see it with the eyes of faith and seize upon it
with the power of our mind.
We see it with the eyes of faith. One might say there is
no gesture of our Lord that does not point to this world to
come. One might say our Lord has no word that does not pos-
sess this keynote: Seek, before all else and above all else, at
whatever sacrifice, this life hereafter.
And we capture it with the power of our mind. If God
exists, there must be life everlasting before His throne. If God
indeed exists, there must be a place where every hidden act of
goodness receives its reward, but also every sin its punish-
ment. If God exists, there must be a place where the longing
that dwells in everyone is satisfied, the longing for perfect
happiness and justice.
O blessed belief in life everlasting! To what stupendous
heights it exalts us, man smitten to the dust by the thought of
perishing! How it animates us! How it consoles us! How it
encourages us!
In the preface of the funeral mass we find these beautiful
words: “We give thanks to Thee, O holy Lord, Father al-
mighty, everlasting God: through Christ our Lord. In whom
the hope of a blessed resurrection hath shone upon us; that
those whom the certainty of dying afflicteth, the promise of
future immortality may console. For unto Thy faithful, O
Lord, life is changed, not taken away: and the abode of this
earthly sojourn being dissolved, an eternal dwelling is pre-
pared in heaven.”
I await this eternal dwelling place, I await this life ever-
lasting. Life everlasting, where the reward of my faith will
be knowledge, the reward of my hope possession, and the re-
ward of my love, of my feeble love, will be the reciprocation
and crown of the eternal love of the infinite God. Amen.VI
THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING: DEATH
“T sevieve in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting.”
With these triumphant words our Creed ends. From this be-
lief emanates strength, encouragement, and consolation for
us in our spiritual life. Belief in life everlasting gives a pur-
pose to our lives, strength in temptation, and consolation in
suffering. Besides all these blessed fruits produced by our be-
lief in life everlasting, is another fruit, the solution of the
problem of death.
Death is mankind’s most torturing problem. However
greatly we have loved another, however firmly we have clung
to another, however closely related we have been, death in-
evitably comes and at the grave speaks to us in hard tones:
“Now you must say farewell: you must part.”
Belief in life everlasting, however, consoles us, and it alone
consoles us, in this grief. Belief in life everlasting can give an
answer, and it alone can give an answer, to this most painful
question. Belief in life everlasting solves the problem of
death.
On the face of death I wish to project the light of life ever-
lasting.
I
THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING IS DEATH
A. Everyone must pass through the gate of death.
1) Ezechias, the king of the Jews, lay scriously ill when
60THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING 6x
Tsaias went to him and told him the Lord’s message: “Thus
saith the Lord God: Give charge concerning thy house, for
thou shalt die and not live” (IV Kings, 20: 1).
“Thou shalt dic.” When these words fell from the prophet’s
lips, the king’s soul shuddered. He turned his face to the wall
and began to pray: “I beseech Thee, O Lord, remember how
I have walked before Thee in truth and with a perfect heart
and have done that which is pleasing before Thee (IV Kings,
20:3). Thus the terrified king prayed and broke into bitter
weeping.
“Thou shalt die,” were the prophet’s words. Who among
us would not start weeping if he heard this? “Die? No. I do
not want to die. I want to live.” Would we not all say this?
2) Yes, man wants to live. Even in ancient times men tried
their best to overcome disease. And when death triumphed
after all, at least they built pyramids as sepulchers, marble
tombstones, memorials, obelisks, epitaphs. But men longed
to live; yet they died.
An Arabian proverb says: “If the house is finished one
must die.” So the Arab never completely finishes his house,
yet he dies.
In Chicago, a convention of undertakers decided not to
paint coffins black any more, but rather all the colors of the
rainbow, in order to soften the depressing effect of funerals;
yet people die there, too.
Once upon a time it was said that all roads lead to Rome.
Yet in very truth we can rightly say that all roads lead to
death. Nothing else is so certain as death. In German, if you
wish to declare that something is quite certain, you say, Tod-
sicher, “as certain as death.”
“Vanity of vanities, said Ecclesiastes, vanity of vanities, and
all is vanity. What hath a man more of all his labor that he
taketh under the sun?” (Eccles. 1:2,. 3.) “I have seen all62 LIFE EVERLASTING
things that are done under the sun, and behold all is vanity
and vexation of spirit” (Eccles. 1: 14). “Whatsoever my eyes
desired, I refused them not; and I withheld not my heart
from enjoying every pleasure.” “And when I turned myself
to all the works which my hands had wrought, and of the
labors wherein I had labored in vain, I saw in all things
vanity, and vexation of mind, and that nothing was lasting
under the sun” (Eccles. 2: 10, 11).
Bocklin has painted an instructive picture of “the four ages
of life.” In the foreground a meadow is scen with a purling
brook and two little children playing on its bank. In the
center to the right a young woman stands with a bunch of
fresh flowers in her hand. To the left a knight with courageous
expression starts out upon his steed to battle with life. In the
background on a little hill rising above a cave, sits a weary old
man with bent back; leaning upon his stick he gazes into the
distance: thus he awaits death who approaches unperceived
from behind. From the cave a stream of water flows cease-
lessly, the symbol of eternally fleeting time, and above the cave
this inscription is seen: Vita somnium breve, “Life is a brief
dream.”
It is indeed a brief dream. The psalmist says to God: “A
thousand years in Thy sight are as yesterday which is past,
and as a watch in the night. Things that are counted nothing,
shall their years be. In the morning man shall grow up
like grass, in the morning he shall flourish and pass away; in
the evening he shall fall, grow dry and wither” (Ps. 89: 4-6).
Life is a brief dream. From every dream one must awake.
Death is an awaking from the earthly dream to the reality of
life everlasting.
B. Through the gate of death everyone must pass, for “it
is appointed unto men once to die” (Heb. 9: 27), says Holy
Writ.THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING 63
1) Gerard Kempis, brother of Thomas, built himself a
beautiful palace and invited his friends to come and admire
it. Everyone praised the house, only one had some objection
to make.
“Your palace is beautiful,” he said; “but I should like to
give you a piece of advice.”
“And what is that?” asked his host.
“Wall up one door.”
“Which one?”
“The one through which you will some day be carried to
the cemetery.”
But this door cannot be walled up.
Death is not merely an unpleasant guest whom we cannot
get rid of. He is a member of the family, he belongs in the
home, and knows no mercy with either young or old.
The hotels at some Italian health resorts display this proud
inscription: Qué si sana, “here health is regained.” Of course,
some invalids do recover their health. But no sanatorium in
the world would dare display this declaration: “Here people
do not die.” Such a sanatorium is not to be found.
2) Who does not shudder when in some cemetery he sur-
veys death’s dominion? How much pomp, how much power,
how much prosperity and splendor lie buried beneath the
silent tombstones, that seem to remind us of Holy Writ’s
warning: “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity” (Eccles. 1:2).
3) Death is no respecter of persons, he is not biased in any-
one’s favor. Whom death will take and when, is God’s secret,
the secret we human beings will never solve.
There are thousands for whom death would be a release,
thousands whose death would be a relief for those about them,
and they live, live on for many years. Others, who seem to be
needed by their family, others who could do so much good,
who could labor so much for the Church of God—these must64 LIFE EVERLASTING
go. Whocan understand this? Only he who reads God’s words
in Holy Writ: “My thoughts are not your thoughts nor your
ways My ways” (Is. 55:8). “It is appointed unto men once
to die” (Heb. 9: 27). Therefore nothing is so certain in life
as that we must die.
C. Since this is so, if we think in a serious Christian way
we do well to become familiar with the thought and carnestly
to prepare our souls for that tremendous hour.
1) The Christian way is often to ask the question: When
will death come for me? On which day? In what guise?
Slyly, like a thief? Will it fall upon me like a robber? At
home? Or at the street corner? I do not know. Therefore I
must always be prepared; my soul must be set in order. Death
may come at any time.
Every day approximately 120,000 people die, every day 120,-
ooo verdicts are passed. Among these are all kinds of men:
counts, dukes, streetcleaners, stonebreakers, gipsies, all come
to judgment. Now and again comes a king, a bishop, a pope.
But they no longer bear any mark of distinction, there is no
crown upon their heads, no papal tiara, no purple on their
shoulders, no ermine, no evening clothes, no dinner-jacket;
nothing but the snow-white robe of sanctifying grace. This
is the Court dress of the heavenly kingdom.
To those who wear this “wedding garment” (Matt. 22: 12),
no matter what they were in carthly life, the gates of God’s
kingdom are opened wide. Those who are without it, no
matter how many decorations were carried on velvet cushions
in their funeral processions, cannot escape the verdict. For we
do not take anything with us there, no medals, automobiles,
estates, checkbooks, nothing but our own inner values. What
we had, we cannot take with us, only what we were. This is
the Christian way of growing familiar with death.
2) The Jews of the Old Testament, according to the testi-THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING 65
mony of Deuteronomy, had to go three times annually to the
holy place appointed, and the sacred writer adds the warning:
“No one shal] appear with his hands empty before the Lord”
(Deut. 16: 16). We, too, come before the Lord, but only once,
at the time of our death. Let us not appear with empty hands.
Therefore it is a Christian proceeding to think of death and
accept the scriptural warning: “O that they would be wise
and would understand, and would provide for their last end”
(Deut. 32:29).
Man is a master of self-deception, he can deceive himself in
many ways, but never more fatally, never more painfully,
than when he postpones repentance until the moment of
death. It is almost an impossibility that anyone should be able
to put his soul in order when he is enduring the torments of
a fatal illness, if, when healthy, he never troubled about his
soul at all. It is no wonder that in such cases the words which
the Savior once spoke to His enemies are fulfilled: “I go, and
you shall seek Me and you shall die in your sin” (John 8: 21).
Dear Lord, let not this threat be fulfilled in me. But rather:
“Let my soul die the death of the just, and my last end be
like to them” (Num. 23: 10).
pig
HOW SHALL WE PASS THROUGH THE GATE OF DEATH?
“It is appointed unto men once to die, and after this the
judgment” (Heb. 9:27). What will dying be like, and what
will the judgment afterward be like?
A. What will dying be like?
1) Strictly speaking, earthly life itself is a continuous dying.
A continual struggle against illness, against growing old, and
against death. We are like a bird perched on a branch. Be-
neath it the flood increases, and the bird hops to a higher66 LIFE EVERLASTING
branch. But when it feels that the topmost branch of the tree
will also be flooded and there is no other way of escape, it
spreads its wings and flies away. We, too, lengthen our lives
in every way as long as possible. But when this is no longer
possible, our soul spreads its wings and flies away: this is death.
2) The spiritual fortifying of the dying is one of the Catho-
lic priest’s most difficult, yet at the same time, most moving
duties. The moment when the torch of earthly life prepares
to flicker out is a very affecting one, and I, a priest of Christ,
have to summon all my wisdom, all my love, all my strength
that the soul may be at its clearest when the moment of pass-
ing comes, and may turn wholly to God in its last moments.
When the last tremor has passed through the mortal body,
when the heart has throbbed for the last time and death has
come, a nameless emotion, grief, distress, takes possession of
each of us. Innumerable questions throng our minds: “Your
body lies here dead, but what is happening now to your soul ?
What happened at the moment your soul left your body and
appeared before its Judge? And what was the verdict? Where
are you now? Immensely far away from us or quite near us?
Do you still recognize us? Do you still remember us, your
relatives, your friends? Or have you forgotten everyone and
everything of this world?”
3) What can the moment of death be like? No one knows.
Those who have experienced it can no longer tell us about it.
What is the moment like, when the instinct of preservation
would make a final spasmodic clutch at life, but death inter-
venes. It is as though we had arrived at a dark tunnel; every-
thing grows dim, everything disappears. Have you ever had
the unpleasant dream of falling precipitately downward into
a dark void? Our hands and feet are bound and we cannot
move; we wish to scream, but not a sound escapes our lips,THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING 67
we only fall downward, downward. Will the moment of
death be like that? Who can say?
Have you ever been on the operating table in a hospital ?
An anesthetic is administered. The world begins to disappear.
Our heads seem to grow larger; now it is as though we were
flying, without wings, far far away into the endless distance.
Will the moment of death be like that? Who could say?
Only one who has been through it. But he cannot speak to us
any more.
B. He does not speak to us because he is standing before
the judgment seat of God, and now comes God’s verdict.
1) At the moment of death the world to come is disclosed
to the soul. Bur what will this first glimpse of the immeasur-
able realm of infinite light be like? Perhaps it will be like the
falling of a rose into the sea when its white petals are em-
braced on all sides and rocked by the murmuring waves.
Shall I perhaps in this way be permeated and transformed to
dazzling brilliance amid the billowing ocean of light?
This is the “perpetual light” that we wish for our loved
ones at the time of their burial. Light that is life-giving. Light
that beatifies. Light that beautifies. Light that is the eternally
blissful, infinitely lovely God.
2) And what will the soul see in this light? Before all else
it will see itself: it will recognize itself, its faults, its virtues,
its merits; it will recognize all this with a clear recognition
such as it never attained on earth even by the most careful
examination of conscience. What is its permanent value, how
far has it succeeded in forming the picture of the eternal
God in its soul, for this is the object of earthly life—this it will
see at the moment of death with undimmed clearness.
3) And now, dear brethren, do not let us shrink from the
task: let us imagine our own souls exposed to this penctrating68 LIFE EVERLASTING
light. In it, every past memory, secret longing, hidden wick-
edness, will be disclosed. What we shall feel is called “the
judgment of God.”
Everything will come to mind, everything. The dreams of
childhood, its desires, virtues, and faults. Words, yearnings,
deeds which we thought we had finally forgotten. The years
of our youth will come to mind, and the time of betrothal
and of young married life.
We shall remember every place we have ever been to: the
churches and the places of amusement, the confessionals and
the dance-halls, the Eucharistic altar and the saloon bar.
And we shall remember everyone with whom we ever came
in contact: our parents, our friends, our children, our husband
or wife, our comrades, our accomplices, the flecting acquaint-
ances of frivolous nights, of sinful friendships kept secret. We
will remember those to whom we were a guardian angel,
those whom we led into sin. They did not wish to sin, but we
persuaded them.
And every word, look, thought; everything we have read,
our prayer books, and the indecent magazines, hands clasped
in prayer, and thieving hands—everything will be remem-
bered.
The inexorable radiance of perpetual light will be thrown
upon our thoughts, words, deeds, glances, and our shortcom-
ings, upon men, places and objects; and this we call “the
judgment of God.”
C. But what will happen after the judgment?
The judgment was the work of a moment. Of that moment
when the ideal picture of what we ought to have become dur-
ing our earthly life flashed upon us, and next to it appears our
marred and disfigured life picture, showing us how in reality
we have distorted the divine ideal; this is “the judgment of
God.”THE GATE OF LIFE EVERLASTING 69
The judgment upon those who have not realized anything
of this ideal, upon whose soul God cannot recognize even the
least resemblance to Himself, is final rejection, perdition.
Nevertheless, those upon whose soul glimpses of God’s
features can be found under all the rubble and dust, are not
rejected, but after the improving, restorative work accom-
plished by purgatorial fire, God reccives them into His eternal
kingdom.
And if anyone dies who, through grace and his own co-
operation, has made reparation here on earth for all his frailty
and faults, that is, on his soul shines the resemblance to the
divine ideal, in that moment he penetrates the beatifying per-
petual light, God’s eternal bliss, that we call heaven.
All this happens in a moment; in a shorter time than it
takes for a man to lift his hand to throw away a withered
flower, or to stretch out his hand to gather a lovely rose,
fragrant in the June sunshine.
“It is appointed unto men once to die, and after this the
judgment.”
My dear brethren. A strange thing happens to the river
Rhone in the south of France, on the old boundary line be-
tween France and Savoy. Great rocks appear on both sides
of the river, coming always nearer and nearer to its banks,
until at last they meet above the water so that the river seems
to be rushing into a rocky grave where it disappears from
sight. The people call the Rhone at this point “the lost river”
because it really does disappear from the face of the earth,
not even its uproar is audible.
But is this river finally lost? Ah no. On the contrary, under
the carth it now accomplishes its most wonderful work. In
the bowels of the earth it bores through, and crumbles to
dust the granite rocks that bar its way, and when one would70 LIFE EVERLASTING
think that the earth had finally swallowed it, all at once it
bursts forth triumphantly from its rocky grave and its cleansed
waters roll on victoriously in the southern sunshine they have
once more regained.
At the boundary line of our earthly life we, too, are swal-
lowed up by the grave. The coffin closes down upon us, the
river of our lives disappears into the depths of the earth, no
sound is heard above the grave. Is our life finally lost? No.
Death is only a gate through which we must pass; but beyond
the threshold the victorious sunshine of the next world awaits
us. Amen.Vil
DEATH VICTORIOUS
In the Berlin National Gallery hangs a startling picture
painted by Spangenberg: “The Triumphal Procession of
Death.”
In the painting, death is seen walking among men, shaking
a bell in his bony hand; a vast crowd is following him.
Little children follow him with daisy-chains in their hands,
that they had made while playing: but the deathbell inter-
rupted their play and called them away.
A sturdy soldier follows death, the rifle with which he had
fought in so many battles still in his hand: but all at once he,
too, heard the bell and had to go.
A young girl follows death, her bridal veil falling in soft
folds about her face: she heard the bell on her wedding-day
and had to go.
Old and young, rich and poor, distinguished and common,
are visible in the picture as, accompanied by a flight of crows,
they rush unresistingly after death with his bell.
And a helpless old woman, a weary, wrinklcd old woman,
stretches out her hands longingly toward death, imploring
him to take her with him: but he docs not want her yet, he
leaves her by the wayside.
We read the title under this startling picture: “The Tri-
umphal Procession of Death.”
Truly, dear brethren, a picture to make us think. Only
from the pulpit can we speak of that painful and affecting
Pa72 LIFE EVERLASTING
reality, of death. Elsewhere people shudder at the thought.
Elsewhere they become pale and upset if anyone warns them
of the end of earthly life.
But the splendid valuc of our Christian faith is shown by its
not avoiding this most serious question, by its daring to face
the serious reality of death, and also by its ability to draw
courage and peace even from this depressing fact, from the
triumphant procession of death. Christianity clearly points
out the startling truth that the fact of death is certain and that
the hour of death is uncertain. But it does not make us despair,
for at the same time it encourages and consoles us.
Everyone will come to the end of his life, but no one knows
when. It is certain that all of us will die, but it is quite un-
certain when we shall die. These are two truths that no one
can doubt.
1
IT Is CERTAIN THAT ALL OF US WILL DIE
No one can question the fact that all, without exception,
are sentenced to death. Holy Writ says clearly: “Remember
that death is not slow . . . for the covenant of this world shall
surely die” (Ecclus. 14: 12). Whether you are rich or poor,
learned or ignorant, healthy or ill, a grayheaded old man or
a crying baby in arms, whether you live on land or water, in
the temperate or in the torrid zone, working or unemployed:
it is all the same. We all shall die. “Remember, man, that thou
art dust and into dust thou shalt return,” our holy religion
says to us on Ash Wednesday.
This is a painful, upsetting truth, but we cannot alter it.
Whether we think of it or not, whether we occupy ourselves
with it or not, whether we prepare for it or not, some day
the Lord will knock at our door. If you have been king, youDEATH VICTORIOUS 2B
will die; if you have been pope, you will die; if you have been
a poor struggler, you will dic. You possess great wealth: do
you die too? You do. You are a poor beggar: do you die too?
You do.
A. Thousands of years ago in Africa, on the banks of the
Nile, mighty pharaohs reigned. Millions bowed abjectly be-
fore them. And there beside them were their wives, queens
adorned with gold and precious gems, a host of servants wait-
ing to obey their every behest; slave girls combed their long,
silky hair. And they also died.
When they dicd, monuments were erected to them, that
were to be worthy of their famous names, where they could
sleep their eternal sleep in peace.
This happened four to five thousand years ago. And then?
Then archaeologists of the last century discovered these
pharaohs’ tombs, excavated all their treasures, and the ancient
dead are now exhibited in the museums of various cities all
over the world.
In any of these muscums you may sce people standing be-
fore a royal mummy in a glass case, looking at it curiously.
Are they looking at a king? No. At a handful of dust.
And this ancient corpse looks back at us from its empty eye-
sockets that seem as though they were looking from a great
distance. And then those compressed lips begin to speak: they
tell us a long, ancient story; the beginning chants the hymn of
life, speaking to us of pleasures, pomp, and glory. And the
end? The end is a softly whispered message: Remember, man,
that thou art dust, and into dust thou shalt return.
B. After speaking of the pharaohs, let me speak of other
kings. One was Louis XIV, king of France, who is usually
called the “sun king” because of his great splendor and mag-
nificence.
He was a favorite of fortune. His armies passed from con-74 LIFE EVERLASTING
quest to conquest. Poets, noblemen, women, one more beau-
tiful than the other, surrounded him with flattery. He built
palace after palace. The buildings he erected are counted to-
day among the most beautiful edifices of France. When we
see his castle and gardens at Versailles, near Paris, we are
speechless in admiration. And he certainly took his share of
the good things of life. He did not want to spend a moment
without pleasure.
Once, however, someone came. Someone who was mightier
and stronger than the “sun king”: he struck with the scythe
that no one in this world can avoid. And the king was laid to
rest in the French royal vaults. Well, gay King Louis, now
enjoy yourself. What? You can do so no longer? But you
lived for pleasure, King Louis, now amuse yourself. What?
You can do so no longer? You cannot even move?
Yet he had one more journey still before him. The French
Revolution came and broke open the royal vaults. King Louis’
moldering body was also found; on his fect the highheeled
shoes that he had worn in life in order to appear taller than
he really was. They took his bones, threw them into a great
ditch and poured slaked lime upon them, and the bubbling,
seething lime seemed to hiss the sad words, “Remember,
man, that thou art dust, and into dust thou shalt return.”
C. After speaking of pharaohs and kings, shall I also speak
of emperors? In the heart of Vienna, the Austrian capital,
stands the Capuchin Church. Beneath this building lie the
great arched vaults that are the burial-place of the Austrian
emperors and Hungarian kings.
Two rows of imposing coffins line the walls: ten, twenty,
thirty, who knows their number? ‘There side by side lie em-
perors, kings, archdukes and archduchesses.
Beneath one great memorial Jie Maria Theresa and her
husband, Emperor Francis, and their children; after themDEATH VICTORIOUS 5
come the others, right to the latest coffins: to crown-prince
Rudolph, Queen Elizabeth I, Francis Joseph. The former pos-
sessors of vast temporal power and pomp enclosed in this cold
crypt, buried, forgotten, moldering to dust.
When standing there between the coffins of crown-prince
Rudolph and Queen Elizabeth, by the statue of the sorrowful
Virgin that Hungarian women erected to the memory of
Queen Elizabeth, into the deathly silence of the crypt the busy
hum of the outer world penetrates, the horns of autos, the
clanging of electric strect cars, the rumble of carts, the noise
of men. Our glance falls on these quict coffins, and we seem
to hear words from their depths, shouted into our ears in that
formidable silence: Today you are still king, tomorrow noth-
ing. Remember, man, that thou art dust, and into dust thou
shalt return.
D. And shall I speak of the czars? When a Russian czar
died, it was the custom to embalm the body, clothe it in a
magnificent uniform, lay it in an imposing coffin and place
it in the imperial crypt at Petropavlovsk to “eternal rest.”
To eternal rest? By no means. The Soviet lords had need
of money. They sent a committee down into the realm of
deathly silence. One after the other the coffins were broken
open.
Alexander III’s coffin is broken open. There he lies in his
glittering military uniform. From his breast they tear decora-
tions set with diamonds, take from his hand the sword inlaid
with brilliants, and hasten to the next coffin. Now it is Alex-
ander II’s turn. Now Nicholas I. They come to the coffin of
the Czarina Catherine I and tear an immeasurably valuable
diamond necklace from the neck of the dead woman. And
as the hammerblows of these despoilers of the dead, who are
void of all human feeling, ceaselessly resound in the deathly
silence, it is again as though we heard the warning cry of76 LIFE EVERLASTING
transitory life: Remember, man, that thou art dust, and into
dust thou shalt return.
E. Shall I give one more example? Yes, but no longer of
kings.
Imagine that the world is a hundred years older. It is the
middle of the next century. Will this be? Probably. Will there
also be frivolous people who live and enjoy themselves and
take no thought for their souls? Surely there will be. But
who will not be? J shall not be. Nor you. Nor anyone who
is here present. We shall then be in our graves, at rest in our
graves.
Rest? That is not well said. By that time perhaps our bones
will have been exhumed to make place for others. Your house
may be still standing, but it will be no longer yours: you will
be dust. This church will stand, it will be filled, but you
will not be here: you will be dust. Here someone will preach,
but it will not be I who do so: J shall be dust. Someone will
celebrate mass, but not he who celebrated it today. Young
boys will be servers, but not those who served today: those
too will already have become dust.
“Oh, death! how bitter is the remembrance of thee” (Ecclus.
41:1), we could cry in the words of Holy Writ. A dreadful,
an appalling thought. One feels uncomfortable, seeks a means
of escape, and begins to argue with oneself: “Ah, why are
you anxious? True, some day we all have to die. But who
knows when that will be?”
pte
IT IS UNCERTAIN WHEN WE SHALL DIE
Yet when we try to quiet the unrest of our souls in this
way, perhaps we do not even think how very right we are.
Weare right, but with a difference in emphasis. With a differ-DEATH VICTORIOUS 7
ence that does not quiet us, but overwhelms us with still
greater despair. “Who knows when death will come?” You
are right: “Who knows when death will come?”
A. One thing is dreadfully certain: that we must die. All
the rest is dreadfully uncertain: when, where, in what man-
ner, in what spiritual state. Mors certa, hora incerta says the
inscription on a tower-clock in Leipzig.
1) When shall I die? Perhaps on a sunny day in spring
when the trees are putting forth new leaves and breaking
into blossom. Will they then close my eyes? Shall I fall like
a ripe apple from the tree on a sultry summer day? I do not
know. Will they lower me into the depths of the grave when
the autumn leaves are falling? Or perhaps on a freezing after-
noon in winter when a pall of soft white snow will cover my
grave in a few minutes? I do not know, I do not know.
“Between the cradle and the grave
Only one short step is made.”
2) And where shall I die?
A shopkeeper once asked a sailor: “Where did your father
die?”
“He was drowned at sea.”
“And your grandfather?”
“He was drowned, too.”
“And you are not afraid of going to sca?” the shopkeeper
asked in astonishment.
But the sailor replied: “Where did your father die?”
“In bed.”
“And your grandfather?”
“He died in bed, too.”
“And you are not afraid of going to bed every night?”
Yes, dear brethren: where shall I die? In a quiet room, or78 LIFE EVERLASTING
shall I fall dead in the noisy street perhaps? At home or in
a hospital? On land or at sea? I do not know.
3) And how shall I die? After long suffering, or suddenly,
in a few minutes? In the quiet weakness of old age or in tor-
menting pain? Surrounded by my relations, or forsaken by
everyone? Shall I die a natural death, or in consequence of a
railway accident, or perhaps under the wheels of an auto-
mobile. J do not know, I do not know.
4) However, after all, dear brethren, this is not important.
It is all the same when I shall die and where I shall die and in
what manner I shall die, if I can reply to the fourth ques-
tion: In what spiritual condition will death find me? This is
not all the same. Alas, if death should overtake me in sin.
‘This is not all the same.
Yet you will dic in the spiritual condition in which you
have lived. Death will be only an echo of our lives. We can-
not hope that God will perform a miracle for our sakes.
Tf all our lives we have not received the sacraments, then
we cannot hope to receive them at the last moment.
If we have sinned all our lives and have not cared for our
souls, if while in health we have not taken time to render a
sincere account of our sins in the confessional, then we can-
not hope that God will rescue us by a miracle, and that what
we neglected to do while in health we can now make amends
for while suffering dreadful bodily agony.
No. We cannot hope for this. Our end will be what our
lives have been. Alas, if death overtakes us in sin.
B. The postman often brings us mourning-cards that tell
us of the death of friends and acquaintances: “It has pleased
divine Providence to take our beloved father to his eternal
rest after long suffering.” Or: “The undersigned announce
with sorrowing hearts that . . .” We read these cards with
deep emotion, put them aside and—continue our work.DEATH VICTORIOUS 79
But some day a mourning-card will be printed that you
will not be able to read, because your name will stand in thick
letters in the center of it. When the postman takes these
mourning-cards to their destination, you will be already lying
dead in a tiny room. Stiff and cold, and as pale as if you were
made of wax. But of all this you will know nothing. Around
you relations and friends will be weeping, but you will hear
nothing of this.
The priest will come and say to those present: Oremus pro
fidelibus defunctis (“Let us pray for the faithful departed”).
But you will hear nothing of all this: if you lived a good life,
well for you; if you died in sin, alas for you.
Slowly the funeral procession will make its way to the
cemetery. Once more the sad chant will resound: “Deliver me,
O Lord, from everlasting death.” But you will not hear this:
if you lived a good life, well for you; if you died in sin, alas
for you.
The mourners slowly disperse. And you remain there alone
in the quiet cemetery. The evening breeze flutters the white
veil at the head of your grave. I read the inscription on it:
Lived 17 years. So young. Or do I not see well? Lived 71
years? It is all the same. For you it is quite all the same.
Hardly a few years, and you are dust. Time passes over
your grave, centurics, millenniums pass. The flowers that
bloomed above you have faded long ago. Perhaps a town has
been built over the cemetery where you werc buried, and in
the house erected above your grave people are living; people
who laugh as once you did, who are corrupt and wicked, as
once you were, who die, as once you did and become dust and
ashes: but your soul lives eternally, and as you lived on
earth, so your life will be in eternity: if you lived a good
life, well for you; if you died in sin, alas for you.
C. We see and feel death’s irresistible sway, we see Holy80 LIFE EVERLASTING
Writ’s words confirmed day by day: “All flesh shall fade as
grass and as the leaf that springeth out on a green tree: some
grow and some fall off: so is the generation of flesh and blood,
one cometh to an end, and another is born” (Ecclus. 14: 18,
19). We experience the truth of this on all sides, yet we see
that there are people who still do not believe this. They do not
believe that they will also die.
“But that is impossible,” you say. “Such a manifestly crazy
person does not exist, who would say seriously that he will
not die.”
Well, that is true, no sane person would say it, but there are
many, many millions who live as frivolously, as irresponsibly,
as if they believed that they would never die.
Yet I cannot imagine anything more appalling than when
someone who does not believe in life everlasting begins to
grow old and ill. When such a one has to recognize the fact
that the years are passing, that the course of his life is nearly
run. And nothing helps, nothing is of any use, rouge is of no
use, nor hair-dye, nor the most modern clothes, nor mountain
air, nor sea-baths. The end draws ever nearer and nearer, the
end of which they never wished to think. And now they
see that their hands are empty, alas, dreadfully empty.
D. Now answer one question, dear brethren. If you had to
go today? If death should come for you within an hour?
If the Lord should send His angel to you today with the
message: “Your stewardship is at an end. Leave everything
and come to render your account.” What would you do?
Could you reply calmly: “Yes, my Lord, I am ready, every-
thing is in order, I go.”
Could you part from everyone with a quiet conscience, and
ought you not first to become reconciled to a few with whom
you are on bad terms?
Could you part from them forever and ought you not toDEATH VICTORIOUS 8r
restore to them this or that of which you have deprived them?
Could you enter into the Lord’s presence with a pure soul
and would not your heart be heavy with the memory of many
sins committed long ago and still unconfessed ?
Could you stand before God: “Father, Thou hast called
me, behold Thy faithful child.”
Yes? Then all is well. Rejoice and be glad.
But if there is anyone who would be startled by such a
message; if there are any to whom it would come unexpect-
edly and find them unprepared; if there are any with whom
not everything is in order, whom this or that neighbor could
accuse before God, whose souls are blackened by many sins,
unconfessed and unforgiven. I earnestly beg them to put
everything in order, to go to confession, to go to confession
at once. I beg them not to try God’s merciful patience any
longer and to think of their unhappy souls.
Let them remember that our earthly lives “are passed away
like a shadow . . . and as a ship that passeth through the
waves, whereof when it is gone by, the trace cannot be
found” (Wis. 5: 9, 10). Let them remember that “life is but
wind” (Job 7:7), and “our years shall be considered as a
spider” (Ps. 89: 10). Let them remember that “it is not in
man’s power to stop the spirit, neither hath he power in the
day of death” (Eccles 8: 8). Let them remember “if the tree
fall to the south or to the north, in what place soever it shall
fall there shall it be” (Eccles 11: 3). That is to say, let us re-
member that it is woe to us if death overtakes us in sin, be-
cause as we die so shall we be judged, and as we have lived
so we shall die.
My dear brethren. One of the marble memorials in the
famous cemetery at Genoa portrays a dead father lying in a
coffin. Between the dead father and the weeping girl stands82 LIFE EVERLASTING
Christ, His hands raised in benediction above them both,
and in the background these three Christian words glitter like
a ray of sunshine breaking through from the other world:
Ego sum resurrectio (“I am the resurrection”).
My brethren. We human beings address one another by
high-sounding titles, we make becks and bows to one an-
other, we fear one another: yet there are only two truly great
powers in the world, two tremendous lords: death and Christ.
Death, who never sleeps, never rests, but mows down his
share of human beings day by day: 120,000 persons daily. And
wherever these 120,000 funeral processions pass—in villages
and towns, on Jand or at sea—everywhere in the world at sight
of them people are deeply affected, they remove their hats,
babbling tongues become silent, rosy faces become pale wher-
ever his majesty Death appears.
Death thus reigned supreme for many thousands of years
and held his triumphant funeral processions, until 1900 years
ago, outside the small town of Naim, one such funeral pro-
cession was met by Someone. By Someone who stopped the
procession wending its way to the grave, stepped to the young
man lying dead on his bier, and said to him: “Young man,
I say to thee, arise” (Luke 7: 14). As though some mighty
shudder ran through the world, the power of death was
broken.
Since then also the years rush by. Since then also funeral
bells are tolled on earth. But since then the oppressive knowl-
edge of our bricf carthly span of existence no longer weighs
so heavily upon us. Since then we know that man’s life, how-
ever tiny a rivulet of existence it may be, is not swept into the
uncertain darkness of oblivion by the rushing years, but the
tiny vein of each one’s life flows into the limitless ocean of
existence that we call God.
Only the rivulet that has accumulated dirt in its passageDEATH VICTORIOUS 83
through the carth fears the translucent sea. But to those that
are able to cast from them the dust and dirt colfected on their
way and arrive crystal-clear at the crystal ocean, beyond all
transiency, beyond every grave, beyond all dissolution, Christ’s
words will ring out encouragingly, consolingly: “I am the
resurrection and the life” (John 11:25). And Holy Writ’s
consolation will resound: “Blessed are the dead who die in
the Lord” (Apoc. 14:13); “The souls of the just are in the
hand of God” (Wis. 3: 1); “The just shall live for evermore,
their reward is with the Lord” (Wis. 5: 16).
My brethren. Let us live as those who know that some day
they will dic, that we may die as those who know that they
will live forever.
Let us live in God’s love, that we may dic in God’s grace.
Amen.Vill
DEATH THE TEACHER
Ons of Christianity’s most profound thinkers, most brilliant
geniuses, was undoubtedly St. Augustine. His writings con-
tain a large number of original and pithy sayings which
crystallize weighty truths. How simple and striking, for in-
stance, are his words, Sit mors pro doctore (“Let death be
your teacher”).
“Doctor Death,” “Professor Death”—assuredly a strange
idea. Hitherto we have known Professor Jones, Professor
Smith, and others, who teach history, political economy,
Latin, Greek, chemistry, and so on. But now comes Professor
Death, And what subject does he wish to teach? His subject
is life; for that is what St. Augustine meant: Let death be
your teacher; let death teach you how to live right.
Today, therefore, I take my hearers to this strange pro-
fessor, to his classroom. Let us listen attentively to what
“Professor Death” teaches us. He can speak all languages, and
in every land he has a teacher’s certificate. Is there an inch of
soi] in the world where no graves have been dug? Perhaps so.
But to find such spots we would have to go to the unin-
habited corners of the earth. Wherever there is a grave, there
is our professor’s rostrum, there sits Death, the great teacher
of life. He summarizes his lectures under three headings:
Good people, learn of me what a nothingness life is, what a
treasure life is, and what a responsibility life is!
84DEATH THE TEACHER 85
I
THE NOTHINGNESS OF LIFE
Death’s first teaching is this: the nothingness of life.
A. Sta viator (“Halt, traveler”), is the warning we read
on ancient tombstones. “Pilgrim on earth, halt,” is also what
death teaches; halt and call to mind how ephemeral every-
thing is, everything. Almighty God alone is eternal.
1) Life flies, quickly it slips from our grasp, however con-
vulsively we would hold it. It is like the flight of an arrow,
like a soaring bird. Even if you were to live in a palace and
have every luxury that heart can desire, and the best of
physicians to treat you with the most expensive remedies, this
would all be of no avail.
2) And how uncertain life is! In 1933 an airplane flying
from Vienna to Venice crashed. Among its passengers was a
young author who suffered serious injuries and died on the
evening of the same day. He had flown that day from Berlin
to Vienna and after two hours’ rest, had continued his flight
to Venice. In Vienna he spent the two hours with an ac-
quaintance. They went by automobile to an elegant restau-
rant. During the meal the young author spoke enthusias-
tically of the great progress made by technology:
“How powerful the human mind is, after all,” he said.
“This morning I had breakfast in Berlin; now at noon I
lunch in Vienna; this evening I shall dine and listen to the
music in one of the restaurants on St. Mark’s Square in Ven-
ice.”
That evening he appeared before the throne of the eternal
Judge, and not in a restaurant on St. Mark’s Square.
3) “Professor Death” here descends from his professorial
chair, goes among the graves, opens them, and makes the
dead lying in them to speak.86 LIFE EVERLASTING
The young say: “How deceived we were when we counted
on a long life and did not believe what we often read in-
scribed on old clocks: Jede Stunde bringt die Kunde (“Every
hour something new”). How empty our entire earthly life
was! The decades passed like smoke and shadow, and now
we see how true the epitaph is that says: Homo humus, fama
fumus, finis cinis, “man is earth, fame is smoke, the end is
dust.”
The poor speak and say: “For us death was a release.” The
rich say: “Not all our wealth was able to save us from this
place.”
The mighty Macedonian king, Alexander the Great, was
right when he commanded that he be placed in his coffin in
such a way that his empty hands should hang over the sides
of it; let the people see that the mighty king departs with
empty hands and can take nothing with him.
Thus the dead speak to us.
“Professor Death,” certainly you teach us well.
B. If only your instructive words could be heard by those
who live with every fiber of their being for this world only.
1) It is a pity that modern man avoids the thought of
death so carefully. He does not like to mect death. The ancient
Romans did not fear death. They dug long rows of graves
beside the most frequented highways that passersby should
see them day by day. Nor did the ancient Christians fear death.
Do not think it strange if I say: It would be good for the
present-day man to have his attention called to graves some-
times, to visit the sick, the afflicted, and the dead. At every
street corner pleasure offers itself: the theater, motion picture
theater, dance, bar. In every store, in every fashion display,
the world of pleasure offers its wares. Is it any wonder that
man forgets there is another world, a world of privation,DEATH THE TEACHER 87
suffering, and discase? Is it any wonder that death has to
teach those who are unwilling to learn in any other way, that
this flecting life is not true life?
2) And death teaches all this,
Tt teaches us to be humble, but at the same time confident,
too. It teaches us that life is nothing, but at the same time it
teaches us what a treasure life is. [t teaches us not to become
vain, because earthly life is so short; but to be filled with joy
because eternal life is so long.
It teaches us that we are citizens of two worlds, but that
we cannot find an abiding home in both of them. The visa on
our earthly passport authorizes us to “pass through.” The
permanent domicile to which we are enroute is in the world
beyond. Here we are wanderers; in the beyond our permanent
home awaits us. Here is the dream, there the reality. Here
is the shadow, there the perfection of existence.
3) And then “Professor Death” raises his voice again: Good
people; if all this is really so, how can you live as though the
contrary were true? How can you live as though your one
and only thought were of this world, of daily bread, of busi-
ness, of pleasure, of the theater, of entertainment? These are
your only desires, your only ambitions, your only anxieties.
Of what comes after this, of what comes after the sods have
fallen with dull thuds upon your coffins, of this truly im-
portant, fateful fact you hardly think at all.
A remarkable thing was printed in a certain newspaper
published over a hundred years ago. (Warendorfer Wochen-
blatt, July 25, 1835.) It speaks of how a person buried while
in a trance could escape if he regained consciousness in the
grave. A string must be drawn through a pipe placed in the
earth, writes the paper. The string must reach to the dead
man’s hand, and a bell must be attached to the other end88 LIFE EVERLASTING
above the earth’s surface. If the dead person awakes all he has
to do is to pull the string; the consequent signal would at
once bring someone to rescue him from the grave.
Are people not strange, dear brethren? It hardly ever hap-
pens that anyone is buried in a trance; they want to provide
for that remote contingency. It is quite certain, however,
that at the moment of death everyone will awake to find him-
self standing before the judgment seat of God. Yet so many
care nothing whatever about this and do not insure themselves
for this event.
Let us listen to death’s teaching and let us never forget
what we are and what we shall become. Our hearts belong
to God, not to the world; let us not allow its sins to soil them.
Our souls belong to God, not to the world; let us not allow
its illusive castles-in-the-air to take us captive. Our gold and
our treasures we cannot take into God’s presence. Nor our
palaces and automobiles. Then what? Only our souls.
The one treasure, the one thing of value that we take with
us is our good deeds.
bag
‘THE TREASURE OF LIFE
When “Professor Death” has made us so serious, he pro-
duces his second prescription. On the second prescription this
is written: Life is short, indeed, but it is also a precious treas-
ure. The past is no longer yours, the future is not yet yours;
so use what is yours, use today.
A. The past is no longer yours.
1) Surely no one can see the passing of the years without
a bit of sadness on the anniversary of his birthday or on New
Year’s Eve if he looks back on the years of his life that have
flown away so rapidly. How dim every past joy and sorrow,DEATH THE TEACHER 89
every task and pleasure, every success and failure, has become.
If we look back on our past life, much of it fades into a mist
or fog. We still speak of last summer, of a journey we made
last spring, perhaps of some greater event. But of what hap-
pened several years ago, our memories are, for the most part,
vague and dim and uncertain.
2) Time is a mystery. Behind us lies the past; that is no
longer ours. Before us lies the future; that is not yet ours.
In our grasp we hold the present, a moment of time that slips
from our hands even while we grasp it.
Gazing into the darkness ahead, we try, at the beginning
of each new year, to see what secrets the future holds. But
we can see nothing.
B. We see nothing because the future is not yet ours.
1) How a person encourages and consoles himself: The
past year was certainly bitter, but here is the new. In it things
must become easier, something unexpected will happen. But
time flies past and does not trouble about human beings,
neither about those who would like to hasten its flight nor
about those who would like to retard it.
The young say impatiently: Oh, if only I could be five
years older, if only I had finished my examinations, if only I
had my diploma, if only I had a good position. The old say
resignedly: If only I were five years younger; then my legs
were not so stiff, my breathing was not so difficult, and my
hands did not tremble so much. Time does not bother about
all that, but rushes on its way.
2) “If only I could know more of the mysterious future.
If only I could see what awaits me in life. What danger, what
fate, what losses. Why does God not allow us to sce into the
future?”
So say many people who do not reflect how appalling
would be a knowledge of the future. How we might be dis-90 LIFE EVERLASTING
heartened, how dreadful it might be to know more of the fu-
ture than what God has seen fit to impart to us!
The psychological and pedagogical tact shown by Chris-
tianity in this question is without its equal. It teaches just so
much of our future fate as is necessary to allow us to work
with hearts full of hope. Not the merciless blows of an iron-
fisted blind fate form our futures, it proclaims, but the fatherly
hand of God who provides abundantly for all His chil-
dren. And His loving heart ordered that we should not knew
the details of the future awaiting us, that our working strength
might not be impaired, that we might not lose courage. We
see the final goal where every road ends, but we do not sce
the road we shall travel. We see only one thing clearly: that
at the price of honest endeavor we can gain eternal life.
The past has flown quickly, the future is not yet in my
hand; but today is mine. Today I may stil] love God: I do not
know how long J may do so. { may still serve God: but I do
not know how long I may do so. Today I may still make
reparation for the past: I do not know how long I may do so.
Today I may still do penance here for my past sins: but I do
not know how long I may do so.
Hence death, at the same time that it shows us the nothing-
ness of life, shows us also what a precious treasure life is. It is
a battlefield, an arena, a trial of patience lasting for thirty,
fifty, seventy years, On living it rightly depends the whole of
life everlasting.
nL
THE RESPONSIBILITY OF LIFE
This is death’s third teaching: The responsibility of this
life.
A. This responsibility makes the hour of death so hard.DEATH THE TEACHER gr
1) What hurts us most in death? Is it that we must part
from our loved ones, from our sphere of work, from our
property? Undoubtedly these things do hurt us. If small chil-
dren and a widow will be left, the thought of their orphaned
state grieves us; if aged parents will be left, their uncertain
future causes us grief. If half-finished ambitious plans are left,
we are pained to leave the work unaccomplished. If we must
leave some laboriously acquired property, the thought of
unknown fate pains us. Yet all this is not what hurts us
most.
2) Then what is most painful in death? Is it life’s final re-
sistance to its passing? Is it the violent disruption of the union
of body and soul? This, too, is painful, and for this reason
death is bitter. Yet this is not what hurts most in death.
3) Do you know what it is that hurts most? Our life’s
account that we are now closing, our balance sheet. The hour
of reckoning that awaits us. The judgment seat before which
we shall presently stand. Our responsibility in God’s sight for
every word and deed committed during our earthly lives—
this is what makes death bitter. The question that stares us
in the face: What will happen to us now? Whither shall
we go?
What will happen to us? This is what a nervous lady asked
when an electric railway car was traveling down a steep
mountain side.
“Oh, conductor, what would happen to us if the electric
brake should fail to work?”
“Never fear, madam, we still have an automatic emergency
brake.”
“But what would happen to us if the emergency brake also
failed to work?” the passenger nervously asked.
“Well, that would not matter very much cither; we would
still have the hand-brake.”92 LIFE EVERLASTING
“But what would happen to us if the hand-brake also
failed?”
At that the conductor scratched his head, and answered:
“What would happen to us then, madam? Well, some of us
would go to heaven and some to hell.”
He was right. And in his answer do you not sense the re-
sponsibility that rests on each of us? In it we hear our Lord’s
warning: “Be you then also ready, for at what hour you think
not, the Son of man will come” (Luke 12: 40).
B. Now, brethren, reply to my serious question: Are you
living in the light of this responsibility? Are your affairs in
order? Are you always prepared for death?
For thousands of years people have been dying. Yet death
always comes to them unexpectedly. Tell me; if you had to
balance your life accounts today, are you prepared to do so?
Tell me; are all your affairs in order?
1) Are your money affairs in order? Will there be no con-
tention at your graveside? Have you in your possession noth-
ing that belongs to another? Is no disorder to be found among
your obligations? Will not the whole outward appearance of
your life collapse at your death, and your relatives have to say
at your funeral: “Alas, why did you bring this upon us?”
2) Have you nothing of importance to say to anyone? Tell
me; could you really not write that letter today, that letter of
explanation, that letter begging forgiveness?
Alas, how much people quarrel with one another! How
they embitter one another’s lives over trifles! Two bald-headed
men are capable of quarreling about a comb. What trifles two
brothers can quarrel about! Children and their parents are
sometimes estranged for years on account of something ut-
terly insignificant.
All at once death intervenes, and they come to their senses
when it is too late.DEATH THE TEACHER 93
Recently an old man was buried, and as his relatives made
their way home from the funeral they discussed him most
touchingly: “What a gocd man he was, he never harmed
anyone.” But why did they discover this only after his fu-
neral? Why only after death, when they so often embittered
him in his lifetime?
“He was a good man.” What a lamentable truth, that many
perceive this and say it only when it is too late! How many
would be gentler, more forgiving, more forbearing, more
loving when it is too late, when it is no longer possible to
be so!
3) However, a still more important question arises: Is your
soul in order? Do you often think of St. Paul’s warning:
“Yourselves know perfectly, that the day of the Lord shall
so come as a thief in the night. For when they shall say:
Peace and security, then shall sudden destruction come upon
them” (I Thess. 5: 2, 3).
Mazarin, Louis XIV’s great minister, had a stroke of apo-
plexy while playing cards. “Perhaps it is only a slight indis-
position,” he thought, and ordered his servant to hold his arm
for him that he might continue the game. In vain. The cards
fell from his hand and he sank back in his chair. His last
words were: “My poor soul, what will become of my poor
soul?”
Think of your past life, and you will exclaim: “My poor
soul, what will become of my poor soul?”
Into the other mysterious life, into the grave, that long, nar-
row pit, we can take nothing. Nor can anyone accompany us.
Not even our friends, our relatives, our brethren, our parents.
It is dreadful. Then what accompanies us on this uncertain
journey? Not our knowledge. Not our good looks, nor our
sturdy muscles. Must we stand empty-handed before God?
No, brethren. There is something that accompanies us;94 LIFE EVERLASTING
but only one thing. It goes with us to our grave, beyond the
grave, right up to the throne of the eternal God, and there it
will speak for us.
Who or what is it? Holy Writ, speaking of the dead, says:
“Their works follow them” (Apoc. 14:13). Our deeds we
take with us.
The glass of water we gave to a thirsty soul, the piece of
bread we gave to a beggar, these will go with us and speak
for us. Everything we did to help our less fortunate fellow
man will accompany us and plead in our behalf. Every kind
word and compassionate deed, every comforting glance and
loving thought of ours, our struggles to resist temptation, all
will accompany us and be our one treasure. “Their works
follow them” (Apoc. 14: 13).
My dear brethren. If you walk about the streets of Rome,
you are made dizzy by the rush of traffic, dazzled by the glit-
tering, splendid life. How many projects, how much en-
deavor, how much human beauty and brilliance!
When you then ascend one of the seven hills and survey
the town from a distance, nothing of this great traffic is seen,
no noise is heard, no earthly striving. The houses of this me-
tropolis huddle together like little colored matchboxes, But
above them, with reassuring dignity, rises the gigantic cupola
of St. Peter’s, pointing to the heights.
To such heights today’s sermon led: to the heights of “Pro-
fessor Death’s” rostrum, to the heights of the cemetery. If we
survey life from these heights, we see how all human striving,
planning, and might sink to a little mound of earth on a
grave. At such a time it is good to perccive the cupola of our
holy faith, rising with comforting calmness above the realm
of death.
The thought of death makes everyone shudder. Even be-DEATH THE TEACHER 95
lievers? Even those whose sacred hope is that after death life
everlasting awaits them? Is it possible that they, too, fear
death?
Yes, it is possible. The instinct of self-preservation is strong
in every creature, it is life’s protecting shicld. The body in-
stinctively draws back from disintegration, and however much
anyone thinks of death, however zealous and religious he
may be, he cannot entirely rid himself of this natural dread.
Death was not created by God: sin brought it in its train. Our
human natures fear it and try to escape from it. Hence it is
comprehensible that the life-instinct of even the most devout
believers protests against death and shudders at the thought
of it.
But stronger than the strongest life-instinct is our faith:
death is only a transition from one form of existence to an-
other, when we cast off one worn garment and put on a new
one in its stead, “that that which is mortal may be swallowed
up by life” (II Cor. 5: 4). Death is not a sinking into nothing-
ness, into Nirvana, but the beginning of real life. Here we
walk in shadow, there in sunshine; here in strife, there in
God’s peace; here in a foreign land, there in the Father’s
house; here we believe, there we know.
This belief does not allow us to despair, but teaches us to
pray:
Dear Lord, | beg, if it is good in Thy sight, let not my death-
struggle be torturing. If it is good in Thy sight, let not my
fear of death be tormenting. If it is good in Thy sight, let
not death overtake me in a strange country, where I am alone.
All this I beg, my Lord.
But more than all clse, one thing I beg. Do not allow death
to overtake me without my having made my confession,
without my having received the sacraments, without my hav-
ing gained Thy pardon. Allow me after my last communion96 LIFE EVERLASTING
to repeat with a tranquil soul the aged Simeon’s words: “Now
Thou dost dismiss Thy servant, O Lord, according to Thy
word in peace” (Luke 2: 29). And that I may then add: “Fa-
ther, into Thy hands I commend my spirit” (Luke 23: 43);
and as an echo hear Thy words: “Well done, good and faith-
ful servant, because thou hast been faithful over a few things,
I will place thee over many things; enter thou into the joy
of thy Lord” (Matt. 25: 21). Amen.x
THE WARNING OF DEATH
Have you ever stood at the middle of a bridge when great
blocks of ice were being swept under it by the water? If you
have not, sometime stand on a bridge when the river is cov-
ered with masses of floating ice and look fixedly at the drift-
ing ice. You need not look long; at once you will feel that
the bridge is moving under you and that you are being swept
away by the current, and you will almost clutch the railing
of the bridge to prevent yourself from being drawn away.
This feeling of uncertainty takes possession of our souls as
often as we think of the transient character of all things hu-
man, of life’s hurrying river, as often as we think of death; as
often as we feel how the boundless ocean of time sweeps the
swiftly rolling waves of life under us. At such times we feel
as though we, too, were being swept along helplessly by the
current, and instinctively we take refuge in the belief in eter-
nal life, the only sure support to which mortal man can cling.
However earnest and honest our lives may be, we cannot
deny that we Christians are deeply touched by the passing
of time. We, too, are shaken by the knowledge that death is
inevitable. We do not, however, let this mood become fool-
ishly sentimental, but strive to understand the admonition
it contains. Death admonishes us of our responsibility and
of our duty.
798 LIFE EVERLASTING
I
THE PASSING OF TIME
As often as we see death’s harvest around us we, too, feel
the icy breath of things transient. At such times we see the
truth of psalm ror: “In the beginning, O Lord, Thou found-
est the earth, and the heavens are the works of Thy hands.
‘They shall perish but Thou remainest; and all of them shall
grow old like a garment, and as a vesture Thou shalt change
them, and they shal! be changed. But Thou art always the
selfsame and Thy years shall not fail” (Ps. 101: 26-28). How
true this psalm is!
A. Everything becomes old and changes.
1) The whole universe in which we live becomes old. The
earth grows old and changes, the heavenly bodies grow cool,
the warmth of the sun decreases. A decade or a century does
not count much in the life of the universe, but the unceasing
passage of centuries and millenniums counts. The earth and
all the created world gradually grows old.
2) Of course many people do not take this very tragically.
‘The sun is growing old and will sometime become cold. Well,
let it. The earth is growing old and sometime the fuel supply
will be exhausted. Well, it will be exhausted. All this would
not cause us anxiety, if we did not perceive something else
as well. We cannot perceive that the earth and the sun are
growing older, but we see something else most plainly; we
see that people grow old: our friends and relations; and we
see that we, too, are growing old.
“Oh, how many gray hairs you have!” we exclaim when
we mect some friend whom we have not seen for six months
or so.THE WARNING OF DEATH 99
“Where have you been that you are all dressed up?” we
ask.
“T have been to Charlie’s wedding.”
“Js he already a married man? I used to play with him
when he was a little fellow in short pants. How old we are
getting!”
Yes, we are growing old. Everything changes and grows
ald like a garment.
B. But Thou, O Lord, art always the selfsame, and Thy
years shall not fail. Only God does not grow old. With God
“there is no change nor shadow of alteration” (James 1: 17).
“Before the mountains were made, or the earth and the world
was formed, from eternity and to eternity Thou art God”
(Ps. 89: 2). “For a thousand years in Thy sight are as yes-
terday which is past” (Ps. 89: 4).
Hence it is a beautiful custom that, when hurrying autos
and crowded streetcars pass a church, men who are jostling
one another in the struggle to make a livelihood, become si-
lent for a moment and raise their hats or make the sign of
the cross, At such times ephemeral man pays respect to the
only eternal God.
When everything around us decays and the screech-owl
voice of destruction screams at us on all sides, then we turn
to this eternal God and grasp His hand more firmly. We,
who are but short-lived, weak creatures, we trust in the God
who is always the selfsame and whose years shall not fail.
We trust in the God who was mighty enough to call this stu-
pendously vast world into existence from the void. We trust
in the God who was mighty enough to keep it in existence for
thousands and thousands of years. We trust in the Gad with-
out whose knowledge not a hair of our heads is harmed and
not a sparrow falls.100 LIFE EVERLASTING
Therefore we must not be weakly sentimental at the sight
of death’s dominion. It should bring two things to our minds:
our responsibility and our duty; our responsibility with re-
gard to earthly life, and our duty with regard to God.
pig
DEATH WARNS US OF OUR RESPONSIBILITY
The first thought that takes possession of us at the sight of
death is one of responsibility for the account we must some
day render.
A. My life is a book, every page is a year. And after I have
completed my life on earth, this book will be opened in
heaven. The book is “the book of life” (Apoc. 20: 12), in
which everything is written.
1) Everything. How appalling only to think of it! Every
word, act, and thought of mine, that perhaps I have forgot-
ten long ago, is written down. Yet it will be so. Our blessed
Lord repeatedly warns us that He will demand a reckoning
from us.
A wealthy man makes big plans for the future: he will
eat, drink, and be merry. But God says to him: “Thou fool,
this night do they require thy soul of thee.” “Give an account
of thy stewardship” the Lord says to His steward in one of His
parables. On another occasion He speaks of the talents that
He will demand back with interest (Matt. 24: 14 ff.). Again
at another time, of the barren fig tree: He will wait one year
longer for it to bear fruit; but if it does not do so then, He
will cut it down and cast it into the fire (Luke 13: 6 ff.).
2) Aware of this responsibility, how differently I will di-
rect my whole earthly life! I will certainly bear in mind the
answer given by an English missioner to an opulent business
man. The priest was invited to dine with a certain rich man.THE WARNING OF DEATH 101
But even during dinner the telephone bell rang repeatedly,
and the host arranged several transactions.
“You sec, father,” he said, “here in this house, no time at
all is lost.”
“Time, indeed not,” replied the missioner, “but Eternity, I
fear.”
B. If, aware of this, I want to survey the results of my
stewardship, if I look to see whether the talent God entrusted
to me has brought interest; if I seek the fruit on my tree of
life, 1 wonder what the result of the accounting will be at
the end of my life.
1) We are acquainted with the modern cash registers with
which large stores are equipped. Each smallest payment is
typed on a tape of paper. In the evening, at the pressure of a
button, the total of the whole day’s receipts lies before us
most precisely added together.
But what is this accurate cash register compared to God’s
“bookkeeping,” compared to the book which Holy Writ men-
tions when it says: “And I saw the dead, great and small,
standing in the presence of the throne, and the books were
opened . . . and the dead were judged by those things which
were written in the books according to their works” (Apoc.
20: 12). I look back upon my past life: must I not be star-
tled when I think of the precise bookkeeping in the next
world?
2) An exhibition of pictures was visited by someone who
stood about in the galleries, bored and uninterested, because
even the most beautiful pictures made no impression on him.
When he began to complain to one of the artists how tire-
some the exhibition was, the artist replied: “If only I could
lend you my eyes, dear friend.”
How differently we should look at an exhibition of pictures,
if we could borrow an artist’s eyes! And how differently we102 LIFE EVERLASTING
should look at this world too, at life, at all our earthly strug-
gles and plans, if we could borrow the eyes of a saint! Let us
say the cyes of St. Aloysius; the eyes of the St. Aloysius who
put this question to himself before every undertaking: “Of
what use will this be to me in gaining eternity?” Or if we
could borrow St. Paul’s eyes, the eyes of the St. Paul who
wrote: “I reckon that the sufferings of this time are not worthy
to be compared with the glory to come, that shall be revealed
in us” (Rom. 8:19). Or if we could borrow the eyes of the
Lord Jesus Himself, the cyes of our Lord who said: “For what
doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world and suffer the
loss of his own soul?” (Matt. 16: 26.) This is the feeling of
responsibility that comes from the thought of death.
Can we, with the valuable material placed in our hands,
form such an image of our soul that God’s eyes will rest with
delight on its beauty? It does not depend on us whether this
image shows an old man or a young boy, an aged woman or
a young girl. How much time on earth God intends to give
to each one, is His secret. But it depends on us and we are
responsible whether the soul of the old man or young boy, the
old woman or the young girl, is beautiful or not.
m
DEATH WARNS US OF OUR DUTY
The knowledge of this responsibility arouses in us a sense
of duty. A double duty: to show a filial gratitude to God for
the love He has bestowed on us, and to make a manly decision
about the future.
A. The moments in which our thoughts are occupied with
death are also the moments in which to give thanks to God.
Perhaps never can we say the first words of the preface at
mass with so much fecling as in these moments: Vere dignumTHE WARNING OF DEATH 103
et justum est, “It is truly meet and just, right and available
to salvation, that we should always and in all places, give
thanks to Thee, O holy Lord, Father almighty, eternal God.”
We give thanks for all the good that Thou hast bestowed on
us in life till now, but we give thanks also for every affliction
with which Thou hast visited us.
1) To give thanks for all good bestowed on us. Before all
else I give thanks to God for the spiritual favors I have re-
ceived during my prayers, especially during mass and through
the reception of the sacraments. I give thanks for all the lov-
ing pardon granted to me after my many backslidings. For
the immeasurable love that entered into my heart with the
Holy Eucharist. For all the grace that aided and guided me
even though I was unaware; that saved me from so many
falls which I shall know about only in the next world. For all
this 1 give humble thanks.
But then IJ also wish to give thanks for all material blessings
bestowed on me: for health and a livelihood, for my family
and my friends, for my successes, for my recovery from ill-
ness. Gratitude for favors received is dictated by our instinctive
human feeling.
2) Nevertheless we must be grateful also for the suffering
and trials that God has visited upon us in the course of our
lives. Many people find this hard to understand.
A few years ago everybody was infected by the crossword-
puzzle fever. It was a sort of intellectual epidemic. Husband
and wife at the dinner table, clerks and storekcepers at their
desks and behind the counter, schoolchildren of all ages—all
were solving crossword puzzles. Yet for those who did not
understand them, these puzzles were nothing but horizontal
and vertical rows of letters and a confusion of black squares
lying mixed pell-mell. For those who did not understand
them. But for the initiated, behind the black lines, seeming104 LIFE EVERLASTING
to run aimlessly hither and thither, an interesting and intel-
ligible solution lay hidden.
Earthly life puts everyone face to face with difficult and
often bitter crossword puzzles. If only more people under-
stood the solution of their crossword puzzle. If only everyone
possessed the necessary skill and patience. In the lives of those
who do not understand it, the black lines of disaster and trial
run in aimless confusion; whereas those who understand it,
know that in the eyes of God every black line has its meaning
and purpose.
What a pity that many do not even wish to understand
this! Yet this is the truly Christian concept: to say Te Deum
also in failure. To say Te Deum also in sickness. To say Te
Deum also in poverty. It is chiefly of this that St. Paul ad-
monishes us: “Giving thanks always for all things, in the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to God and the Father” (Eph.
5:20).
B. Besides gratitude, the thought of life’s brief span makes
me aware of another obligation: the duty of manly decision.
If everything rushes toward death, if everything sooner or
later slips from our grasp—health, good looks, money, pleas-
ure, fortune, rank, fame, everything—then henceforth our
all will be, not this world, but life everlasting; the world and
worldly possessions will be only means toward life eternal.
1) During his imaginary journey, when Dante arrived at
the gate of Paradise, before entering he glanced back once
more at the earth. “I looked back across the seven spheres,”
he writes. “I saw the earth: it was so small that I had to smile
at sight of it. So that is the little place that often makes us
so proud.”
Does not the same feeling possess us when, in the last mo-
ments of a passing year, we look back at it as it prepares to
sink into its grave? How the past twelve months, fifty-twoTHE WARNING OF DEATH 105
weeks, three hundred and sixty-five days shrink! Was that
the year that so often made us proud, foolhardy, sinful ?
For many people this earth is everything. This earth and
its pleasures, its wealth, its treasures. “He who has money,
has everything,” they say.
Yet indeed it is not so. With money you purchase things to
cat, but not an appetite. With money you can purchase medi-
cine, but not health. You can buy soft pillows, but not quiet
sleep. You can buy a beautiful house, but not a good con-
science. You can buy acquaintances, but not friends. You can
buy servants, but not their loyalty. And principally, with
money you can buy a beautiful crypt in the cemetery for your
body; but a place for your soul in life everlasting? No. A
thousand times no.
Then let us be wise, dear brethren. You know the re-
proach that was once made to the great astronomer, Tycho
Brahe, by his coachman: “Good master, you know your way
about the heavens, but here on earth you are very stupid.”
How many modern people would deserve this reproach,
but reversed: “You know your way about the earth very well,
you are quite at home here, but you are stupid with regard to
heaven, you do not trouble about your eternal home and your
destiny.”
2) We still have time, God has left us the continuation of
our lives. Do not let us waste that too. You know what St.
Augustine wrote of the value of time: Moments are the seeds
of eternity, he said (semina acternitatis). Time is precious,
for with time well used we can purchase eternity.
The years pass, flying by one after the other in rapid suc-
cession. Sad it would be if, at the end of a life that has sped
by all too quickly, we should have to exclaim with Hebbel:
“The man I am, sorrowfully greets the man I might have
been.”106 LIFE EVERLASTING
In describing some ancient churches, Baedecker’s guide
books often remark: “It is regrettable that the frescoes were
later retouched.” A regrettable barbarism: to ruin a master-
piece with bungling strokes of the brush. But Christianity has
imprinted such a masterpiece upon our souls: Christ’s divine
features. Let us be watchful that sin does not daub its vile-
ness upon this masterpiece. If this misfortune has happened
in the past, let us be the more watchful henceforth. Time
is passing. We must not postpone the work of repair and
restoration.
If even after our best intentioned resolves we become aware
that we waver again and again, and if after another fall we
again have to lift our hands in supplication for pardon, even
then we must make a fresh start, a thousand times if need
be. Let our consolation be the knowledge that when we ap-
pear before the omniscient God, He not only knows our
faults and failings but also our many brave exertions and
struggles in trying to overcome them. True, He sees our falls,
but He sees also our repentance.
This earth is a vale of tears for all of us. Like an endless
line of pilgrims, humanity winds its way through it, and
every pilgrim—great or small, rich or poor, young or old,
man or woman—every pilgrim carries his own cross upon his
shoulder. Right through all the stations of life until we arrive.
For the pilgrimage has an end. We shall arrive.
Now if everything in this world passes away, are we not
foolish to build our lives on something so transient? In your
room do you not hear time steadily sawing at your tree of
life? Each tick of the clock is a movement of the saw under
your feet.
Is any man so foolish as to build himself a beautiful house
on quicksand, on a boggy swamp? We build with concrete,THE WARNING OF DEATH 107
and reinforced concrete at that. Eternity, that is reinforced
concrete. Eternity, that is a foundation on which we can build
confidently.
Brethren. The stream of time sweeps the ice-blocks of the
years beneath us; but we have a strong support to which we
can cling: our belief in eternity.
And if in the midst of such thoughts we can listen to
death’s warning, then at the hour of our departure the prom-
ise of the psalm will be fulfilled in us: “He that dwelleth in
the aid of the most High, shall abide under the protection of
the God of Jacob. He shall say to the Lord: Thou art my
protector, and my refuge; my God, in Him will I trust (Ps.
go: 1, 2). Amen,x
THE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH
On the last day of the year usually a great deal of business is
done at the post office. The postmen can hardly cope with the
work. Smal] envelopes, big envelopes, picture postcards, and
greetings. Almost all of them have the same contents: “Wish-
ing you a happy New Year.” A happy year. Happier than last
year. This is an agreeable custom. It may well be, of course,
that the good wishes will not make the new year a happy
one.
Some try to insure a happy new year by other means. They
start the new year by not going to bed that night. Friends
and relatives gather and wait for midnight. When the clock
strikes twelve they clink glasses and greet one another with,
“A happy New Year.” Of course the new year will not be hap-
pier because of this.
Others do something else. Restaurants and cafes are filled
to overflowing by those who have not learned to enjoy them-
selves at home. When midnight comes they raise a din with
shouting, singing, blowing horns, and the like, and cry out
almost hysterically: “Happy New Year.” Of course the new
year will not be any happier because of all this.
But, dear brethren, when our holy religion repeatedly and
emphatically admonishes us of the importance of this brief
earthly life, she does so to insure us a genuinely happy life.
Not only does she wish it for us, she also tells us how to ob-
tain it. Courageously facing us—men who are to forget all
108THE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH 109
else in the preoccupations of everyday life—she cries into our
ears unpopular and sobering truths: “Good people, call to
mind how brief earthly life is, and how important earthly life
is. If you use life properly, then indeed it will be happy and
blessed for you.
1
THE BREVITY OF EARTHLY LIFE
A. How short life is! When a man is born, a lighted candle
is, as it were, placed in his hand. He knows that the candle
is burning, that its length is steadily decreasing, and that
some day it will flare up for the last time. But no one knows
how long his candle will last.
When a man is born, he starts out on a journey, but he does
not know how long this journcy will be. He knows that it
will lead up and down hill, sometimes in sunshine, sometimes
in storm; and some day he will reach the end of the road. But
no one knows at what moment he will reach there.
How short life is! Like the skilful extraction of a tooth: the
patient is in tense expectation; now, now is the moment, but
by that time the tooth is out. By the time we notice it, the
greater part of life is past, it is no longer in our hands. “Have
I really lived so long?” we sometimes ask wonderingly. Little
children often say: “When I am grown up.” The young still
see visions and build magnificent castles-in-the-air. Adults,
however, become more modest, year by year their aircastles
are less sumptuous. Some fine day we notice that we are say-
ing: “When I was young.”
How short life is! The Bible reiterates again and again:
“The days of man are short, and the number of his months is
with Thee: Thou hast appointed his bounds which cannot
be passed” (Job. 14:5). “Behold Thou hast made my days110 LIFE EVERLASTING
measurable, and my substance is as nothing before Thee. And
indeed all things are vanity, every man living. Surely man
passcth as an image” (Ps. 38: 6, 7). “Man’s days are as grass,
as the flower of the field so shall he flourish; for the spirit
shall pass in him and he shall not be, and he shall know his
place no more” (Ps, 102: 15, 16).
B. Although life is so short, we do not relish facing the fact.
On the contrary, a strange, disillusioning, unpleasant feeling
comes over the man deeply immersed in daily cares, when he
finds himself face to face with the brevity of life.
x) Yet often we mect with death. Burdened with care,
weaving plans for the future, we hasten along the busy streets
of the city, and all at once we meet a funeral procession. Some-
one has died. Someone who hurried along these streets a few
days ago with just as many cares, with just as many plans as
we do now. What a disturbing encounter!
We walk in flowery meadows in the warm sunshine of a
May day. A sweet fragrance fills the air, everything is sheer
beauty, sheer joy. Suddenly we start back: the lifeless body
of a little bird lies before us on the ground. Even here death
and corruption have accompanied us.
A beautiful red apple is set before you at the end of dinner.
We cut it in half: it is full of worms. Even here we find
death and corruption.
2) We meet death on all sides, but never does it seem so
dreadful, so tangible, so audible as on the last day of the year,
on New Year’s Eve. Then we can almost see how the present
becomes the past; we can almost hear how the current of the
year flows into the shoreless ocean of time.
During the year a man is as immersed in his work as a
schoolboy in some interesting book that falls into his hands:
he sees nothing except the book.
We adults, too, are wholly preoccupied during the yearTHE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH rr
with the struggle for life, with duty and work. We toil and
strive in the race for success. But on that evening when, as it
were, we hear the creaking of the wheels of passing time,
when we almost feel its transitory character, on that evening
the question arises: Why, why? Every flower at last fades.
Every child grows old. Morning is followed by night. Every
summer passes into winter.
At such times we ask ourselves a painful question. A ques-
tion which always abides in the depths of our souls, but which
in that hour burns with tormenting pain: Is it true that we
also must some day die? {s man like the year now hastening
toward its grave: a little surging of the waves, a ruffling of
the water; and then silence, a final passing on?
3) When we have experienced all this, when this thought
has made us humble, when the dreadful burden of it has
almost overwhelmed us, then we take the first step toward
true greatness, toward real life, toward genuine values—
toward a really happy new year. Whoever has once looked
with secing eyes upon the brevity of earthly life and into the
infinity of eternity, becomes serenely tranquil, and his peace
cannot be taken from him.
This happened to St. Francis of Assisi when he fell seri-
ously ill at twenty-three years of age, and looked death in the
face. He did, in fact, recover, but the whole world became
dim and shadowy in his eyes; he heard the voices of his old
friends, but with only half an ear; he saw the world he had
been used to, but he now saw with penetrating eyes: his eyes,
bathed in the light of eternity, saw behind all earthly vanity
the skeleton of its ephemeral character. This trail St. Paul
mentions when he says: “We have not here a lasting city, but
we seek one that is to come” (Heb. 13: 14).
“But if we think like that, earthly life will lose its purpose
and meaning.” No, indeed.112 LIFE EVERLASTING
On the contrary: after we think like that, earthly life gains
a new purpose and a higher meaning. True, everything passes,
but everything returns to the hand of its maker, God. In this
sense life is truly eternal circulation: it starts from God’s hand
and returns to God’s hand.
Thus we arrive at the second sobering lesson: earthly life
is short; but it is not only short, it is also important.
0
THE IMPORTANCE OF LIFE
Happy the man who takes to heart the admonition that
life is not mere pleasure, not mere work. It is something be-
sides this, it is also the service of God.
A. Life is mere pleasure. Anybody’s heart is grieved when
he reads in the newspapers about almost incredible instances
of a frivolous squandering of life; when he notes how irre-
sponsibly some persons waste their whole earthly life. If any-
one mentions the matter to them directly, they are offended.
“Oh, leave me in peace. A man lives only once,” they say in a
tone of rebuke.
If they would but consider what they are saying: A man
lives only once. Since you live only once, it is more important
than anything else that you live this one life well. If you had
two lives, you might perhaps risk one of them. But you have
not two lives, you have only one life. This you must live well.
Life is something more than pleasure seeking. And it is not
the sort of “happy new year” that our holy religion wishes us.
B. Life is not merely work. It is indeed toil; but not only
that. It is a struggle for bread; but not only that. It is a hard
struggle with the cares of earning a livelihood; but not only
that.
How hard the present-day man works. If we consider theTHE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH 113,
daily labor of a man engaged in a trade, of a physician, a
lawyer, a professor, a business man, a laborer, we see what a
rush their life is. A mother, a typist, a woman at any kind
of work, a teacher; they have to perform racking work. But
this in itself is still not the ideal of Christian life. It is still not
the “happy new year” that our holy religion wishes us.
C. If life is not merely pleasure and not merely work,
what else is it? What is this happy and harmonious life? Most
people would certainly be confused if on New Year’s Day we
were to say to them: “A few moments ago you wished me a
happy new year. Now what precisely do you mean by a happy
new year?”
“What do I mean? That you may enjoy good health.”
O yes: good health is a treasure. But it is only a part of
happiness. For if it were happiness itself, then people who are
in splendid health would not complain of unhappiness.
“A happy new year? Why, I wish you financial success and
prosperity; that will make the new year a happy one.”
But this will not make it a happy year. True, without money
we cannot live. But to live happily with nothing but abun-
dance of money is equally impossible. We see that often those
who have great wealth sink into the most appalling morass
of immorality. And we see that those who in despair take their
lives are not always people who live in poverty. Money leads
to dissension among relatives, money arouses sinful passions.
No, money does not insure happiness.
“Well then, I wish you abundance of pleasures in the new
year: visits to the theater, dances, an automobile, fur coat.
Surely that is enough.”
Enough? It is by no means enough! Something within us
begins to speak after the emptiness of nights spent in pleas-
ure. Within us is a voice that can be silenced for a time, but
that at length cries out in protest. You return home from at-114 LIFE EVERLASTING
tending a funeral, or you are crushed by some calamity, or
you are sitting alone at home, with nothing to break the si-
lence but the ticking of the clock. Then this voice begins to
speak. We are possessed by a great longing that not all the
pleasure in the world can satisfy. We are possessed by a home-
sickness that all the treasures of this world cannot satisfy.
We shall insure ourselves a happy new year, a happy life,
if we hear this voice and heed it. Our life will be a happy
life if we satisfy this longing. Our life will be a happy
one if we appease this yearning. As the years pass, every other
yoice within us becomes quieter, every longing of ours be-
comes weaker, every other road leads us rather into the mists,
but the voice of cternal life rings out, the longing for life
everlasting flares up.
D. Now I understand what a happy life is. It is something
more than pleasures, something more than work; a happy
life is the service of God. Whoever you are, wherever you are,
of whatever age you are, whatever position you are in: your
life must be in the service of God.
How will it become a service of God, you ask. By praying
morning and night? By going to mass on Sunday and keep-
ing the fast days? By frequently going to confession and
communion? By doing all these things.
Is something further necessary? Yes indeed. We must fulfil
our duty wherever Providence has placed us. We must be
strict with ourselves and forbearing with others. We must
firmly control the corrupt instincts latent within us and must
be willing to journey by the hard and rugged road that leads
to God. We must consider this life only as a temporary so-
journ, and seek the answer to its every question by the light
of eternity.
Brethren. This is the secret of a happy life. Whether you
are a child or an adult, a father or a mother, a young manTHE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH 15
or a young woman, let your life be a service of God. You may
also enjoy earthly life, in the right way. You must also work
during your earthly life, perhaps a great deal. But besides all
this, besides enjoyment and work, de not forget that the
candle in your hand is always burning down, the path ahead
of you is always growing shorter, life is slipping from your
grasp. Take care, then, that you do not have to appear before
God’s judgment scat with empty hands.
Your life will be happy if, besides the many, many transient
earthly tasks, you also accomplish a work that reaches over
into eternity. Your life will be happy if day by day you make
your memorial more beautiful. For that is everyone’s task: to
work out a memorial for himself. It is not important whether
this memorial is the statuc of a child or a youth, a young man.
or an old man, but that it should please the eternal God. This
is important, that in it the eternal God may recognize His
own image.
m
THE VALUE OF LIFE
Here the third great admonition falls on our ears: This
life is short, this life is important, then use this life to the
best of your ability, turn the coming years to the best account.
Our ancestors had a fondness for putting abstract religious
truths into graphic narrative form. Thus originated the an-
cient story of a poor simple man who is sitting alone in his
hut on New Year’s Eve when, precisely as the clock strikes
twelve, an angel appears and places a sack of gold in front
of him, saying: “This is yours. Use it well. Be happy with it.”
The angel disappears. At first the poor man is speechless with
astonishment, wondering whether he is awake or dreaming.
Finally seeing that the affair is no jest, he says: “With this116 LIFE EVERLASTING
money I will first of all pay my debts, then I will be very
careful how I use the remainder.”
The poor man who receives a sack of gold on New Year’s
Eve is, properly speaking, ourselves. ‘The remainder of life
that we receive from divine Providence is a great asset, an im-
mense treasure. What shall we do with it? Pay our debts and
take care how we use the remainder.
A. Before all else I will use the remainder of my life to
pay my debts: the many debts to God I made in my past life.
“Many pay with a chronic illness in the second half of their
lives for the sins they committed in the first half,” said an
experienced physician. This thought is continued by Chris-
tianity. In their life after death men pay for all the sins they
committed in their life before death.
I must be grateful to God that He has given me the op-
portunity to pay my debts, the opportunity to repent, to con-
fess, to atone here in my earthly life. I may not say: I still have
plenty of time.
You have time? Brethren, time deceives us. Every day
time shows us a new dawn, but moments that have passed
never return. Time never stands still. “The number of days
that we have lived are so many steps nearer to our goal. The
older we are, so much shorter is the remainder of our lives”
(St. Gregory). “See therefore, brethren, how you walk cir-
cumspectly not as unwise but as wise, redeeming the time”
(Eph. 5: 15).
You have time? On December 24, 1933 an awful railway
accident occurred near Paris. In a moment of time this ac-
cident took more than two hundred people—many of them
children traveling home for the holidays—before the judg-
ment seat of God. At the scene of the collision, the railroad
line was strewn with broken toys. But perhaps the mostTHE SOBERING FACT OF DEATH 117
dreadful relic was a bloodstained school-report containing the
following: “He is very quick-witted, intelligent, diligent; a
great future awaits him.” The boy was lying among the dead.
“A great future awaits him.” Do not say, my brethren, that
you still have plenty of time.
You have time? If the dead were to return, what would
they wish for? Gold? Automobiles? Theaters? Champagne?
Only a little time. Not even a year, a month. “If only we
had a week in which to pay our debts to God.” Brethren,
pay your debts as soon as possible in a sincere holy confes-
sion.
B. What shall I do with my life henceforth, with the treas-
ure that God has given into my hands? Besides paying my
past debts, I will make a wise use of it.
Look back upon your past life, simply upon the last year,
and ask yourself this question: “Can I be satisfied ?” But take
care what you reply. There are some who will hasten to reply:
J am satisfied. This year I passed my examinations; I married;
I found a position. J bought a little house. My savings have
increased.
Take care. These things you do not take with you. And if
you stand before your Judge, and He asks: “Is that all you
have brought with you?” You will have to answer: “That is
all.” You open your hands: they are empty, quite empty.
I do not want to make such use of the time that is still
mine. I wish to make good use of it, that at the end of each
day I may be able to say at my night prayer: My Lord, today
I not only became older, I not only came nearer death, but
Talso came a step nearer to Thee. I became one degree better.
One fault of mine I have vanquished. I have added another
stroke to the picture of our Lord in my soul and made it a
trifle more beautiful.118 LIFE EVERLASTING
My brethren. With such elevating and reassuring thoughts
the Christian confronts the inexorable power of death. Our
life’s candle is burning down. Earthly paths become shorter
in front of us. Life slips more and more from our grasp. It
is man’s fate that he must go. Not out into the dark and
gloomy night, but into the waiting arms of God. It is man’s
fate that the river of his life flows on and passes, Not into
a parched lake, but into the infinite ocean of eternal life.
Today the praise given to God by the psalmist is still valid:
“Tn the beginning, O Lord, Thou foundest the earth, and the
heavens are the works of Thy hands. They shall perish, but
Thou remainest; and all of them shall grow old like a gar-
ment and as a vesture Thou shalt change them and they shall
be changed. But Thou art always the selfsame, and Thy years
shall not fail” (Ps. 101: 26-28).
And St. Paul’s words to the Thessalonians also remain
valid: “To you who are troubled, rest with us when the Lord
Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with the angels of His
power in a flame of fire, giving vengeance to them who know
not God and who obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Who shall suffer eternal punishment in destruction
from the face of the Lord and from the glory of His power,
when He shall come to be glorified in His saints and to be
made wonderful in all them who have believed” (II Thess.
1: 7-10).
Brethren, life is like a banknote: it is not valuable in itself
but for what can be purchased with it. We are still in a posi-
tion to purchase eternal bliss with our use of life. We are
still in a position to avoid coming among those whom God
will condemn to eternal punishment in hell; we can still
come among those whom He will praise and receive into
His eternal realm, Amen.XI
DEATH THE GUIDE
Curistianity shows courage in keeping one day of the year
as “All Souls Day” and taking the living among the dead on
that day. General opinion and practice regard all mention
of death as something tactless, unseemly, indelicate.
How peculiar are human ways of thought! Life’s greatest
admonition, most moving truth, and most inevitable reality
is death. Yet it is seldom mentioned except by euphemism.
Day after day the postman delivers black-bordered mourn-
ing-cards, the newspapers contain several accounts of sudden
death; in every large city cemetery many burials take place
every day: yet we bury our heads in the sand because we
dread to face the reality.
But not all of us. On some tombs you may see carved a
broken pillar or an inverted and extinguished torch. But we
Christians, who place the cross of hope on the graves of our
loved ones, have no reason to avoid reflection on this earnest
and moving truth. The thought of the other world is indeed
serious and solemn, but it is not without hope and comfort.
Is death’s realm shrouded in gloom? Do mournful sorrow
and fear wander among the graves in the cemetery? Or do
warm sunbeams of consolation and encouragement shine
forth from this other world? The sunlight contains ultraviolet
rays which are more invigorating than the others. Invisible
to the human eye, they can be detected by especially sensitive
mechanisms. Likewise to the materially-minded the sadness
19120 LIFE EVERLASTING
of the cemetery is dark and forbidding; but to the sensitive
eyes of faith that saddenness is lighted with the radiance of
belief in life everlasting.
In the tombs of the ancient Egyptian pharaohs grains of
wheat were placed. Recently these grains, discovered when
the tombs were opened, were planted in the soil and, after
these thousands of years, they sprang into verdant life. Like
this seed, is belief in life beyond the grave, seed that is sown
by religion in the graves and springing into blades of blessed
consolation.
This light from the other world gives us a different view
of earthly life and helps us to bear life’s hardships.
I
A DIFFERENT VIEW OF EARTHLY LIFE
A. We are oppressed at the thought of a grave without a
cross above it.
1) We struggle all our life, and at the end what remains?
The certainty that we must go! Were J an animal, this thought
would not disturb me. Horse and rider go together into battle,
to suffering and death. But the horse never asks, Why? Why
all this? Only the rider does that.
A child stands on the curbstone. He has a cake in his hand
from which he takes huge bites, at the same time crying bit-
terly. “Why are you crying, little boy?” a passerby asks. “I
am crying,” answers the boy, “because every time [ take a bite,
my cake gets smaller.” Certainly there is something to cry for
in that. Thus life, too, decreases in our hands as cach passing
hour takes a bite out of it.
2) But this thought saddens only those who have no ray
of sunshine from the other world. For it is our sacred con-
viction that the grave is merely the final station of a state ofDEATH THE GUIDE 121
earthly existence, but not the annihilation of life itself. Thus
with eyes of faith I see this earthly life and its tasks in another
light. I set myself other goals, I make other plans, have other
desires, other tasks. I do not value life too highly, but neither
do I undervalue it. I do not want to obtain its pleasures and
comforts at any cost, even at the cost of sacrificing my moral
principles. Strictly speaking, this alone is real death: the de-
struction of spiritual values, the extinguishing of the fire of
the Holy Ghost in our souls.
B. But does the thought of the rapid passing of life diminsh
our love of work? On the contrary, it stimulates it. You need
only look at the haymakers when a summer thunderstorm
threatens to break above their heads. With industrious haste
they redouble their efforts that they may gather in the hay
before the rainfall. Our earthly life is such a haymaking and
harvesting.
A certain author writes: “If on January first we could be
certain that we would die on the next December thirty-first,
how different our way of thought, our work, our behavior
would be! How much excitement we would consider use-
less; how much more kindly we would regard others; how
grateful we would be for a short spell of lovely weather, for
a good suit, for a plate of food! How little we would be
concerned about the political situation or the Stock Exchange!
C. Belief in life hereafter is also a connecting link between
the living and the deceased members of a family. Thus says
St. Paul: “Be not sorrowful, even as others who have no hope”
(I Thess. 4: 12).
This belief rings forth from Christ’s words of comfort in-
scribed over the graves of our dear ones: “He that believeth
in Me, although he be dead, shall live” (John 11: 25).
This belief carries our love beyond the grave, finding ex-
pression not only in the placing of wreathes on the graves122 LIFE EVERLASTING
of our dear ones, but rather in prayers said for them, in masses
offered for them, in charitable deeds and in penances prac-
ticed for their sakes.
This belief in a hereafter explains the remarkable edu-
cational force, the almost incredible source of energy, that
emanates from a parent’s grave and affects their surviving
children, Life shows surprising cases of children, whose con-
duct often grieved their parents, becoming serious and quite
changed at the parent’s grave.
D. The warmth of this belief in a hereafter stirs up, in the
hearts of parents mourning for their dead children, manifes-
tations of charity toward their fellow men.
1) The moment when parents stand beside the coffin of
one of their children, is a touchingly painful one. The mail
has brought me sad letters from many a heartbroken mother
who has scen her lovely young daughter or her only son laid
in the grave. After that the bereaved mother sits staring be-
fore her in silent despair with dry eyes, or with her faith in
divine goodness shaken, struggling alone without any con-
solation.
2) What shall I say to such a one? What can give her
consolation? Nothing but the sunbeam shining upon us from
the next world.
The bereaved mother who believes in that next world does
not bury in her child’s grave the most beautiful ornament of
a woman’s soul, maternal love, but pours out this love upon
other children who have become orphaned, or expends it
upon those who have never known a parent’s love.
I know of a mother who remained in desolate despair after
the death of her child, until someone advised her to begin
knitting socks and making little shirts for children just the
size of her own little son, no longer for her own child butDEATH THE GUIDE 123
for little sufferers. And then, as the product of her knitting-
needles increased, the anguish of grief decreased in her heart.
Perhaps her little son sent her this sunbeam from the other
world.
Tt
LIFE'S HARDSHIPS
In the sunlight of that other world I have a different view
of life’s hardships.
A. The perfect dispensation of justice in the hereafter is
a consolation in bitter moments of earthly injustice. Our
grief at unjust neglect or unfair judgment is gently appeased
by the perfect justice of the next world. We are saddened by
death’s inexorable dominion, its face has many solacing fea-
tures. If we think life is unfair or that happiness has been
meted out with false measures, let us go to the cemetery and
there we shall be reconciled with our lot.
By the sunlight of the other world, we sec that all earthly
life is like a great game of chess. While the game continues,
there are kings and queens, knights and peasants. But when
the game is at an end, all alike are swept from the board and
each one comes into the silent box, into his coffin; no longer
is there king and peasant, and knight. There is only one: the
soul freed from the body, and according to the way it has
obeyed God’s commandments and performed the duties of
earthly life, it awaits its sentence from divine justice. And
then comes true a little German rhyme that we may render
thus:
As we believe, so do we live;
And as we live, so shall we die;
And as we die, so we remain,124 LIFE EVERLASTING
B. By this light from the other world, Christianity offers
the most optimistic view of life, because this religion gives
strength to bear the hardest fate.
1) When relentless death yearly mows down millions
around us, so that the idea might easily come into our minds
that man lives only to die, Christianity is able to chant the
triumph of eternal life.
From the moment of his birth every man wrestles with
death. A man hastens from one piece of work to the next;
another man from pleasure to pleasure. One wakens from a
wretched night to another wretched day; the other from a
night spent in dancing to a day of gaiety. Each is on his way
toward death.
But Christ is a greater lord than death; therefore He gives
strength for the most difficult life. You have lost all your
property? Your small capital is exhausted? Everyone who
loved you has died ? Your life is bitter? You are disappointed?
Jf you were richer than even the richest millionaire, of
what advantage would that be to you when you must leave
this life? And if you have been poorer than poor Lazarus
and suffered more than the holy Job, but you have lived ac-
cording to God’s will, what an asset this will become in the
next world!
2) The belief in a world to come always was and is a
marvelous source of strength in moments of calamity. On
March 26, 1827, one of the world’s greatest musicians died;
musical eras are reckoned from his third symphony as his-
tory is reckoned from the birth of Christ. And at the zenith
of his career, this Beethoven became deaf. In 1822 he wished
to conduct the only opera he composed, “Fidelio.” At the re-
hearsal, singers and orchestra are thrown into confusion. They
begin again. Again all is confusion. The dreadful truth flashes
upon the great composer: I have become deaf!DEATH THE GUIDE 125
Could a more appalling disaster have befallen him? And
how did he behave in the face of it? Did he collapse? Did
he take poison? Did he shoot himself? No. “I grasp fate
by the throat,” he writes. Whence came his superhuman
strength? From the sunbeam that shone upon him from the
other world, from his belief in life everlasting.
3) But perhaps I should not mention such remote ex-
amples. Shall I mention some modern ones, too?
Then see, two letters. Not an imaginary philosophy, not
an improvised instance, but two letters that were really writ-
ten. And what is related in them really happened recently
to two sisters.
The mother of Margaret and Mary, two warm-hearted,
deeply sensitive sisters, died. Life then swept the sisters far
apart. Here are two letters that they wrote to each other. I
repeat: these letters were really written by them; I did not
compose them.
Here is the first one:
October 25, 1925.
My dearest Mary:
Eugene and I have just returned home from the cemetery, where
we took two large pots of magnificent flowering white chyrsanthe-
mums to dear mother’s grave in our own name and yours, the
best we in our poverty could afford. We also took two large
bouquets of fir-branches. You can light a little candle at home,
or look at those wonderful perpetual tapers, the stars—if the skies
are not cloudy—and pray for her and Daddy and Augustus . . .
and for all the other good souls who haye gone on before to the
eternal home.
Where shall we be a hundred years hence?
I might well have said less than a hundred years. By then new
faces, new figures will walk the face of the earth, only here and
there some feature or some movement will be a reminder that
they were the little children playing around us today. A drop of
our blood, a little trace of our souls, may still be found somewhere.126 LIFE EVERLASTING
Humanity now seems strangely to resemble a great uniform
river, the past, the present, and the future, flowing from one in-
finity to the other, its way leading for a little space through the
educational province of “earthly life.” There is a “next world,” but
it is so very different that we can have no idea of it. How can a
root or a seed in the damp, dark carth imagine an entirely dif-
ferent world where there is light and air and warmth, and where it
will bloom in indescribable delicacy of tint and fragrance? And
where it will be able to create. You know that is what I should love
to know and to do in eternity. I do not want “eternal rest,” but
eternal activity. To be at rest, yes, at rest that I am on the right
path, that I cling to the dear Lord, and He will not forsake me.
But otherwise I should like to help Him, and on my memorial
cards, besides perpetual light, wish me good work too! And do
not cut flowers for my grave, but pray for me and have mass said
for the salvation of my soul.
But how far I have wandered from what I began to say! In a
word, your flowers are also lying on dead Mama’s grave. But do
not think of her grave if you want to meet her. Let us seek her
where there is no death, that is, with the dear God. This is not
a place, this heaven, it is the continuation of the life of spiritual
qualities, of goodness of a dear and beautiful individuality in an-
other sphere, in timeless and spaceless dimensions. Let us be worthy
of her memory by our patience, by the calmness with which we
bear our troubles, in forgiveness, in love. This mortal existence
passes so quickly; in a happier, spiritualized form, not subject to
bodily illnesses, we shall all meet again.
That is the end of the one letter.
I will read a few lines of the sister’s reply:
Transientness, transientness. Either sooner or later everything
passes, everything, whether it is good or whether it is painful.
‘The children grow up, we slowly disappear, then they quietly grow
old and their children too, and a strange spirit of the times, a
strange era will come. It is not worth while making a great fuss
about our lives, our well-being, our belongings. They will not last
forever, we cannot take them with us. . . . Why cling to thingsDEATH THE GUIDE 127
from which our hands slip, or which slip from our hands. We
need something absolute, something changeless, and eternally ideal
and calm.
I “died” long ago, in the sense that I have laid my old standards,
ambitions, fancies, longings, and demands at the feet of Him
who gave me life and who can take back my life at any moment.
And I have “risen again” to the fulfilment of my duties and only
beg that I may be allowed to bring up my children, that I may
harm no one, and may always know what is demanded of me by
circumstances, and that I may always stand fast to my principles.
We can never know what is good and what is bad for the develop-
ment of our “permanent part,” and rather shall the children grow
up in poverty to love of work, to commonsense views of life, than
in prosperity to self love, and a desire for comfort and pleasure.
In this way I take what comes with great inward tranquillity and
am exceptionally grateful for every little joy. And the result is
that Tam much, much happier than when I wanted to have my
own way or when I wanted to dictate to God how He should
order my destiny, that He should help me, but at once. And how
and in what manner He should help. Curing my bronchial catarrh,
He sent me a digestive complaint. That I should paint. He sent
poverty so that I had to earn money. With this period of house-
work perhaps He will heal my stomach complaint, or it will have
some effect on the children’s future. But it is certain that in every-
thing He gives some positive good.
‘That is the second letter.
Shall I add anything to it, my dear brethren? Shall] I draw
attention to the fine, spiritual tranquillity that is brought to
suffering hearts by the sunbeam from the other world? Shall
I say that they do not fear to look to the world beyond the
gtave, whose graves are surmounted by the cross of Christ?
The great Apostle of the Gentiles, St. Paul, in his epistle
to the Romans, speaks fifty-seven times of the dreadful reality
of death; yet he is able to say these beautiful words of spir-128 LIFE EVERLASTING
itual reassurance: “None of us liveth to himself, and no man
dieth to himself. For whether we live, we live unto the Lord;
or whether we die, we die unto the Lord. Therefore whether
we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s” (Rom. 14: 7, 8).
Amen.XII
DEATH THE COMFORTER
Ar the entrance to old Italian cemeteries we often find two
interesting statues. One represents sorrow: it is the statue of
an afflicted man bent by grief, with an extinguished torch
at his feet; the other is the personification of life eternal, of
resurrection, of renewed meeting: it is the statue of a hand-
some youth, a star glistens on his forehead, and his shining
eyes look upward.
These two statues are well placed at the entrance to a
cemetery; for death has indeed such a twofold figure. The
one is a rattling skeleton with a sharp scythe in its hand,
and wherever it appears the bitter weeping of mourners breaks
forth. Its voice at such a time is the mysterious voice heard
by the great prophet Isaias of the Old Testament on one oc-
casion: “The voice of one saying: Cry! And I said: What
shall I cry? All flesh is grass and all the glory thereof as the
flower of the field. The grass is withered and the flower is
fallen” (Is. 4o: 6, 7).
Yes, all life is as grass. This is one representation of death:
a rattling skeleton.
But there is another representation of death, and to me
this seems much more the Christian idea: when death is de-
picted as an angel. The angel of death. His voice is the consol-
ing voice that the Apostle St. John heard: “Write: Blessed are
the dead who die in the Lord” (Apoc. 14: 13). This voice is the
voice of eternity.
129130 LIFE EVERLASTING
Eternity. St. Augustine calls it magna cogitatio, “the great
thought.” After all, this is the only truly great thought, strong
and imparting strength, a thought reassuring and encourag-
ing. Other human thoughts are concerned only with earthly
life and come to an end with earthly life: but this thought
speaks most beautifully in death’s realm, in the land of graves.
It goes to every mourner, to every orphaned heart, to every-
one struggling with sorrow, and repeats Isaias’ question:
“Knowest thou not or hast thou not heard? The Lord is the
everlasting God. . . . They that hope in the Lord shall re-
new their strength, they shall take wings as eagles, they shall
run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint” (Is.
40: 28, 31).
What can make death, appalling and dreadful death, bear-
able, a solacing, encouraging angel? These two thoughts:
death is the end of earthly life; death is the beginning of
life everlasting.
I
THE END OF EARTHLY LIFE
The first consolation given by the angel is that death puts
an end to earthly life and to all the suffering and injustice
that is entailed by life.
A. Death puts an end to all earthly suffering. I scarcely
need to say much about this. These words of Holy Writ re-
quire no explanation: “O death, thy sentence is welcome to
the man that is in need, and to him whose strength faileth;
who is in a decrepit age and that is in care about all things”
(Ecclus. 41: 3, 4). And St. Ambrose declared: “Life is full of
so much trouble that death, compared to it, seems rather to
be a remedy than a penalty.”DEATH THE COMFORTER 131
How much suffering accompanies man on his earthly pil-
grimage! How much pain, how many tears! And in life
everlasting all this is at an end. “They shall no more hunger
nor thirst, neither shall the sun fall en them, nor any heat,
for the Lamb, which is in the midst of the throne, shall rule
them and shall lead them to the fountains of the waters of
life, and Ged shall wipe away all tears from their eyes”
(Apoc. 7: 16, 17).
Is it any wonder that many invalids greet death joyfully
when he steps to their bedside with the sand run down in the
hourglass in his hand and whispers into their ear the Lord’s
message: “The time has come when you may rest from your
labors” (Apoc. 14: 13). Death is a cessation from all suffering.
B. Furthermore, death is a dispenser of justice. This earthly
life abounds in so much injustice; so many times evil con-
quers, and honor suffers defeat. Thereby many are often very
embittered. But when we are severely tormented by the many
injustices of earthly life, let us go to the cemetery among the
quiet dead, and there our rebellious hearts will become
calmer, Death is a dispenser of justice. Rank and position
count for nothing in his eyes, he cannot be bribed with wealth,
nor cajoled with smiles; he accepts no one’s recommendation
of another.
Perhaps you know the German ballad of the bells of Speyer.
A poor man died, says the ballad, and in the tower the big
emperor-bell pealed forth, the bell that usually tolled only
when an emperor died. And the populace said: “The em-
peror has died, the emperor has died.” Later emperor Henry
V really did die, but when only a little passing-bell tolled,
and people asked one another: “Who can the poor sinner be
who today has come to judgment?”
Tam sure you feel the symbolism of this ballad: that death132 LIFE EVERLASTING
is a dispenser of justice. In his realm every earthly difference
disappears, and every true difference, every spiritual value,
appears.
C. Thus death equalizes the social inequalities of earthly
life. “Give an account of thy stewardship” (Luke 16: 2). You
stand before a Judge who cannot be bribed. Whether you
were renowned or unknown, wealthy or poor, the scion of an
old family or of an obscure one, emperor or beggar, these
differences are now of no account. “For we brought nothing
into this world, and certainly we can carry nothing out”
(I Tim. 6:7).
Some may recall the profound symbolism of the burial in
the crypt of the Vienna Capuchins of the mighty ruler Fran-
cis Joseph I in the year 1916.
The lord steward of the royal household knocks at the door
of the crypt.
“Who asks for admittance?” is the question put from the
depths of a vault by a Capuchin father.
“The emperor and king, Francis Joseph I,” answers the
lord steward.
“T do not know him.”
The lord steward again knocks at the door.
“Who asks for admittance?”
“Francis Joseph of Habsburg.”
“T do not know him,” is again the reply.
The knocking is repeated for the third time.
“Who asks for admittance?”
“A poor dead person.”
At that the door of the crypt is opened and the coffin ad-
mitted.
In death all earthly distinctions disappear, but all true dis-
tinctions become important.
D. Death sometimes cancels our debts to God. Death andDEATH THE COMFORTER 133
its precursor, suffering, may be a sinner’s opportunity to
atone for his sins. Who can say he has no atonement to make
in the sight of God? Even if those sins have been confessed,
has sufficient atonement been made?
Ina beautiful, ennobling, and exalting prayer zealous Chris-
tians offer their deaths to God in humble surrender during
their years of health and strength: “My Lord, whenever and
wherever death overtakes me, under whatever circumstances,
I accept it at Thy hand as expiation for my sins.”
Thus St. Paul’s words become true in us: “For to me . . «
to die is gain.” How could it be otherwise, when death puts
an end to earthly suffering, dispenses justice, equalizes in-
equalities, and cancels our debts?
0D
THE BEGINNING OF LIFE EVERLASTING
Death has a still more consoling, more encouraging feature.
At the same time that death lifts the cross from our shoul-
ders, our holy religion erects it on our graves as a sign of
consolation. That cross proclaims that with death life ever-
lasting begins and therefore death is a homecoming to our
heavenly Father. This is what makes death a consoling angel.
A. Real life begins with death.
1) On every building the roof is important, that is, the
conclusion of every work is important. The concluding words
of the Creed are important. If there is no life everlasting, what
is all the rest worth: of what value is God, Christ, the Church,
the whole of life? If there is no eternal life, of what worth
is this earthly life? It would be an aimless struggle.
On the other hand, if I am a Christian I believe in life
everlasting. I believe that here on earth I have only a little
piece of life in my hand; the greater part of it, the endless134 LIFE EVERLASTING
part, is in God’s hand. And what is here obscure, uncertain,
unjust, and anguishing is dispelled in that other part, and all
becomes bright and glorious. Christianity displays profound
psychology when it calls the day on which a saint has died
dies natalis, his birthday. Death is not destruction, and man
does not remain the grave’s eternal prisoner.
Every grave will fare as one in Hannover fared. There in
an old cemetery stands the grave of a distinguished woman
who died in 1782. Her tombstone bears the following strange
inscription: “This grave, bought for all time, must never be
opened.”
“For all time—never.” What weighty words!
Yet the grave was opened; opened neither by an carth-
quake nor by human hands. At the foot of the tombstone a
little birch tree began to grow. The little tree became a big
tree and in time removed from its path everything that ob-
structed its growth. Iron clasps were bent, stones were moved
from their places and now this mighty tree stands in the mid-
dle of the grave. It did not trouble much about “for all time”
and “never.” Thus in Joseph of Arimathea’s garden our Lord
opened the sepulcher that many wished to keep closed for-
ever. Ever since then on our graves the cross of this risen
Savior proclaims that the last word does not belong to death,
but to life.
2) We know that death is the great sower, and the grave-
yard is God’s acre. This is quite a biblical expression. You
know Jesus’ words: “Unless the grain of wheat falling into
the ground die, itself remaincth alone; but if it dic it bringeth
forth much fruit” (John 12: 25). So according to our Lord
we must die that we may live. That is why St. Paul declares
that in baptism, we are baptized for death: “Know you not
that all we who are baptized in Christ Jesus, are baptized in
His death?” (Rom. 6: 3).DEATH THE COMFORTER 135
What things we often see on graves! What pagan rep-
resentations! The most fitting ornament is the cross. The
cross with this inscription: “I believe in life everlasting.” I
believe that what we call death is 2 transition from one form
of life to another. Transition to that other life, where the
heavenly Father awaits us.
Can there be anyone who does not believe this? Our Lord
spoke of it again and again. There mourners shall be com-
forted, there the pure of heart shall see God (Matt., chap. 5).
There will be held the marriage feast where we must appear
in wedding garments (Matt. 22: 12). There the good fish will
be separated from the bad fish (Matt. 13: 48). There is the
house mentioned by Christ: “In My Father’s house there are
many mansions” (John 14: 2). At death the true, the higher
life begins.
3) What will our death be like? No one can tell. But I
imagine that all at once the room will grow dark where I
lie on my sickbed. The electric light will burn in vain, I no
longer see it. I am already feeling my way along a corridor.
But that does not last very long. All at once at the end of
the corridor a door opens wide and I stand in a dazzling
flood of light in the next world. The doctor has hardly said
“He is dead”; but my soul already stands in the radiance of
perpetual light. Have you ever seen the wide-open eyes of a
little child when its mother first takes it into the candle-
lighted room on Christmas Eve, where “little Jesus” has al-
ready been? Well, so we too shall stand when, after our long
pilgrimage, we return home, from this “vale of tears” to
where “little Jesus” has not only “been” but where He lives
eternally.
In truth he who thinks that death takes the members of
his family to some immeasurable distance from him, does
not think rightly of death. On the contrary, death abolishes136 LIFE EVERLASTING
all distance between us because it liberates the soul from every
limitation imposed on it by matter. Death does not disperse
a family; the deceased members of the family continue to
belong in the midst of us; they are simply living in another
home. Living there and waiting for us there.
Thus death’s forbidding features become reassuring, con-
soling, encouraging. Death is indeed a great secret, a great
mystery. Mysterium iniquitatis, the mystery of sin, because
through sin and on account of sin death came into the world.
But it is also mysterium caritatis, the mystery of love, because
the despairing feature of our own death has already been taken
away by another great death, our Lord’s death of redemption.
Happy death? Is such a thing possible? Is it true that
people have died smiling calmly, with a peaceful expression,
with confident surrender to the divine will?
Did they not feel the pains of illness? Yes, but hope and
the yearning for God was still stronger within them. Did they
not regret leaving this earth? Yes, but their longing to pos-
sess heaven was still greater. Did they not know the fear of
death? Yes, but their yearning for life everlasting conquered
it. Did they not perceive the angel of death? Yes, but they
also saw the consolation and beauty of his face.
The thought of such a “happy death” is the greatest con-
solation in the hour of our own death. An architect docs not
mourn when he has finished a building. An artist is not sad
when he has put the last touches to a picture. A soldier at the
end of a successful battle. The wanderer who has reached his
goal. The mariner upon coming into port. A child is not
sad when it comes home to its father.
B. In that thought we have discovered the most comfort-
ing feature of death’s face. Death is a homecoming to our
heavenly Father. “I leave the world and I go to the Father”
(John 16: 28).DEATH THE COMFORTER 137
1) Says a French writer (Vinet): “The Christian is a man
of desires.” Certainly a holy homesickness draws us toward
the eternal kingdom of our heavenly Father as rivulets are
drawn toward the great ocean, as a wanderer is drawn toward
his home, as the magnet is attracted by the magnetic pole. We
are never satisfied with today, but await what the morrow
will bring. Never was the past year good enough, we always
wish for a happier new year. Because we all feel that “we
have not here a lasting city, but we seek one that is to come”
(Heb. 13: 14).
This longing made St. Paul say that he had a desire “to
be dissolved and to be with Christ” (Phil. 1: 23). Death is
the great dissolution, the unveiling of the soul: then the
material partition wall falls, the wall that hid God’s face from
our sight.
Death is the gratification of the portentous longing that
makes man a restless sojourner here on earth. “While we are
in the body, we are absent from the Lord” (I Cor. 5: 6), is
St. Paul’s lament. Here we live, as it were, in a hotel room.
Who would wish to settle down definitely in such a room?
The final object of all our fervent longings is God, our
final home is God’s kingdom. The realm where the words of
Holy Writ are realized: “Behold the tabernacle of God with
men, and He will dwell with them and they shall be His
people and God Himself with them shall be their God”
(Apoc. 21: 3).
‘Now we understand why our hearts beat with joy when
our Lord speaks of.death as a homecoming to the Father
(John 14:2). Who would not be joyful when after a long
sojourn abroad he at last returns home to his Father’s house?
When those who are weary and overburdened may lay aside
their tools, their kitchen work, their pens; may throw the
heavy knapsacks from their shoulders and rest in a place138 LIFE EVERLASTING
where “God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and
death shall be no more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sor-
row shall be any more” (Apoc. 21: 4).
2) Death is also a day of compensation: the crowning of
all our self-discipline, of our every battle, of all our renun-
ciation.
When the abbot St. Hilary came to the end of a long dis-
ciplined and repentant life, and the fear of death tortured
him greatly, he encouraged his departing soul in these words:
“Step forth; what fearest thou? Break forth, my soul, why
dost thou hesitate? For nearly seventy years thou hast served
Christ; shalt thou now fear death?” What a consolation for
anyone to be able to say this!
“O sweet brother death,” cries St. Francis of Assisi in the
“Hymn to the Sun,” that he wrote before his death. Truly
the death of the righteous is as tranquil and bright as a beau-
tiful sunset. Above them hover the words of Holy Writ as
the Church applies them: “Precious in the sight of the Lord
is the death of His saints” (Ps. 115: 15).
3) It is true, nevertheless, that the thought of this home-
coming is likewise a warning for us.
‘This question was once put to Epaminondas: “Whom dost
thou consider the greatest, Chabrias, Iphicrates, or yourself ?”
To which Epaminondas replied modestly: “First see how we
shall die; only then can one judge.”
So it is, my brethren. How shall we die? Do you wish to
know how we shall die? It is easy to reply to that. We shall
die as we have lived. For Dante’s words are true (Inferno,
cant. 14, line 51): “What I was in life, I am in death.” He
who has cared for his soul, for eternal life, for God, while
enjoying good health, will find God beside him when the
great moment approaches. He will be able to look into death’s
eyes as St. Francis of Assisi did.DEATH THE COMFORTER 139
4) And in this we find death’s final consolation. Now
comes the grand “unveiling of the statue.” Mortal life is no
more than the scaffolding of a building in course of construc-
tion. If then the work of the soul is finished, the scaffolding
is removed and the building appears.
Does everything pass, is everything engulfed by the shore-
less ocean of time? Oh no. There is something that trium-
phantly defies time. And what is this? Every little stone that
we built into our souls. Every little good intention, thought,
word, and deed of ours derived from God. All our pain and
suffering, all our unselfish love, all our patience and loyalty,
every moral victory of ours; all this remains forever. It is true
that in the same way our every weak moment and failure,
our every infidelity and lack of principle, all our cowardice
and falsity, all our dark hours and dark deeds remain too.
Thus we see the nature of our life’s task: to build our-
selyes, to ennoble and beautify our souls, unti] the angel of
death comes for us. This building work is the duty of each
one in whatever position or under whatever circumstances
he lives his life on earth. Whether our lifework is in the
kitchen or in the factory, in the office or in the hospital ward,
whatever it is in the world, this task awaits all of us: the
building of our souls. Therein we find life in death; and he
who finds life in death ceases to fear death.
“All flesh is grass,” said the prophet Isaias. “The grass is
withered and the flower is fallen” (Is. 40: 7). If that were all,
it would be calamitous. But this truth has an exalting con-
tinuation: grass that is withered will grow again. This truth
is dreadful only for those whose roots have broken away from
God, from the life-giving soil of the soul. “For if you live
according to the flesh, you shall dic, but if by the Spirit you
mortify the deeds of the flesh, you shall live” (Rom. 8: 13).
“What things a man shall sow, those also shall he reap. For140 LIFE EVERLASTING
he that soweth in his flesh, of the flesh also shall reap cor-
ruption. But he that soweth in the spirit, of the spirit shall
reap life everlasting” (Gal. 6: 8).
The wicked “shall shortly wither away as grass, and as
the green herbs shall quickly fall” (Ps. 36:2). But “the just
shall flourish like the palm tree; he shall grow up like the
cedar of Libanus” (Ps. g1: 13).
Then let us listen to death’s last admonition: When you
came into the world, you wept bitterly, but around you every-
one rejoiced. So live that when you leave the world, even if
everyone around you weeps, you will rejoice, rejoice in the
eternal bliss that awaits you.
My dear brethren. Up two sides of Switzerland’s famous
mountain, the Rigi, climb cog-wheel railways. One of them
starts at Vitznau on the shore of Lake Lucerne, the other at
the foot of the other side of the mountain, at Goldau.
On the platform of the Goldau railway station a notice
states that underneath the station nearly five hundred persons
lie buried, together with the church and more than a hundred
houses.
On September 2, 1806 there was a landslide down the side
of the Rossberg, burying the five hundred inhabitants under
a mass of rocks and earth. The rocky mass still lies in omi-
nous proximity to the railway; beneath it an entire village
lies buried.
There, too, lies the village church. On the day of the catas-
trophe, in the church, in the Holy Eucharist, the Lord Jesus
Christ also descended into the underground grave.
What a consoling thought: Christ is also buried with His
followers who died so suddenly. What a consoling thought!
For to suffer is not the most dreadful thing; but to sufferDEATH THE COMFORTER 141
without Christ. To be buried is not the most awful thing;
but to be buried without the hope of resurrection.
Lord Jesus, help us Thy followers, that if we suffer in life
our every suffering may be mitigated by our belief in life
everlasting.
Lord Jesus, help us, Thy followers, that when we die we
may be fortified in death by the consolation of our home-
coming.
Lord Jesus, help us, Thy followers, that if we are buried we
may before dying once more receive the Holy Eucharist and
be buried together with Thee, that the hope which animated
St. Paul may also animate us: “I have fought a good fight,
J have finished my course, I have kept the faith. As to the
rest there is laid up for me a crown of justice which the Lord,
the just Judge, will render to me in that day” (II Tim. 4: 7, 8).
Amen.XII
DEATH THE VANQUISHED
Woo has not heard of the cemetery at Pisa and the famous
frescoes above its entrance? The largest painting, “The Tri-
umph of Death,” commemorates the dreadful plague of 1348.
In this picture, life is represented by a pleasant green park;
amid music, games, and pleasure, the people pass their days,
but in the distance death is seen approaching on dark pinions,
with fearfully owing white hair. The people do not observe
his approach, until all at once he smites with his scythe into
the midst of the merrymakers. Certainly this “Triumph of
Death” is a picture calculated to make everyone shudder.
But on a different part of the wall another picture is to be
seen: tranquillizing, comforting. This is not death trium-
phant, but death vanquished. Here no flower-garden is sym-
bolical of earthly life, but a somber valley surrounded by
rocky crags, “the Vale of Tears.” This, too, is full of people,
just as the park in the other picture. They also die as do
those others, but not with contorted faces. Each face ex-
presses a holy longing, a sacred calm; each one yearningly
stretches out his arms toward death: here death is not vic-
torious, death has been overcome, vanquished.
Death vanquished? Is there such a thing? The most beau-
tiful manifestation of belief in life everlasting is when mortal
man overcomes death. Because death can triumph only over
those who do not believe in life everlasting. This thought I
intend to set forth in the first part of today’s discourse; after-
142DEATH THE VANQUISHED 143
ward to consider that he who believes in eternal life van-
quishes death. Christ aids him to overcome it when He
appears beside his sickbed.
I
THOSE WHO ARE VANQUISHED BY DEATH
A. What is man’s life but a ceaseless struggle with death
and a continual dread of death? We eat and drink, rest and
amuse ourselves, recruit our strength and underge medical
treatment: all this is a forced concession, a brief respite ex-
torted from death’s niggardly hand.
When someone dies who is dear to us, we say while weep-
ing bitterly: Life is so short! Does everything pass so quickly ?
Does everything perish?
Yes, dear brethren, everything perishes. “We belong to
death, and everything that is ours is his,” says the Latin poet,
Horace.
This world, this earthly life
For young and old is only strife,
First we laugh, then we sigh,
And the end is that all must die.
How dreadful it must be when a person feels his strength
decreasing, feels that death is approaching, and has nothing
to say to him! Nothing but what the wretched Nietzsche said:
“The crows are cawing and wending their swift way toward
the town. So it will snow; alas for him who has no home!”
Who is it that has no home when the freezing eventide of
life comes? He who has no faith. Only such a man, an un-
believer, is vanquished by death.
B. However we patch and mend our lives, death seems to
triumph after all. With a few skilful strokes of his pencil,144 LIFE EVERLASTING
Diirer has shown us a startling picture of death: Death sits
on a horse, emaciated to a skeleton, on his head a ghostly
crown sparkles; in his outstretched hand is a scythe with
which he mows down everything wherever he goes in this
world. The title of the picture is, “King Death.”
The picture is true, yet not true. It is true because there is
no living thing on earth that can escape the power of death.
But it is also not true, because there was Someone who was
stronger than death on his galloping horse: Christ who over-
came death, Christ the Lord of life. And everyone who clings
to the hand of the Christ who vanquished death, is stronger
than death.
An elderly physician once said: In my fifty years of medical
practice I have seen thousands die. Some awaited death with
a dull resignation reminiscent of the animals, some with im-
potent rage, some resisted despairingly and awaited its com-
ing in fear and trembling. Only one kind awaited death
calmly and peacefully: believing Catholics.
Is this true? Is it possible? Is it possible that one dies and at
the same time overcomes death? What is the secret of this?
What gives us, mortal men, strength to vanquish the dreadful
tyranny of death?
big
‘THOSE WHO VANQUISH DEATH
A. The answer cannot be doubted: Whoever believes in
life everlasting vanquishes death.
1) There is hardly anyone who does not know the first
line of the Bible: “In the beginning God created the heavens
and the earth” (Gen. 1:1). These are sublime words.
But if I were now to ask what are the very last words of theDEATH THE VANQUISHED 145
last book of Holy Writ, I am afraid few persons could tell
me. Yet they are sublime, vivifying words.
“Come, Lord Jesus” (Apoc. 22: 20) says the Apostle St. John
in the closing lines of the last book of the Bible, the Apoca-
lypse. Holy Writ could not end with a more beautiful long-
ing than this; and we cannot close our own life with a more
beautiful desire.
2) What is life? Ceaseless fear of death. This fear weighs
on our entire lives and enfeebles them. How much more a
man’s life would be if he did not fear death!
Those who are accustomed to consider earthly life from
the standpoint of life everlasting, in their last moments will
calmly listen to the consoling prayer of holy mother Church,
which is said beside the dying by a priest: Proficiscere, anima
christiana, “Set out on thy way, Christian soul.”
Come, brethren, set out. Earthly life was the pilgrimage,
now is the homecoming. Earthly life was the battle, now
comes the victory. Earthly life was the test, now comes the
reward. Earthly life was a voyage, now comes the harbor.
Earthly life was the night, now comes the sunrise, the light
eternal. Proficiscere, sct out on thy way, Christian soul. For
unbelievers death is a leap into darkness, an appalling leap.
For the believer it is the gentle opening of a door.
If shortly before his death Socrates possessed sufficient
spiritual strength to sacrifice a cock to the gods in gratitude
because he was soon “to be cured of the illness, life,” with
much better reason we can look up hopefully toward the
opening gates of our eternal home.
B. I look at the graves in our cemeteries and my eyes fasten
their gaze on a great symbol: the cross erected upon the
graves. On our graves the arms of the cross point heavenward
and speak of a consoling truth: the grave is not the last word,146 LIFE EVERLASTING
the grave is incapable of covering life, with death life is
merely changed, it is not lost. Obdormivit in Domino says the
Church most consolingly of the dead, they “fell asleep in the
Lord.”
Let this falling asleep in the Lord come. What does it sig-
nify to one who has striven all his life to serve God? The
end of a race, the crowning triumph of a struggle, the dying
away of battle, the overcoming of death. For one who has
overcome death, the solemn tolling of funeral bells proclaims
the Easter of life eternal. To him funeral bells ring in the
Sun, the Sun that has risen never more to set.
C. Whoever thinks in this way may indeed mourn for his
loved ones, but his mourning will be of a different sort.
1) St. Paul counsels us not to mourn for our dead as the
unbelievers do. “Be not sorrowful even as those who have no
hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so
them who have slept through Jesus will God bring with
Him” (I Thess. 4: 12, 13).
But what does that mean? Are we not allowed to mourn,
are we not allowed to shed tears? O yes. We may weep for
our dear ones who have departed. Is there any picture dearer
to us, more widely known, than the picture of the Mater
dolorosa, Sorrowful Mother, mourning for her dead Son?
And that marvelous woman, St. Elizabeth of Hungary, did
she not burst into tears when the news of her husband’s death
was brought to her?
We, too, may mourn, but not in a pagan manner. Not as
“those who have no hope,” but as those who know that death
was vanquished by Christ. As those whose cars have heard
St. Paul’s stirring words: “This corruptible must put on in-
corruption, and this moral must put on immortality. And
when this mortal hath put on immortality, then shall come to
pass the saying that is written: Death is swallowed up inDEATH THE VANQUISHED 147
victory. O death, where is thy victory? O death, where is thy
sting?” (I Cor. 15: 53-55.)
2) We can overcome, because death has already been over-
come by Christ. After Christ’s advent people still dic, it is
true, just as they did before He came to earth. But since His
coming we know clearly and certainly that even after burial
our souls, destined to eternal life, remain.
But death is not now such a victorious tyrant as he was be-
fore Christ came, because today we know that he destroys in
us nothing but what is transient. Today death seems not to be
the same dreadful reaper he was long ago, because now we
know that he takes us from darkness to light, from sickness
to health, from thirst to the fountain-head, from space and
time to an infinity that knows no limitations.
Death was vanquished by Christ when He proclaimed that
it is only a transition to a new, more beautiful life. As in na-
ture some species become extinct to make way for more per-
fect ones, so at the end of life we step out of our own narrow
frames that we may step into God’s infinity.
Death was vanquished by Christ when He proclaimed
that the corruption of our bodies that arouses so much horror,
is nothing but the removal of a barrier that prevents us from
entering our real home.
Death was vanquished by Christ when He taught mankind
to face death courageously. The multitude turn their backs
upon death and strive to escape from him. Of course they do
not succeed and so they become death’s victims. For the more
anyone tries to flee from death, the more helplessly he falls
into death’s hands.
What happens to him who looks death in the face with
head erect? Of course he too meets death, but freely, con-
sciously, in the strength of a great future hope, triumphantly.
This mortal overcomes death, for in the last great moment,148 LIFE EVERLASTING
there beside him holding his hand, stands Christ; the Christ
who triumphed over death.
Or
CHRIST BESIDE THE DYING
Now we have arrived at the final source of our victory. In
the decisive moments of our last conflict, Christ stands beside
us. This, my brethren, is not a mere figure of speech, a mere
rhetorical ornament.
A. When we come into this world, in the ceremonies
of our baptism, our holy religion places a lighted candle in
our hands and places a white robe of innocence on us. When
we are preparing to depart this life, it again lights this candle,
endeavors to robe our souls anew in the white sanctified gar-
ment of grace, and brings Christ to our sickbeds in the Holy
Eucharist.
1) “Receive this white garment,” says the officiating priest
at baptism in the first hours of our life, “which mayest thou
carry without stain before the judgment seat of our Lord
Jesus Christ, that thou mayest have life everlasting.” “Receive
this burning light and keep thy baptism so as to be without
blame; observe the commandments of God, that when our
Lord shall come to His nuptials, thou mayest meet Him to-
gether with all the saints in the heavenly court and live for-
ever and ever.”
Now we prepare to stand before the judgment seat of God,
now the “wedding hour” has come. As mother Church stood
by us in the first hours of our lives, so now she takes her stand
beside us in this last hour. Then a lighted candle was in our
hand, the symbol of faith, as it is now also. Now she washes
us clean by the power of the sacraments of penance, the Holy
Eucharist, aad extreme unction.DEATH THE VANQUISHED 149
2) Death and holy communion. Death and the eternal
memorial of Christ’s death. Death and the Holy Eucharist.
How greatly they belong together! The death of frail man
and the eternal memory of Christ’s death! We priests know
to how many persons, grievously ill, the administration of
the sacraments has brought relief. Nurses and doctors can
testify to how many sick people the reconciliation to God
has brought alleviation, when no narcotic in this world was
able to relieve their pain. Every experienced priest can tell of
many sick people who, after a good confession, received in
holy communion the Redeemer whom they had lost in the
noisy bustle of life. But this Redeemer never rested until He
could whisper reassuringly into the ear of His strayed sheep
undergoing the hard struggle of the death agony: “I am the
bread of life. If any man eat of this bread, he shall live for-
ever” (John 6: 48, 52).
This is the final triumph over death. When every false
allurement of the world fades away, when at life’s end, like
the farewell rays of the setting sun, our childhood’s faith
again shines forth and, bathed in tears of repentance, man
contentedly places his soul in the hands of his heavenly Fa-
ther. How grateful we should be to our Lord that He Himself
comes to strengthen us in the final struggle.
B. How grateful we must be also because He has given
a special sacrament to be administered to the sick in the most
difficult hour, in fateful hours. “Is any man sick among you?”
writes the Apostle St. James. “Let him bring in the priests
of the church and let them pray over him, anointing him
with oil in the name of the Lord; and the prayer of faith shall
save the sick man, and the Lord shall raise him up, and if he
be in sins they shall be forgiven him” (James 5: 14, 15).
1) Do you understand, my brethren, what this sacrament
is for? Is it to bring death to the sick? That is what some150 LIFE EVERLASTING
people seem to think. Is it that those to whom it has been
administered are dying in any event and can now be buried?
Certainly not. Here in this church sits a dear listener of mine,
a professor of medicine at the university who has attended my
sermons for many years. Last spring he became seriously ill,
sent for me at once, received extreme unction. And did he die
of it? Today he is here again, praying here with us and listen-
ing to the word of the Lord.
When we speak of extreme unction we speak of a sublime
thing: of the sanctification of death, of the grace of a good
death. This is the real euthanasia, good dying, and not an
overdose of injections to send a sick person to the next world
in a stupor. “To die well” is the most difficult art in the
world. Everyone dies, but everyone dies only once, and we
must attain this one death rightly.
2) Who does not fear death? Everyone with a healthy
nervous system fears it. But Christ’s sacrament mitigates our
fear and fortifies our dismayed hearts.
While we are healthy we perhaps do not grasp what a ter-
rible burden it can be, a more torturing spiritual suffering
than the illness, when a sick man remembers his unfulfilled
duties, his unrepaired faults, his old sins. This dreadful sense
of guilt may consume more of his vitality than the bodily
illness itself.
The memory of sins committed by the cycs. The many
frivolous, sinful glances, for which it will be so difficult to
account. But see, here beside us stands Christ’s priest. Anoint-
ing our eyes with holy oil, he prays: “Through this holy
unction and through His most tender mercy, may the Lord
pardon thee whatever sins thou hast committed by see-
ing.”
Again: how much improper, even sinful, conversation,
how many indecent words, how much gossip, abuse, and un-DEATH THE VANQUISHED 151
kind criticism! But see, now Christ’s priest anoints our lips
and prays: “Through this holy unction and through His most
tender mercy may the Lord pardon thee whatever sins thou
hast committed by taste and speech.”
And he anoints our ears praying that God’s mercy may
pardon the sins we have committed by hearing—all of them,
all of them.
And he anoints our hands that God’s mercy may pardon
the sins we have committed by touching—all of them, every
one of them.
And he anoints our feet, that God’s mercy may pardon the
sins we have committed by walking—all of them.
This is real euthanasia, this is the art of a good death, this
is victory over death, when, after receiving the sacraments,
we can say with peace in our heart: Now I lay down my life
in God’s hands.
C. Dear brethren, is it not a heartless stupidity to deprive
a sick person of this fortifying sacrament? Is it not an im-
mense responsibility to postpone calling a confessor: No, not
today. Tomorrow, sometime later. All at once comes sudden
death; and the poor sick person, without having received the
sacraments, goes to meet his God.
1) For a good death, strength is necessary; this strength
can be given only by the grace of God. The more this world,
with all its perfidious promises, disappears from the sight
of the sufferer, the more intense the anxiety felt because of
the approaching judgment, the more does he need the help
of God’s grace. Like a child who in a disturbing dream in-
stinctively secks its mother’s helping hand, so a sufferer needs
God’s tranquillizing aid. I have never heard that the reception
of the sacraments has harmed anyone, but I have often heard
how greatly sufferers have been calmed and comforted after
receiving them.152 LIFE EVERLASTING
The wife of a dying man asked the physician this question:
“Please tell me, doctor, shall I calla priest to my husband now,
or will it be better to wait until he loses consciousness?” The
doctor answered: “It depends, madam, whether you wish to
help the sufferer, or merely wish to print on the mourning-
cards that “the deceased passed on after devoutly receiving
extreme unction.”
2) What comedies—allow me to use this strong word—
what comedies are often played in a sickroom! The sufferer
would like to have the sacraments because he feels that noth-
ing else can help his restless soul, but he hesitates to ask for a
priest lest his relatives be alarmed. His relatives would be
very glad if the sufferer were to receive the sacraments, but
they hesitate to call a priest lest the sick man be alarmed.
Meanwhile the sufferer becomes weaker and feebler: he loses
consciousness and finally dies without Christ having come to
his bedside to help him with His sacraments to vanquish
death. And all this because of the relatives’ sentimental, stu-
pid, unchristian anxiety.
How much more earnest, more profound, more Christian,
and more genuinely loving was the manner of thinking of a
young married couple who promised each other on their
wedding-day, that if either of them should become seriously
ill at any time, the other would not fail to say: “My dear, the
time has come.” The time has come for you to ask Christ to
be beside you. O yes, I believe that death does not gain the
victory over such as these, but they vanquish death, for to
their bedside comes the Christ who vanquished death. Above
such a deathbed will radiate St. Paul’s assurance: “If we be-
lieve that Jesus died and rose again, even so them who have
slept through Jesus, will God bring with Him” (1 Thess.
4:3).DEATH THE VANQUISHED 153
My dear brethren. In Deuteronomy is described the death
of the great Jeader of the Hebrew people. Sublime are the
simple words in which Holy Writ speaks of the death of
Moses. Moses went up to mount Nebo where the Lord showed
him the Promised Land, the final earthly goal of his life’s
work. “And,” says Holy Writ, “Moses, the servant of the
Lord, died there in the land of Moab, by the commandment
of the Lord, and He buried him (Deut. 34:5).
What beautiful words! Moses arrives at the end, ordained
by God, of his toilsome life. At the Lord’s word, he lays his
weary head upon His breast, as a tired child rests in its moth-
er’s arms. “And He buried him.”
My Lord, such a calm, quiet passing grant to me also. That
when the angel of death knocks at my door, I may fall asleep
in Jesus and, cleansed in the Jast confession, united with
Christ in the last communion, strengthened by extreme
unction, I may confide my soul to Thy fatherly hands. Amen.XIV
PURGATORY
Wrru death, life is not finally at an end. On the contrary then
real life begins, life that never ends, Death is not the last
word in man’s life: it is a gate through which we must pass
to attain to a more glorious, more complete life.
Death is not the end of everything; rather everything then
begins: an eternally happy life begins in God’s kingdom if
we have merited it by our earthly lives. Or an eternally pain-
ful life begins in the realm of perdition if we passed through
the gate of death with our souls turned from God, crippled
by a heavy burden of sin.
Besides these two alternatives of life hereafter, our holy
religion speaks of a temporary form of life in the hereafter,
life in purgatory. That is where sins repented and confessed,
but not yet completely atoned for, must receive temporary
punishment, that after the penance has been endured, we
may enter into eternal bliss completely cleansed and purified.
Belief in purgatory is so consoling and reassuring, origi-
nating as it does in the innermost depths of the human heart,
that we should feel a painful void in the structure of our re-
ligious system, if this doctrine were missing from it.
What would become of us if there were only heaven and
hell? Who has the audacity to say of himself at the end of his
earthly life, a life perhaps full of moral frailty, that his soul
is not bound to make any reparation to offended divine jus-
tice? Who can believe that his soul is so pure and faultless
154PURGATORY 155
that at the moment of death it can enter immediately into
God’s kingdom? The kingdom of that God before whose
holiness even the angels veil their faces, for it is written of
Him that “in His angels He found wickedness” (Job. 4: 18).
Indeed if there were no purgatory we should all have cause
to despair, we who are not so good that after death we could
enter heaven at once, nor, let us humbly hope, so wicked as
to deserve damnation. That is why I devote the present ser-
mon to the consideration of these important questions: Does
purgatory exist? Of what does purgatory consist? What is
correlative to the existence of purgatory?
I
THE EXISTENCE OF PURGATORY
According to the teaching of holy Church, there is a place
for the souls of the dead where reassuring hope and torment-
ing pain are equally at home; there is a place where the souls
of the dead suffer, but they suffer in the certain hope that their
sufferings will come to an end. This place is purgatory.
A. The Catholic Church has proclaimed this belief since
early times, Holy Writ and sacred tradition both declare it.
1) The existence of purgatory is attested by Holy Writ.
In the Books of Machabecs, that is, in the last books of the
Old Testament, we read that Judas Machabeus “sent twelve
thousand drachmas of silver to Jerusalem for sacrifice to be
offered for the sins of the dead” (II Mach. 12: 43). “It is there-
fore a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that
they may be loosed from sins” (II Mach. 12: 46). Thus we
sce that the Old Testament testifies to a belief that there is a
place where penance may be done and forgiveness of sins be
gained after death; and that the living may pray and offer
sacrifices for these penitents.156 LIFE EVERLASTING
In one place our Lord speaks of sins that will be forgiven
“neither in this world nor in the world to come” (Matt.
12: 32). In speaking thus, He evidently teaches that there is a
place after death where certain sins are forgiven.
Moreover St. Paul speaks plainly of purgatory. According
to him, besides those who enter heaven immediately after
death, are some whose carthly work “the fire shall try” (I Cor.
3: 13) and, if their work is found worthy, they too will be
saved “yet so as by fire” (I Cor. 3: 15).
2) We find also that Christian tradition is unanimous in
professing belief in the existence of purgatory.
In the earliest ceremonies of the celebration of mass, a
distinguished place is occupied by the “commemoration of
the dead.” But without belicf in purgatory, without the pos-
sibility of a purification of the souls of the dead, this com-
memoration would have no meaning at all.
Neither would the countless epitaphs on the early tombs
in the catacombs; therein prayers are asked for the dead.
“Pray for me.” But for whom are we to pray? We cannot pray
for those in hell, and there is no need to pray for those in
heaven. Therefore only purgatory remains. Without belief in
purgatory there would be no reason for all the many prayers
and masses for the souls of deceased persons in which the sur-
viving relatives and friends turn to God. Yet as early as the
second century, Tertullian mentions that on the anniversary
of the deaths of Christians their relatives were in the habit
of having mass offered for the peace of their souls. Certainly
those who are acquainted with the various epitaphs in the
catacombs, the supplications, requests, and prayers, will not
doubt that the earliest Christians were convinced that the liv-
ing can be of help to the souls of the dead; in other words,
that there is a purgatory.PURGATORY 157
B. Belief in purgatory is also a general conviction deeply
rooted in the human soul. Therefore we find it in some form
even in pre-Christian times, in pagan religions.
1) Different books of pagan ceremonies have come down
to us, for example, books of Egyptian burial ceremonies, and
these speak of propitiatory sufferings that must be endured by
good souls that they may gain admittance to Osiris’ heavenly
kingdom. According to the Persians, the souls of the dead first
had to make a weary journey through the twelve constella-
tions of the Zodiac; only after that could they attain bliss, The
Greek Stoics speak directly of the fire regions, where souls
are purified of their faults. There is scarcely any pagan liturgy
without prayers and sacrifices for the souls “wandering in
shadows.” We can truly say that some form of belief in pur-
gatorial fire was mankind’s common treasure long before
Christianity. This shows how surely it originates in the no-
blest yearnings of the human soul and how greatly it satis-
fies its deepest cravings.
2) We know that even those who avowedly and theoreti-
cally haye eliminated this doctrine from their articles of faith,
do in reality still acknowledge it. For they too pray for their
dead and practice almsdeeds in their name and for their sake;
but this has no meaning unless there is the possibility of
purification, unless purgatory exists.
Human reason itself leads us to the conclusion that for
those who do not die in mortal sin, that is, for those who die
in the state of grace, there must be a transitory place for
atonement, for purification. Perpetrated crime requires pun-
ishment here on earth; for offense against God’s laws satisfac-
tion must be given. True, God is merciful; but His mercy does
not make Him ignore and overlook it. That mercy is shown
by His giving the possibility of atonement. And if we have158 LIFE EVERLASTING
not taken sufficient advantage on earth of this possibility by
our practice of penance, compulsory penance and painful
reparation await us in purgatory.
rr
THE NATURE OF PURGATORY
A. Purgatory, as its name indicates, is a place of purifica-
tion and expiation.
1) At the moment of judgment, God shows the soul what
it should have been according to His eternal plan, and how far
it is from this in reality.
If a person has died in the state of grace, but burdened by
many faults and imperfections, his soul will, at the judgment,
of its own accord declare: Lord God, with so many imperfec-
tions I cannot enter Thy kingdom. With such blemishes I
could not live eternally in that realm whereof it is written:
“The glory of God hath enlightened it, and the Lamb is the
lamp thereof” (Apoc. 21: 23).
2) This imperfection will be felt by man before God’s’
judgment seat. How should he not feel it when even here on
earth all sensitive souls feel it? What does such a soul feel?
It feels that we never finished with ourselves. We are never
finished with ourselves, our own souls, our own spirituality.
Who could, for instance, here on earth attain the full accom-
plishment of God’s will, that we “be made conformable to
the image of His Son” (Rom. 8: 29).
Nor are we ever finished with our work. The artist can
never say that he is finished, nor can the teacher, the student,
or the writer.
Purgatory will be the place where everything is rightly
completed. There we shall receive what is still lacking to
God’s likeness in our souls. Purgatory will be the place wherePURGATORY 159
we shall place the keystone to the building upon which we
have worked all our earthly lives. Purgatory will be the place
of great restoration: there we shall correct the disfigurement
and cover the scars that have marred our souls through sin
on earth. As soon as this image of God becomes radiantly
clear, our purgatory will be ended. We may then enter into
God’s eternal bliss.
B. If we thus grasp the purpose of purgatory, then we sce
how superficial is the view of those persons who consider
the penance of purgatory as unworthy of God. “God should
mercifully remit both sin and punishment,” they say. “This
is worthy of His beneficence. But not expiation and repara-
tion.”
1) What a shallow way of thinking! Whoever thoroughly
reflects upon God’s sublimity knows that man’s rebellion
against God, if it remained unpunished, could not be recon-
ciled with God’s infinite justice and with the majesty of the
eternal moral order.
Sin, an offense against God, is taken lightly by the world
today. Look about you and you will see with what incredible
recklessness, with what revolting cynicism, sin is propagated
among men. Where will everyone acknowledge the truth of
the psalmist’s words: “Thou art just, O Lord, and Thy judg-
ment is right” (Ps. 118: 137)? Where wil] Christ’s words
become true: “Amen I say to thee, thou shalt not go out from
thence till thou repay the last farthing” (Matt. 5: 26)?
God’s two apparently conflicting attributes, His justice and
His mercy, are brought into harmony by our belief in pur-
gatory. According to this doctrine, justice demands the pen-
alty, but mercy allows that this penance be mitigated, and
abridged by loving solicitude of the living.
2) Thus also we understand the twofold character of pur-
gatory: it is pain, but at the same time it is hope.160 LIFE EVERLASTING
In what docs the suffering of purgatory consist? It is the
same as that of hell, except that it is not eternal.
Hence one punishment there is an unavailing yearning
for God. Now we sce who God is. Now our souls divested of
their bodies would strive toward God, but they are impeded
by sin not yet expiated. And besides this yearning, a real pain
torments us that is greater than the most torturing pain of
earthly life. This is one of the constituent elements of purga-
tory: a sorrowful atmosphere.
However, although this place is the scene of great suffer-
ing, it is not hell, nor is it the vestibule to hell; it is the vesti-
bule to heaven. Those who are here are not in the devil’s hand,
but in God’s hand, that is, they are in a state of grace. Further-
more, they possess the certain knowledge that this state of
grace is no longer in peril, that they can no longer lose what
we living people unfortunately can lose at any time. They,
therefore, are already sure of their salvation. This is purga-
tory’s other feature: hopeful and confident expectation.
Then what is purgatory? A joyous hell, a sad heaven. There
souls rejoice because they are sure that they will some day
enjoy God; but they also suffer because they cannot yet enjoy
God. As surely as heaven is made heaven by the possession of
God, and as surely as hell is made hell by the loss of God, so
purgatory is made purgatory by this transitory character:
transition between the future possession of God and the pres-
ent loss of Him.
mH
COROLLARIES TO THE DOCTRINE OF PURGATORY
I fear, dear brethren, that what I have just said was an un-
known idea to some of you. We so seldom speak of purgatoryPURGATORY 161
and so seldom think of it. Yet splendid teachings and admoni-
tions are latent in this article of our faith.
A, I will point out one or two of the corollaries to the doc-
trine of purgatory.
1) Belief in purgatory removes hell further from us. Chris-
tianity does indeed teach the shattering postulate that not only
eternal bliss exists but also everlasting perdition.
How many persons are terrified and made despairing, yes,
even brought to denial of faith, by the thought of an eternal
hell. “Can God really be good, can He really be merciful, if
He was capable of creating an eternal hell?” we hear them
ask. This is perhaps the most difficult article of our faith to
understand. But it immediately becomes more intelligible,
more bearable, if we know that there is also purgatory, that
there is opportunity to atone for the greatest sins repented and
confessed.
The thought of hell might indeed be unbearable if there
were no purgatory. Massillon, Louis XIV’s orator, in the
course of a sermon in St. Eustace’s Church in Paris, said that
the majority of people are damned. At the end of the sermon
the congregation sprang up from their seats, terrified and
despairing. The greater number of people are lost? Dreadful!
An unbearable thought! And they were right. The preacher
would have been right only if there were no purgatory.
2) Belief in purgatory brings heaven nearer to us. Some
people are made faint-hearted by the high standard of heaven.
“How far it is from us! How hard to attain! How can we
satisfy such strict requirements?” But see how much nearer
heaven is brought to us, how much easier its attainment is
made, by belief in purgatory.
The picture we have formed of God’s mercy gains its final
decisive touches from it, since God is not only benign as162 LIFE EVERLASTING
heaven proclaims, not only just as hell attests, but also merci-
ful, as is evidenced by purgatory.
Purgatory is an answer to those who charge our moral doc-
trine with excessive severity, saying that “it does not yield
an iota of its principles,” that “it does not reckon with human
frailty,” that “it demands so much that weak, sinful man can-
not fulfil it even with the best will in the world.”
Here is the answer. From our moral ideals, certainly noth-
ing can be withdrawn. But if someone has become a victim of
the imperfections of human nature in spite of his habitual
good dispositions, then for him there always remains purga-
tory as a side-door to heaven. It is not the great portal but,
after all, it is a door to heaven.
3) Purgatory is also the best answer to the false doctrine
of reincarnation.
How admirably the Church feels the most deeply hidden
longings of the human soul! Who would not long for a place
of purification? Is this not the greatest consolation for every-
one who honestly strives to do God’s will, who wants to be
good, pure, and faithful, but who time and again is brought
to a fall by sinfully inclined human nature? What a consola-
tion it will be for us if, before God’s judgment seat, we can
say: “It is true, dear Lord, that I was not good enough to be
found worthy to enter heaven at once. But, thanks to Thy
grace, neither was I wicked enough to be cast into hell. First
sift me, cleanse me, as wheat is cleansed from chaff; and then
receive me into Thy eternal kingdom.”
Christianity proclaimed the reality of this “purifying suf-
fering” long before obscure Eastern philosophies sowed the
seed of erroneous beliefs in men’s souls concerning reincar-
nation, beliefs that cannot be established by any argument
whatever.
My brethren. You who perhaps coquet with the thoughtPURGATORY 163,
ne
of reincarnation, you who find it “so tranquillizing,” “so
comforting.” You should know that we also believe in “a
purification” after death. We also proclaim that every sin
“must be expiated” and “must be atoned for.” But for this we
have no need of a doctrine of reincarnation teeming with con-
tradictions and depriving earthly life of its seriousness, but
we find the mute pain of quiet penance in purgatory amply
sufficient.
Spiritualism, the invocation of spirits, reincarnation, and
similar hazy, vacillating ideas, as substitutes for belief in pur-
gatory, find a footing among those who lack the warmth of
Catholic faith. This fact shows how suited to the human
soul’s yearnings is the belief in purgatory, and how impossible
it is for us to endure the thought of being finally cut off from
our dear dead, and how impossible it is to think we can no
longer make them feel our love and gratitude after they have
died.
B. Here, however, we have arrived at another thought:
purgatory not only serves for our instruction, but also as a
warning for us.
1) Purgatory enables our love to be stronger than death,
to extend beyond the grave, purgatory makes it possible for
us, living beings, to help the souls of those who have died.
Consoling is the Christian doctrine, that death cannot tear
asunder the bonds of relationship and of friendship, that
prayers said for them, mass offered for them, self-denial and
good deeds practiced for them, can be of assistance to the
dead and curtail their period of suffering.
A sad but real human trait is that many malign one an-
other in life, embitter one another, quarrel, are ungrateful to
their benefactors. Only when death has taken them from our
midst do we awake to a late recognition of what a treasure
we have lost. Often despairing mourners lament: “My mother164 LIFE EVERLASTING
has died, my wife, my brother, and I was so often unkind and
heartless to them while they were alive. How sorry I am now!
But what can I do, how can I make amends?”
How our holy faith consoles us with its teaching, that with
our prayers and good deeds we can, at least now, after their
death, discharge our neglected debt of gratitude, we can make
amends for much of our heartlessness!
In this way developed the pious custom of zealous Chris-
tians to offer up prayers, almsdeeds, holy communion, and so
on; they seek to shorten the time of penance for souls that are
being purified.
We are always moved when we read the words in which
St. Augustine refers to the death of his mother St. Monica.
Augustine and his brother Navigius stand beside their dying
mother. Navigius wishes that his mother could die on their
native soil and not in a strange land. But the dying Monica
says: “Bury my body wherever you please. Take no thought
about that. Only one thing I beg of you: that at the Lord’s
altar, wherever you may be, remember me” (St. Augustine,
Confessions, Bk. IX, chap. 11).
If only this were the first thing to occur to us in connection
with our dead: to remember them at God’s altar. How many
flowers, how many wreaths are sent to funcrals! This may be
some consolation for the bereaved; the dead, however, do not
profit by it in any way. But they do indeed profit by our
prayers, the masses celebrated for them, and by our good
deeds.
Monks of the Trappist Order, when they meet, greet one
another with the words, Memento mori, “Remember death.”
Death is the end merely of earthly life; but it is not the end
of love.
2) Belief in purgatory contains another warning for allPURGATORY 165
of us: to make as many amends as possible in this life for the
sins we have committed.
Man’s life is filled with suffering, trouble, and sorrow, but
Christians see in these things the love of a merciful God. It is
the work of divine mercy that we are given opportunity to
do penance here on earth. Suffering comes to everyone. Hence
we are wise if we accept every bereavement, illness, privation,
the wicked treatment of men, every humiliation and difficult
task, with humble hearts: “Reckon this, my Lord, all this
patient endurance, as part of my amends.”
Sorrow and suffering still remain, but the endurance of
them is easier and more meritorious.
My dear brethren. King Charles V of Spain, whom history
calls wise, once put a peculiar choice before his son. On one
table he placed a crown, on the other a sword; then he called
the boy and put the difficult question to him, which did he
wish to possess. The prince smilingly stretched out his hand
toward the sword and said: “By this I will deserve the other.”
By the sword the crown. A truly Christian idea; in it is the
whole program of Christian spiritual life. By the sword the
crown. By the conquering of self, by courageous and de-
termined battle against our evil inclinations, against exacting
instincts and temptations, to attain possession of eternal life.
True, in battle some wounds are received, in the conflict
failure threatens; but belief in purgatory bids us not to de-
spond.
This belief, although a serious doctrine, is also a joyous
one. It is a serious warning not to be contented and at peace
in our sins; but it is also a joyous solace, that we do not need
to despair because of our human weaknesses.
Days pass, the years are swallowed up, the shadow of the166 LIFE EVERLASTING
grave lengthens, death and destruction terrify, but I bravely
raise my head and cry out in their faces: No, no, you can do
nothing to me. I am the son of Him whom you could not
conquer: of Christ triumphant over death.
Clinging to the victorious Christ, I say daily: I believe in
life everlasting. Here I am only a wanderer, my true home
awaits me. Here I am only on a journey, God is at its end.
Here I thirst for bliss, with God I arrive at the life-giving
waters.
Lord God, we beg with confidence that some day we may
arrive at this heavenly home and enter into Thy eternal realm:
if not at once by the great shining gate of heaven—for that
we are not worthy—at least through the side-door of purga-
tory. Amen.XV
ETERNAL PERDITION
For sixteen years I have proclaimed God’s word from this
pulpit, but never have I faced such a difficult task as the one
today. For sixteen years I have preached in this church to my
attentive listeners, but never have I felt my duties as a herald
of God’s word to be so difficult and affecting as today, when
I must speak of eternal perdition.
That heaven exists, this is casy to believe. That there is a
place where all earthly suffering, pain, illness, and death
ceases and where every moral exertion of ours receives its just
reward. Yes, this we joyfully believe: heaven exists.
But does hell exist, too? Is the thought that God can pun-
ish eternally, not a mere figment of some imagination of the
Middle Ages? That there does actually exist an eternity where
(one begins to tremble at the very idea even) in never ending
torment those sentenced to perdition live their eternal life!
“Why speak of this? It would be better never to utter the
name of hell. Why frighten people with it? No one ever
returned from hell. Who knows if it really exists?” Such ob-
jections are heard nowadays if anyone wishes to discuss this
subject. Truly we do not speak of it from this pulpit in order
to frighten, but with a scrious object in view. “No one ever
returned from the next world, so why speak of it?”
I wonder if anyone has ever returned from the sun? Or
from the stars? Yet how much we know of the heavenly
bodies and what a serious science the science of astronomy is!
167168 LIFE EVERLASTING
Nor is it true that no one has ever come to us from the next
world, because our Lord Himself came thence. What we
know of the world to come we know from Him. From Him
we know the two shattering truths of which I intend to speak
today: Not only is there a heaven, but there is also a hell; and
not only heaven lasts forever, but hell also. Surely two im-
pressively serious doctrines: Hell exists and it is eternal.
I
HELL EXISTS
A. God’s infinite sublimity and the gravity of God’s com-
mands demand a place where those who rebel against Him
atone by suffering after death. This way of thinking is so
suited to man’s mentality that even without Christianity the
reasoning human mind would have discovered it.
1) This truth was felt by religions that existed prior to
Christianity. Appalling suffering has to be endured (accord-
ing to the belief of the Greeks) by Tantalus, king of Phrygia,
who killed his own son and prepared him for food. But in
Hades, the place of perdition, Tantalus is tormented by eter-
nal hunger and thirst as a punishment. Fruit and water stand
in front of him, but when he stretches out his hand for them
they recede from him. “The torments of Tantalus.”
You have certainly heard of the Danaids, the forty-nine
women who killed their husbands and now as a punishment
must eternally fill a bottomless cask with water drawn in a
sieve.
You have heard of Sysiphus, the cruel Corinthian ruler
whose eternal punishment it is to roll a heavy stone uphill,
and when he has almost reached the top, the stone rolls down.
“The labor of Sysiphus.”ETERNAL PERDITION 169
You have heard of Ixion who is bound to a wheel in the
depths of Tartarus and the wheel continually breaks his bones
and never ceases to turn.
You have heard of Tytius whose heart is eaten piecemeal
by ferocious vultures that are never satisfied.
You have heard of Theseus who sits eternally in the dark-
est depths.
Is it not strange that whereas many protest against the
thought of damnation, longing to escape from the awful
reality of hell, yet we always find the thought of eternal
punishment in the religions of various peoples: the Indian
Veda religion knows a hell just as does Buddhism, the religion
of Zoroaster too, just as Mohammedanism.
We can truly say that belief in eternal perdition was the
belief held by all mankind even before Christianity.
2) Reason itself leads us to this belief. That there really
is a hell, that there must be a place where every sin receives
its punishment, is a conclusion of even non-religious persons,
because of the awful wickedness that exists in the world.
When on all sides we learn of the atrocities committed by
men: of blood-curdling murders committed without a twinge
of conscience, of robberies, of the widespread immorality, of
truth and honor trampled under foot, who would not despair,
who would not waver in his faith if there were no hell where
all this dreadfulness will receive its well-deserved punish-
ment?
That there is a place where, as our religion teaches, rebel-
lious, fallen angels are punished, and that Satan is not a
mythical personage invented to scare disobedient children,
but is a sad reality, the frightful deluge of sin in modern life
leads us to accept. For who understands the infernal wicked-
ness, the abysmal corruption, the cunning godlessness, that170 LIFE EVERLASTING
we witness day by day on all sides, if we do not attribute it
to the work of the devil, if it is not true that sometimes awful
fires flame up from hell to scorch the earth?
B. The existence of what humanity presaged so strongly
before the coming of Christ, was elevated to a certainty by
the Christian religion.
It is true, brethren, that the dreadful thought of eternal
damnation makes one shudder. I myself would be glad if I
could honestly say: There is no hell; there is only heaven. But
our holy religion declares this doctrine in so many forms that
of its truth not the slightest doubt can remain.
1) You say there is no hell? But our Lord’s precursor, St.
John the Baptist, said that “every tree therefore that does not
yield good fruit shall be cut down and cast into the fire”
(Matt. 3: 10). And the same St. John the Baptist taught that
at the judgment God will “gather His wheat into the barn,
but the chaff He will burn with unquenchable fire” (Matt.
3:12).
2) You say there is no hell? Then you give the lic to our
Savior’s plain and direct teaching. Again and again He spoke
of hell.
No one can say that Christ wished to frighten people. But
when He speaks of hell and of the torments of hell, His words
are emphatic. Poor Lazarus came into the one eternity, the
heartless rich man into the other; the five wise virgins came
into the one, the five foolish into the other; of the good thief
Christ said that the good thief would enter into His kingdom,
into Paradise; speaking of Judas, our Lord said it would have
been better for him had he never been born.
If hell is not the penalty for mortal sin, then there is no
truth in Christ’s words, when He said that it will profit a man
nothing to gain the whole world if he suffers the loss of his
soul (Matt. 16: 26).ETERNAL PERDITION q7t
You say there is no hel[? But did not our Lord say that the
wicked will come to a place “where their worm dieth not,
and the fire is not extinguished” (Mark 9: 45) ? And that same
Christ who in the Sermon on the Mount spoke of the eight
beatitudes, later spoke of “hell fire,” too (Matt. 5: 22), where
“there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Luke 13: 28).
And that same Christ said: “Fear ye not them that kill the
body, and are not able to kill the soul, but rather fear him
that can destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matt. 10: 28).
If there is no hell what does Christ mean by saying that at
the judgment He will set some on His right hand, but some
on His left? (Matt. 25:33). And to the wicked He says:
“Depart from Me, you cursed, into everlasting fire” (Matt.
25: 41); and then, “these shall go into everlasting punish-
ment” (Matt. 25: 46).
3) You say there is no hell? But then you will have to
reject what St. Paul declares. For he wrote: “We shall all rise
again.” Every one of us that ever lived on the carth. Those
who died when they were mere infants, and those who lived
to be ninety—all will rise again. Those who were buried in
graves will rise again, and those who were engulfed by the
sea, torn to pieces by an explosion, or consumed to ashes by
a fire, will also rise again. Those who went to church, re-
ceived the sacraments, prayed, and were honest all their lives,
will rise again, and those who in life did not listen to the
voice of the bells calling to mass will also hear the sound of
the last trumpet and rise again. “We shall all indeed rise
again” writes St. Paul; “but we shall not all be changed”
(I Cor. 15: 51). Ah, that is it. Only the bodies of the saved
will be glorified, those of the damned will be loathsome.
4) You say there is no hell? Then you think in a childish
way about God. However frightful hell is, we understand
it if we know God’s other works.172 LIFE EVERLASTING
Here around us is the universe. Its magnitude proclaims
God’s omnipotence. Here before us stands the cross of Christ:
the bleeding Christ upon it proclaims God’s boundless mercy.
Here before us lies heavenly bliss: it proclaims God’s infinite
goodness. But here stands hell, too; and what does it pro-
claim? It proclaims God’s infinite justice.
God’s justice must be so strict because His omnipotence in
the world, His mercy on the cross, and His goodness in
heaven, have shown themselves so great. If all these are not
sufficient to convert us, what remains? Only His infinite jus-
tice in hell.
As the greatness of the world is beyond all our imagination,
as the cross is merciful beyond all our hopes, as the boundless
bliss of heaven is beyond all our premonitions; so hell is more
dreadful than anything we can fancy. And if what St. Paul
writes of the happiness of the saved is true, namely, “that eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the
heart of man, what things God hath prepared for them that
love Him” (I Cor. 2: 9), then it is true of the tortures of the
damned that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard them, and the
punishment prepared by God for them who do not love Him
exceeds all human imagination.
Now I understand how right St. Augustine was when he
said that to be separated from God is as great a punishment
as the greatness of God Himself (City of God, Bk. II, chap. 4).
Imagine an eternal thirst for infinite beauty, for God, and
nothing to assuage it. Imagine an eternal hunger for infinite
goodness, for God, and not a morsel to satisfy it. Imagine an
eternal longing for infinite perfection, for God, and no real-
ization that satisfies it.
There is no friendship, no love, no consolation, no relief,
no hope; but there is bitterness and self-accusation, there is
reproach and self-laceration, there is abhorrence and regret,ETERNAL PERDITION 173
but a late regret. Where is the fire that could burn like this?
When the lost see the error of their whole misspent lives, but
they see it too late.
Tr
HELL IS ETERNAL
Here we have arrived at the most difficult part of the ques-
tion. Christianity not only teaches that there is a hell, but also
that it lasts forever, that it will never have an end. This is one
of the most difficult points of all our religious doctrines; this
is one of the greatest stumblingblocks to those not quite con-
versant with their faith.
A. Eternal hell. Some individuals believe everything else,
but here they come to a standstill. The infallibility of the pope
they are ready to accept, also the Blessed Mother’s virginity:
everything but this.
“Tt is a dreadful thought,” they say. “Forever. To live
damned forever. Irreparably, irretrievably, hopelessly, for-
ever. No, hell cannot be eternal. For the sin of a few minutes,
would the dear God punish in this way?”
1) Truly, our human way of thinking is afraid of the
thought. We shudder at it. It is no wonder that we should like
to escape from this truth; it is comprehensible that we should
like to explain that this is not so: but in vain. This is such a
positive teaching of Christianity that there is no doubting it.
The same Scripture that speaks of the good God, and of the
merciful God, and the gentle and lowly Christ, speaks also
of the worm that dieth not and of the fire that is not ex-
tinguished (Mark 9: 45). The same Christ who recounted
the parable of the father who forgave his prodigal son, also
related the parable of the heartless rich man who went to
hell and suffered dreadful torment there.174 LIFE EVERLASTING
You say hell cannot be everlasting. But then there is no
reason for Christ’s sacrifice, for His crucifixion. God never
does anything without a reason. Yet if hell is not everlasting,
then He gave His only begotten Son as a sacrifice without a
reason.
If hell is not everlasting, then the martyrs, who died for
their faith to insure themselves against eternal perdition,
died without a reason. If hell is not everlasting, then it was
without a reason that the Apostles and missioners exerted
themselves to save the pagans from eternal perdition.
If hell is not everlasting, then there is no meaning in our
Lord’s memorable words: “If thy hand or thy foot scandalize
thee, cut it off and cast it from thee; it is better for thee to go
into life maimed or lame, than having two hands or two feet,
to be cast into everlasting fire. And if thy eye scandalize thee,
pluck it out and cast it from thee; it is better for thee having
one eye to enter into life, than having two eyes to be cast into
hell fire” (Matt. 18: 8, 9).
Truly, dear brethren, cither we must accept this religious
truth, that damnation is everlasting, or we must blaspheme
by saying that God is not wise in His ways.
2) You say hell cannot be everlasting because “a good
God cannot be so severe as to punish a moment's sin eter
nally.” Many try to reassure themselves in this way. But how
foolish they are! God’s goodness is not helpless weakness or
sentimental soft-heartedness. God is really good; but He is
also holy and just.
God is good. Yes, good and merciful while we live and
strive to turn to Him. Certainly He said: “If your sins be
as scarlet, they shall be made as white as snow; and if they
be red as crimson, they shall be white as wool” (Is. 1: 18).
But all this is only as long as we are in this life. For, after all,
God’s goodness cannot be weakness and sentimental softness.ETERNAL PERDITION 175
Whoever knows what eternal bliss is—the attainment of our
spiritual maturity and participation in the life of the God-
head—knows that to enter into it is something impossible for
those who have spent their earthly lives with their hearts
turned away from God.
“For sin lasting but a moment can there be everlasting
punishment?” The magnitude of sin is not decided by the
fength of its duration. It takes only a moment for the mur-
derer to fire his fatal shot. It takes only a moment for a per-
son to lead another into serious sin, for which he may lose
everlasting happiness.
It would be more logical to reason in this way: because God
is so holy, because sin is in such contrast to Him, hell must be
dreadful. Are you truthful? Then you abhor a lic. Are you
pure in heart? Then you turn from moral filth. Are you hon-
est? Then you avoid dishonesty. As God is infinitely holy,
sin in His sight is infinitely awful, and so by His very na-
ture He must turn from it—forever.
The soul that is in grievous sin at the moment of death—
we can say, the soul that dies with heart turned from God
—will remain like that for thousands of years, for millions
of years, for all time.
Mortal sin is turning away from God a hundred and eighty
degrees. Whoever dies like that, whose head stiffens in that
position, will remain like that forever: and to live eternally
turned away from God is perdition. This is indeed a terrify-
ing doctrine, but it is a sad truth.
B. However, we relieve the awfulness of the belief in hell
—we might say we draw the poison-fang from the problem
—and our disturbed souls become calmer if we remember
that the just God condemns no one to hell who does not
deserve it.
1) God does not judge precipitately or under the influence176 LIFE EVERLASTING
of passion or at the very moment the sin is committed. He
does not judge anyone before He has mercifully called him
to repentance and given him a chance to turn over a new
leaf. But he who is unwilling to repent, he who does not want
to turn to God; what shall God do with him?
War is called the last resort. This is the people’s last weapon.
They turn to it only when they have tried every other method.
Hell is also such a last resort in God’s hand. He does not turn
to it until He has tried every means of saving us.
It is so little, so incredibly little that God has stipulated for
forgiveness. I regret that I was wicked, I promise never to
repeat my offense and to confess as soon as possible: that is all.
Could He require less than that?
2) Hell, it is true, is a dreadfully formidable doctrine of
our faith. But let us consider who goes to hell. He who dies
in mortal sin, without confession or, if there was no oppor-
tunity for confession, without full repentance, at least.
Mortal sin. Who commits mortal sin? He who delib-
erately commits a grievous offense against the law of God,
after adequate reflection. Thus we know what mortal sin
is objectively.
We do not know, however, and no one but God knows,
in a concrete case whether a certain person’s deed was in real-
ity, also subjectively, mostal sin, although outwardly it ap-
pears to be that. We do not know to what extent inherited,
perverse inclinations, a neglected up-bringing, evil surround-
ings, and a thousand other mitigating circumstances may
modify the verdict of the all-knowing God.
3) The thought of hell is dreadful, but we are comforted
if we reflect: who is there? What does our holy religion teach
about this: who is in hell? We do not teach that a single
person is there besides the fallen angels and Judas.
There have been monsters in universal history, yet we doETERNAL PERDITION 177
not know for certain whether they are there; on the contrary,
there was an executed criminal, the good thief, of whom we
know that on the day of his death he reached heaven. Yet
according to our human judgment, we would have sent him
to perdition, because we judge by the outward seeming. But
when God judges He places everything in the balance, every
factor that is invisible and incalculable to us, all taint, evil
inclinations, a neglected education, wicked surroundings.
God puts all these in the scales when He judges. And there-
fore we do not know who goes to hell.
C. Do not let us rack our brains about who is sent to hell,
but rather about how we ourselves may avoid it. We avoid
hell if we avoid mortal sin or, if we have had the terrible
misfortune to fall into it, if we erase sin from our souls by
sincere confession.
1) It is interesting to watch the crowd at a large railway
station. What bustling excitement! When the waiting-room
doors open everyone rushes to the train, perspiring under
their luggage and parcels, pushing and thrusting one an-
other aside. Only one thought possesses them: not to lose
the train!
The signal is given, a whistle blows, the crowded train
starts. Just then a late passenger rushes on the platform. His
hair is disheveled, his forehead bathed in perspiration, pant-
ing and choking he comes to a halt and disappointment rings
in his voice as he looks after the departing train and says: “I
have missed it.”
My brethren, let us bear this in mind when we think of
life everlasting. When the train starts for heaven let us not
miss it. If we miss it, there is no other train. We have lost
it forever.
2) Forever? Again that startling word. I am shaken by it;
but I must believe it. My limited human view cannot fully178 LIFE EVERLASTING
grasp it, but I believe and declare that God is not stricter
with us than we deserve. And I declare that if God’s merciful
love did not wish to weaken to helplessness, and if God did
not wish to expose the moral exertions of honorable, re-
spectable persons to the derisive laughter of the frivolous and
light-minded, then He had to create everlasting hell.
If hell were to end, then there would be an end to all seri-
ous moral order. The earnest moral efforts necessary to earthly
life would at once disappear. Why should I be honorable,
why should I hold to my principles, when it does not matter
much if I fall?
If there is no omnipotent Judge who will call us to account
for the inmost thoughts of our hearts; if there is no judgment
seat where all the good deeds we did in secret, all our words,
all our heroic struggles will be placed in the balance; if there
is no Judgment Day whose effulgence will place the heroism
of a virtuous life and the frivolity of light-minded dissipation
in their true light: if all this is not, then who can speak of a
just, good, and holy God?
Therefore, however dreadful the thought of hell may be,
let us all heed its warning. Brethren, endure, persevere. Even
at the cost of hard toil, even at the cost of daily struggle, and
even at the cost of ceaseless self-discipline, endure at God’s
side. Turn toward God. Live turned toward God. And die
turned toward God.
My dear brethren. After the Israelites had taken posses-
sion of Canaan, they swore a solemn oath to keep God’s law,
as described so graphically in the twenty-seventh chapter of
Deuteronomy. Half the people, six tribes, took up a position
on Mount Hebal, a barren mountain strewn with ruins; the
other six tribes stood opposite on Mount Garizim, a moun-
tain covered with blossoming meadows and forests. In theETERNAL PERDITION 179
valley between the two mountains lay the town of Sichem;
there the priests and Levites took their stand beside the ark
of covenant. “Cursed be the man that maketh a graven and
molten thing, the abomination of the Lord . . . and shall put
it in a secret place,” came the cry of the priests. And the peo-
ple’s reply thundered forth: “Amen.”
“Cursed be he that honoreth not his father and his mother,”
“Amen,” replied the people.
“Cursed be he that removeth his neighbor’s landmarks.”
“Amen!”
“Cursed be he that perverteth the judgment of the
stranger, of the fatherless, and the widow.”
“Amen.”
“Cursed be he that secretly killeth his neighbor.”
“Amen.”
“Cursed be he that taketh gifts to slay an innocent person.”
“Amen” thundered the people in answer.
But Moses, after prophesying this scene, then continued
to speak of what awaits those who keep God’s laws, “Now
if thou wilt hear the voice of the Lord thy God, to do and
keep all His commandments . . . blessed shalt thou be in
the city and blessed in the fields . . . blessed shall be thy
barns and blessed thy stores, blessed shalt thou be coming
in and going out . . . blessed . . . blessed of God.”
We are deeply affected when reading this description. Yet
what is it compared to the thunder of the last judgment, when
no Jewish priest will say the words of cursing and blessing,
but the divine Judge; and no people will answer “Amen,”
but the angels of God.
“Depart from Me,” resound Christ’s words. And the angels
thunder: “Amen.”
“You cursed . . .” And the angels reply: “Amen.”
“Into everlasting fire.” “Amen.”180 LIFE EVERLASTING
“Which was prepared for the devil and his angels.”
“Amen.”
But then the wrath will disappear from Christ’s face and
with infinite gentleness He will turn to the good:
“Come, ye blessed of My Father”; and from millions and
millions of hearts the joyous answer will re-ccho: “Amen.”
“Possess you the kingdom.” “Amen.”
“Prepared for you from the foundation of the world.”
“Amen.”
Lord God, I believe that there is a hell, but I also believe
that there is a heaven. Grant that I may never sce hell, but
that I may see and possess heaven forever. Amen. Amen.XVI
ETERNAL BLISS
Amonc the Kamba negroes of East Africa persists an ancient
legend.
Once upon a time, long, long ago, according to the legend,
the inhabitants of those parts were very embittered by death’s
merciless destruction. They sent messengers to all countries
of the world, to seck a place where death was not lord, so that
all the people should move there. The messengers traveled
over the face of the earth for years, wandering from one coun-
try to the other. Finally they returned with the calamitous
news: We must stay here and die as our fathers died, for a
kingdom where death is not master does not exist in all the
world.
But it does. There exists a kingdom whose inhabitants live
forever, and they live in eternal bliss. There is a place where
“death shall be no more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sor-
row” (Apoc. 21: 4). There is a place where men “shall no
more hunger nor thirst, neither shall the sun fall on them, nor
any heat . . . and God shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes” (Apoc. 7: 16, 17).
The kingdom of heaven exists where all God’s promises to
His faithful children are fulfilled, and wherein the last sen-
tence of the Creed becomes holy reality: “I believe in the resur-
rection of the body and in life everlasting.”
“T believe in God.” Thus begins our Creed; the avowal of
faith in God. “I believe in life everlasting”; thus it ends, with
181182 LIFE EVERLASTING
the gaining of God. We begin with faith and conclude with
everlasting life, where there will be no more faith, only
knowledge.
With the avowal of eternal bliss the Creed ends, just as
with the gaining of eternal bliss the zealous life of a Christian
ends. Today we will turn our thoughts to the kingdom of
heaven, to the realm of eternal bliss, to our real eternal home
and, as far as that is possible here on earth, to endeavor to
reply to these questions: Does the kingdom of heaven really
exist, and what will heaven be like?
I
DOES HEAVEN EXIST?
The most important question for us now is: How do we
know that the kingdom of heaven really exists?
A. For an answer we naturally appeal to our divine Mas-
ter.
1) If there is no heaven then there is no meaning in Christ’s
whole life. His entire earthly life, His teaching, and His suf-
fering were to enable man redeemed from sin to attain to
the heavenly Father’s eternal kingdom.
As we read the Gospels we are impressed by the many
times and the many different ways Christ spoke of eternal
bliss. On one occasion He says to His disciples that whoever
sacrifices all for Him, for His name’s sake, “shall receive
an hundredfold, and shall possess life everlasting” (Matt.
19:29).
Another time He prophesies to them that they will be
persecuted for His sake, but they shall be glad and rejoice,
“for your reward is very great in heaven” (Matt. 5: 12).
Or hear what He says in connection with the accumula-
tion of wealth. “Lay not up to yourselves treasures on earth,ETERNAL BLISS 183
where the rust and moth consume and where thieves break
through and steal; but lay up to yourselves treasures in heaven
where neither the rust nor moth doth consume, and where
thieves do not break through nor steal” (Matt. 6: 19, 20).
In numerous parables the Savior speaks of eternal happi-
ness. He speaks of it as His “Father’s house” (John 14: 2), as
“a hidden treasure” (Matt. 13: 44).
Let us recall the beautiful words that will resound at the
last judgment: “Come, ye blessed of My Father, possess you
the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the
world” (Matt. 25: 34). Our Lord’s doctrine is so permeated
by the belief in eternal bliss that the entire Gospel would have
to be denied by anyone who wished to deny the existence of
heaven.
2) We can see how different is Christ’s way of speaking of
eternal life fron the way others spoke of it before His coming.
Pagan peoples did indeed expect happiness after death.
But, as the religions of these peoples were distorted, so they
promised themselves a distorted life hereafter: the heaven of
religions that were of the earth earthly, full of sensual pleas-
ures, was naturally itself of the earth earthly and sensual.
Not so the heaven of Christ. There is no trace of earthiness
in His heaven. His heaven is not a banqueting table of huge
dimensions, it is not eating and drinking, or revelry, or the
luxury of the Mohammedan seventh paradise. According to
Christ, eternal life is His Father’s house; Christ goes before-
hand there, and there awaits His faithful children. “In My Fa-
ther’s house there are many mansions. . . . I go to prepare a
place for you. And if I shall go and prepare a place for you,
I will come again, and will take you to Myself; that where I
am, you also may be” (John 14: 2, 3).
In the Christian heaven is indescribable bliss; but it is not
the bliss of sensual life. It is such bliss “that eye hath not seen,184 LIFE EVERLASTING
nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man”
(I Cor. 2:9), as St. Paul writes. But this bliss is not made to
earthly measures and for earthly longings. We can imagine
it only dimly, we can hardly form any idea of it; only those
will see it who once attain to heaven.
B. Will many be there? Who will be there? How many
achieve heaven? What an enticing question. And we cannot
answer it.
1) Nevertheless, even though our Lord Jesus said nothing
explicitly about this particular question, I think it is not un-
seemly curiosity on our part if, approaching the question
with humble heart, we seek a reply to it.
Thinking in a merely human way, the reply would be that
the greater number of those who are not doomed to perdi-
tion, do not enter at once after death into God’s kingdom,
but must first mature and do penance in purgatorial fire;
but after a shorter or longer period of penance, they reach
God’s kingdom.
That would be the merely human reply. On the basis of
Christian hope and humble trust, however, I think we can
give a much more gladsome answer. Of the man who strove
all his life to do God’s will—and there are many such also
today, thank God—of the man who lived an honest, dutiful,
religious life, and often purified himself from sin with tears
of repentance in the confessional, who befere his death con-
fessed, received holy communion and extreme unction and
full indulgence combined with the papal blessing—of this
man we are justified in hoping that at the moment of his
death he heard the words that our Lord addressed to the
good thief, to the sinner repenting at the last hour: “Amen I
say to thee, this day thou shalt be with Me in paradise” (Luke
23: 43)-
What a wise thing it is then to pray daily for a happy death.ETERNAL BLISS 185
Many beg God to give them a happy death. But by a happy
death they mean that they may not suffer long and may fall
asleep calmly, imperceptibly. It is also permissible to pray
for this. But much rather should we pray that we may not die
without having received the sacraments; a hundred times
greater than all the funeral pomp, than all the forests of flow-
ers and funeral sermons is the consolation if we cross the
threshold of death with souls at peace with God.
2) “Consolation.” Is this heaven only a comforting picture
of the imagination, or is it sacred reality? The reproach is
often made to Christianity that it works with “bills of ex-
change on the hereafter,” and that if anyone is overwhelmed
by a burden of carthly suffering, if anyone is tormented by
the disasters of carthly life, it refers to the just and equalizing
satisfaction of the other world.
Dear brethren, if this were only the raising of false hopes,
such a reproach could rightly be made to our religion. Every
bill of exchange is made of value by the name of someone
who stands security. Now do you know who drew up this
“bill of exchange on the hereafter” ? Do you know who stands
surety for it? Someone who Himself knew the trials of this
earthly life, who Himself went through every phase of suffer-
ing, and, acquainted with all this, encouraged His persever-
ing followers in their sufferings with these words: “Be glad
and rejoice, for your reward is very great in heaven” (Matt.
5:12).
If the name of such a Surety is on the bill of exchange, we
accept it. If He encourages us with the reward of life ever-
lasting, who Himself came from that life and came that He
might help us to attain it, we follow Him gladly. There-
fore we believe steadfastly that eternal bliss, the kingdom of
heaven, exists.186 LIFE EVERLASTING
qn
WHAT WILL HEAVEN BE LIKE?
What will heaven be like? In what does its happiness con-
sist? What shall we do in eternity? These are questions that
we should like answered.
What shall we do in heaven? Our reply to that is two bricf
sentences: we shall see God and we shall possess God. This
is eternal bliss. Simple words, but fathomless depths lie be-
hind them.
A. We shall see God.
1) Will that really be a source of infinite bliss? The Chris-
tian religion has many beautiful customs and salutations that
our forefathers used and loved, but not one touches us so
deeply as when laying our dear dead in their graves, before
taking final leave of them, we send a last good wish after
them into their new lives: Requiem aeternam dona ets, Do-
mine et lux perpetua luceat eis, “Eternal rest grant unto them,
O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them.”
Perpetual light. In this is contained everything that we ex-
pect in heaven. Where there is light, there is recognition.
Where light is eternal, there recognition is eternal. Here on
earth there is also light: the light of reason and faith. But
here we recognize God only dimly. Here no one can see God.
But there we shall see Him as He is.
But is that true? Listen to the words of St. Paul: “We see
now through a glass in a dark manner, but then face to face.
Now I know in part, but then I shall know even as I am
known” (I Cor. 13: 12).
‘Then what do we expect from heaven? What do we ask
for our dear ones who have departed from this life? Why do
we endure so steadfastly in the temptations of this earthlyETERNAL BLISS 187
life? Why do we hold a lighted candle in our hand at our
baptism? Why docs one burn at our deathbed? Why are
several candles lighted on the altar at solemn functions?
Because we are God’s children, children of light. We are
souls straining from the depths to the heights, from darkness
toward perpetual light. The light that reason gives us is only
a pale torchlight. That which faith gives is stronger, but it
is not fulness of light. I strive forward, toward perpetual light,
toward life everlasting, where I shall see God “face to face.”
Can this be truce? We have the words of St. John: “Dearly
beloved, we are now the sons of God, and it hath not yet ap-
peared what we shall be. We know that, when He shall ap-
pear, we shall be like to Him because we shall see Him as He
is” (I John 3:2).
2) We shall see God, and in God His works. That will be
a panorama, to see the plans of divine Providence which in
life we often considered hard and unjust. To see the greatest
and smallest figures of world history, the celebrated and the
forgotten, but now in their true light, the light they have
deserved. To see nature’s laws and hidden forces, also those
that man has never yet discovered. To see all this in the glow
of perpetual light, and never be able to cease looking, and
never weary of so doing.
We shall also see the angels and all those who have attained
their salvation. “I saw a great multitude, which no man could
number, of all nations and tribes and peoples and tongues,
standing before the throne and in sight of the Lamb, clothed
with white robes and palms in their hands” (Apoc. 7: 9).
What a gallery! What a collection of pictures! Not the oil
paintings of Raphael or Murillo or Titian, but of living souls!
How much beauty, how much charm, how much nobility!
3) We shall see God. Shall we fully understand God,
all His attributes, the profundity of His very being? Ah, no.188 LIFE EVERLASTING
A creature cannot fully understand its Creator, nor the finite
the Infinite: the ocean cannot be contained in a glass.
But the soul will see God, and not merely believe. We shall
not merely see God’s reflection in a glass, as we see it here on
earth (I Cor. 13: 12), but we shall see God Himself. See and
never cease seeing.
We cannot penetrate the unapproachable depths of God’s
being, that is, we cannot exhaust God entirely, but everyone
can see and enjoy as much of God, they can imbibe as much
of Him, as they are able to receive. Everyone will see God in
different measure, so everyone’s eternal bliss will be different,
yet everyone will be infinitely happy, because all will receive
as much of God as they are able to receive.
Will eternal bliss not be the same for everyone? No. For
each onc it will be different. Everyone will receive a different
measure of happiness but everyone will be infinitely happy
and no one will be envious of the other.
The happiness of every soul will be different just as the
stars are different the one from the other (I Cor. 15: 41).
How will this be possible?
Let us imagine a crowded concert half where Beethoven’s
Symphony is being given. Everyone enjoys it, but everyone
enjoys it in a different degree. Each enjoys it according to
the amount of musical appreciation he has acquired.
Here is the great lesson we should learn from these truths.
The more we occupy ourselves with God in this life, the
more we shall receive of Him in heaven. The more we have
allowed grace to permeate us here during our earthly lives,
the more will “the light of glory,” the “perpetual light,”
permeate us there.
B. This is our answer to those who, in their human and
material way of thinking, bring up all kinds of doubt about
heaven.ETERNAL BLISS 189
Modern man is made up of nerves, and his work is a con-
tinual planning and activity. Hence we should not wonder
that he asks anxiously: What is this eternal bliss, what are
we going to do there? Our Catholic faith replies that “we
shall see God.” But what will that be? Shall we stand like
white statues and stare stiffly at God, without any activity?
Shall we not be wearied if heaven is that?
1) How instructively the legend of St. Augustine answers
this question!
An ancient legend says that three hundred years after the
death of St. Augustine, a monk, kneeling in prayer at the
great saint's tomb, had a remarkable vision. He saw St.
Augustine standing with wondering eyes at the gate of
heaven, just about to cross the threshold.
“My father,” exclaims the monk, “it is now three hundred
years since your death occurred, and now you are standing
only at the gate of heaven!”
And St. Augustine replies: “Yes, for three hundred years
I have been standing here in amazement and wonder at the
happiness of the saved. But now I will cease wondering and
enter heaven.” How much wisdom is hidden behind the
simple words of that old legend!
One of the Church’s most brilliant intellects and her great-
est saint, Augustine, who wrote many treatises on the most
difficult theological questions, and whose genius penetrated
the depths of the most complicated problems, this St. Augus-
tine arrives in heaven. And its loveliness, its bliss, and its
splendor so far surpass the imaginative power of even this
marvelous mind that at the very gate, before entering, he has
to wonder and admire for three hundred years.
2) OF course, this is only a legend. Heaven has no gate
and steps, no towers and battlements. But the gist and essence
of the legend is true: the bliss and beauty of life everlasting190 LIFE EVERLASTING
are so wonderful that the most brilliant human intellect, the
most vivid imagination, is incapable of picturing them even
approximately. Not to speak of exhausting them or of being
wearied by them.
Shall we not grow weary of them? Does a mother grow
weary of watching her little child for hours at a time? Does
an artist grow weary when for weeks he plans and improves
and paints the subject he has created in his imagination? Does
a scientist grow weary when he racks his brains for years
over some unsolved problem?
Yet all the created beauty and all the combined treasure
of the world are but insignificant grains of dust, mere frag-
ments, compared with the infinite beauty and richness of the
infinite God. All earthly beauty is but a shadow of God’s
beauty.
3) Thus eternity will hardly be sufficient for us to survey
God’s works. We look twenty or thirty times at St. Peter’s
Basilica in Rome, at a splendid view from a high mountain;
and we are never satisfied. Then what shall we feel when we
see the Creator of all created things? When we see not the
Alps, not mountain lakes, but the eternal source of all beauty?
Tf on earth we wish to see clearly, we need a strong light:
sunshine, a reflector, an arc lamp. In life everlasting there is
also light—not the sun, not electric light, but “perpetual
light,” the new grace of God—theology calls it the light of
glory—that God radiates upon the blessed that in this re-
splendence they may see Him.
To see God is to participate in some way in God’s blessed-
ness, in His activity, in His life. Such a sight of God will
not be wearisome monotony, but rather the most stirring
and animating perpetual movement and activity: movement
and activity, but without fatigue.
C. The sight of God, however, is only one of the sourcesETERNAL BLISS 191
of heavenly joy. There we shall not only see God, but we
shall also possess Him.
1) Seeing God there is not the same as secing something
here on earth. Here on earth, however joyously we look
at something, however long and however deeply, we only
absorb its image and remembrance, but the object itself re-
mains outside of us. In heaven, where we look at God with-
out bodily eyes, we shall not receive His image, but His being
will enter our soul, will live in us, as today our inmost
thoughts live in us. God will embrace us somewhat as, when
we throw ourselves into the midst of the billowing sea, we
are enveloped on all sides by the ocean.
Let us reflect on some consequences of this truth. If God,
perpetual light, envelops us, then we too become radiant. If
God, eternal knowledge, envelops us, then we too shall know
all that on earth we sought in vain to know. If God, infinite
goodness, envelops us, then all our former loftiest desires will
be fulfilled. If God, infinite bliss, envelops us, then all joy
that earth denied us will be realized.
2) Or we can express this truth thus: every noble endeavor
and desire that lived in us on earth, with an imperfection,
incompleteness, and insufficiency that left us unsatisfied, will
now become our own in the most perfect consummation.
How little we are understood, how often our actions are
misconstrued in life! How many complain, and rightly, that
they are not in the position where they can properly develop
their talents. Many human lives are broken off in the bud,
without blossoming or bearing fruit. Many souls struggle
enchained in weak bodies, or lost in the mists of ruined nerves
and shattered constitutions. And all these limitations will
be unknown in heaven.
In life we ask many questions without obtaining an answer.
But the answers will be given in heaven. In life we are tor-192 LIFE EVERLASTING
mented with many pains. But all pain is banished from
heaven.
3) There is one more special source of heavenly joy: the
society of Christ and the saints. What an inexpressible flood
of joy will flow over us when we stand close to the Lord Jesus!
Lord Jesus. How often have we uttered Thy blessed, holy
name! How often have we called upon Thee in temptation!
How often have we looked on Thee in the Holy Eucharist
where our eyes saw nothing but bread! But now the time has
come for which I have prayed so much: the veil has fallen.
With what devotion people make pilgrimages to the tomb
of St. Anthony of Pauda, to that of St. Francis of Assisi, to
some ancient picture of the Blessed Virgin! But now we shall
be with Mary herself. And with the great saints. What a
choice society that will be! There is everything truly noble,
great, and beautiful that has ever been on earth.
There are our own dear ones, our parents, our relatives.
I scarcely need mention the joy we shall experience upon
again joining those from whom we took leave at the mouth
of the open grave. Nothing of us that is of value will be lost
there. In heaven, love and friendship will not be lost, but will
be ennobled and strengthened at the very source of love.
Thus indeed we shall meet again.
It will be a source of special joy, I think, to see those who
are there through our cooperation, through our merits. It
will be unspeakable joy to hear such words as these: “Thank
you, father, for bringing me up so strictly: that brought me
here.” “Thank you, mother, that you set me such a good
example, and prayed for me: that brought me here.” “Thank
you, dear wife, husband, friend. Thank you, dear father con-
fessor. Without your help I should never have attained this
eternal blessedness.”
Eternal blessedness. What marvelous words! What a livelyETERNAL BLISS 193
hope! What a reassuring promise! The end of every journey,
the final subsidence of every struggle, the final meaning of
earthly life: eternal blessedness. With what reassuring ef-
fulgence it radiates above our dark, winding earthly paths
and makes bearable the heavy cross of this “vale of tears”!
Eternal life is perpetual light; this earthly life is a great
darkness. What I have said about heavenly life, is no more
than when a bit of light from a neighboring room steals into
a dark room through the crack of the door and lets us know
that the other room is brilliantly illuminated.
What I have said is but human stammering. Where is the
human imagination that can picture the blessedness of God’s
kingdom? That blessedness where an infinitely just God
will heal our wounds and dry our tears.
God grant that our souls may some day be thrilled with
joy when the heavenly gates are opened to us and our Lord
says: “Well done, good and faithful servant, because thou
hast been faithful over a few things, I will place thee over
many things: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord” (Matt.
25:21).
God grant that on the last day we may be standing at the
right hand of Christ and hear His welcoming words: “Come,
ye blessed of My Father, possess you the kingdom prepared
for you from the foundation of the world” (Matt. 25: 34).
Amen.INDEX
Abstract concepts and the soul, 17, 20
Activity, man’s desire for eternal, 126
Airplane crash (anecdote), 85
Alexander the Great: burial of, 86; gricf
of, 43
Aloysius (St.) on carthly actions, 102
Ambrose (St.) on life and death, 130
Anecdotes
airplane crash, 85
attainment of immortality, 165
Augustine, St., 38
beauty of heaven, 46
Beethoven, 124, 188
belief in immortality, 56, 124
the buried village, 140
certainty of death, 63
Charles V of Spain, 165
chief of police in Paris, 54
conductor on railway car, 91
consolation of belief in immortality,
120
cupola of St. Peter’s (Rome), 94
death, 69
degrees of happiness in heaven, 188
dream of Genadius, 38
drunkenness, 54
earthly cares, 55
earthly wisdom, 105
existence of purgatory, 161
express train, 3
Francis Joseph I, burial of, 132
Francis of Assisi (St.) and the mason,
36
grave in Hannover, 134
historian crossing the Nile, 55
hope of immortality, 48
house of Gerard Kempis, 63
influence of mind on body, 21
instinctive belief in immortality, 45
Anccdotes (continued)
Italian cemeteries, 129
Johanna (“Mad”), death of, 27
last judgment, 178
late passenger, 177
life, 35,
life after death, 38
life’s goal, 31
Louis XIV of France, 73
Massillon’s sermon, 161
Mazarin, death of, 93
migration of birds, 45
missionary and the business man, 100
oath of the Israclites, 178
poor man on New Year's Eve, 115
preparation for death, 87, 93, 177
“Professor Death,” 84 ff.
purgatory, existence of, 161
Purpose of life, 36
radio receivers, 19
railway accident (Paris), 116
rescue from the grave, 87
responsibility of life, 91, 100
restraint of belief in immortality, 53
resurrection from the dead, 134
Rhone river, 69
shopkeeper and the sailor, 77
Socrates, death of, 7
soldier on battlefield, 3
soul and the brain, 19
suffering with Christ, 140
Tamina Gorge, 35
‘Thomas More in prison, 56
thought of death, 5
time of death, 77
tomb of the Hapsburgs (Vienna), 74
tomb of the Russian czars, 75
triumph of death, 73 ff.
triumph of the Church over death, 94
195196
Anecdotes (continued)
‘Tycho Brahe, 105
unbelieving father, 53
uncertainty of life, 85
value of life, 115 £.
violinist, 46
wheat in Exyptian tombs, 120
wine in spring, 48
Zeno and the oracle, 51
Atheists, death of, 42
‘Augustine (St.)
appearance of (legend), 189
on death, 84
on the death of St. Monica, 164
on eternity, 130
on hell, 172
on possession of God, 52
on the value of time, 105
Baedecker’s guide on frescoes, 106
Beethoven (anecdote), 124, 188
Bells of Speyer (German ballad), 131
Berlin National Gallery, 71
Bernard (Claude) on thought, 15
Biology and spiritual phenomenon, 14
Body, resurrection of the, 39
Bécklin: “Isle of the Dead” by, 24; paint-
ing of the four ages of life by, 62
Brahe, Tycho (ancedote), 105
Brain: dependence upon the soul, 18;
and spiritual creation, 16; and
thought, 15
Brevity of life, 109-12
Buried village (ancedote), 140
Campo Santo (Genoa), epitaph in, 34
Cares of the world (anecdote), 55
Change, man’s fear of, 97
Charles V of Spain (anecdote), 165
Chinesc: belief in immortality among
the, 8; emperor (legend), 11
Cholera in Paris (1835), 42
Christ, consolation of the dying by, 148+
53
Christian man, Vinct on, 137
Christ’s victory over death, 82
INDEX
Church, consolation of the dying by the,
148-53
Cicero, De immortalitate animae by, 7
Clare (St), Murillo’s painting of the
death of, 4
Columbus, the courage of, 58
Comfort of death, 129-41
Communion at time of death, 149
Concepts and the soul, 17, 20
Conductor on train (anecdote), 9
Culture, faith the support of, 49-52
Cupola of St. Peter’s (ancedote), 94
Czars, tomb of the (anecdote), 75
Danaides, punishment of, 168
Dante: on earthly pride, 1045 on life and.
death, 5, 138
Death
Augustine (St) on, 84
the beginning of immortality, 154
of believing Catholics, 144
the certainty of, 72-76
Christ's victory over, 82
the comfort of, 129-41
the day of compensation, 138
the nd of suffering, 130-33
gate to immortality, 58-70
the guide of our life, 119-28
judgment after, 67
the justice of, 131
life's regulator, 5
man’s fear of, 95
man’s nearness to, 110
man’s victory over, 142-53
necessity of preparation for, 92
not a respecter of persons, 64, 132
the painfulness of, 91
passing from life into, 65-70
the passing of honors with, 73 ff.
pricstly consolation at the time of, 66
purpose of (anecdote), 69
the regulator of life, 108-18
of Socrates (anecdote), 7
a source of encrgy, 121
spiritual condition at the time of, 78
the teacher, 84-96
those vanquished by, 143 ff.INDEX
Death (continued)
those who vanquish, 144-48
the thought of (anecdote), 5
triumph of, 73 f.
triumph of the Church over (ance-
dote), 94
vanquished by Christ, 147
the victory of, 21-24, 71-83
the warning of, 97-107
warning of our duty by, 102-7
warning to the ungrateful by, 102
Degrees of joy in heaven (anecdote), 188
Desmoulins, death of, 42
Drunkenness (anecdote), 54
Diirer, “King Death” by, 144
Doty, death's warning of our, 102-7
Dying, Christ's aid to the, 148-53
Egyptians, belief in immortality, 7
Elizabeth of Hungary (anecdote), 75
Epaminondas on greatness, 138
Epitaph: in the Campo Santo (Genoa),
34; of Gardonyi, 7; of Newman,
443 of Veuillot, 2
Eternal bliss; see Heaven
Eternal life; see Immortality
Eternity, St. Augustine on, 130
Eternity of hell, 173-80
Everlasting life; see Immortality
Express train (anecdote), 31
Extreme unction, 549 f€.
Ezechias (King), death of, 60
Father, unbelieving (anecdote), 53
Fear of death, St. Hilary on, 138
Felix (Governor) and St. Paul, 54
“Fidelio,” Beethoven's opera, 124
Francis of Assisi (St.): death of,
“Hymn to the Sun” by, 138
ness of, t113 and the mason (anec-
dote), 36
Francis Joseph I, death of (anecdote),
132
Future life; see Immortality
Future, our knowledge of the, 89.
Gardonyi: epitaph of, 7; on the posses-
sion of God, 52
197
Genadius, dream of (anecdote), 38
Genoa, Campo Santo at, 34: memorials
ia, 81
Good works, value of, 94
Goodness, immortality demanded by di-
vine, 30
Grave in Hannover (anecdote), 134
Gregory (St.) on the passing of time,
116
Happiness: degrees of heavenly, 188;
man’s need of, 30; man’s search for,
425 in the service of God, 114; and
wealth, 105
Happy death, prayers for a, 184
Hapsburgs, tomb of the (anecdote), 74
Hardships of life, 123-28
Heaven, 181-93
beauty of (anecdote), 46
belief in, among pagans, 183
consolation of the belief in, 185
degrees of happiness in, 188
the existence of, 182-85
the joys of, 183
the nature of, 186-93
possession of God in, 191
reunion in, 192
sight of God in, 190
society of the saints in, 192
teachings of Scripture about, 182
Hebbel, death of, 105,
Hell, 167-80
Augustine (St.) on, 172
the eternity of, 173-80
the existence of, 168-73
the justice of an eternal, 174
necessity for a, 168
the pains of, 172
persons in, 174
teachings of Scripture about, 170
Hell, belicf in: difficulty of, 167; among
pagans, 168; reasonableness of, 169
Hilary (St.) on fear of death, 138
Historian crossing the Nile (anecdote),
55
Holy Communion at time of death, 149198
Honors: object in life, 373 passing of,
with death, 73 ff.5 St. Philip Neri
on, 56
Horace: on life and death, 1433 on Jit-
crary fame, 17
House of Gerard Kempis (anecdote), 63
Hugo (Victor): on life and death, 443 on
the powers of the soul, 22
“Hymn to the Sun” by St. Francis of
Assisi, 138
De immortalitate animae by Cicero, 7
Immortality
attainment of (anecdote), 165
death the beginning of, 133-41, 154
death the gate to, 58-70
demanded by God's goodness, 30
demanded by God's justice, 29 f.
the existence of, 9-11
fulfilment of justice in, 4r
God's plan in, 29-32
hope of (anecdote), 48
the importance of, 2-5
instinctive belief in (anecdote), 45
lack of belief in, 4
man’s search for, 11
Pascal on, 3
Socrates on, 22
teaching of Christ on, 25-29
Immortality, belicf in, 1-11
by ancient pagans, 7
among the Chinese, 8
Cicero on, 7
consolation of, 5, 32, 60, 120 (anec-
dote), 122
as a cultural support, 49-52
Doctor Maye on, 5
by Egyptians, 7
encouragement in suffering, 56-59
the fruits of, 48-59
man’s victory over death by, 142-53
in prehistoric times, 6
by primitive peoples, 8
reasonableness of, 35-47
regulator of passions, 56
restraint of (anecdote), 53
by Socrates, 7
INDEX
Immortality (continued)
soldier on battlefield (anecdote), 3
spirit of self-sacrifice from, 53
strength in temptation, 53-55
strength in trials (anecdote), 124
testimony of man’s heart, 42-47
testimony of man’s senses, 8
testimony of man’s will, 41 £
‘Thomas More (anecdote), 56
Veuillot’s cpitaph, 2
wisdom of, 9
Instinct, migratory (anccdote), 45
“Isle of the Dead,” Bécklin’s painting of,
24
Israelites, the oath of (anecdote), 178
Italian cemeteries (anecdote), 129
Ixion, punishment of, 169
Jairus, daughter of, 27
Jo egeszsey, 14
Johanna (“Mad”), death of (anecdote),
21
Joys of heaven, 183
Judgincnt after death, 67
Justice: of death, 131; of an eternal hell,
1743 immortality demanded by,
295 man’s desire of, 4
Kamba negroes, legend among, 181
Kempis (Gerard), house of (anecdote),
63
“King Death,” Diirer’s painting of, 144
Kingdom of eternal life (legend), 181
Labor of Sysiphus, 168
Last judgment (anecdote), 178
Life
the brevity of, 109-12
after death (anecdote), 38
death the regulator of, 108-18
the goal of (anecdote), 3
the hardships of, 123-28
the nothingness of, 85-88
purpose of, 36
the responsibility of, 90-94
the route of (anecdote), 35
the transientness of, 126
the uncertainty of, 64, 76-83INDEX
Life (continued)
the value of, 88 ff. 115-18
various views of, 120-23
Life and death: Dante on, 5, 138; Horace
on, 143; Michelangelo on, 44; St.
Ambrose on, 130; Victor Hugo
on, 44
Life everlasting; see Immortality
Literary fame, Horace on, 11
Logic, the powers of, 17
Louis XIV of France (anecdote), 73
Massillon, sermon of (ancedote), 161
Materialism and existence of the soul, 12
Maye (Doctor) on belief in immortality,
5
Mazarin, death of (anecdote), 93
Memorials in cemetery at Genoa, 81
Michelangelo: on life and death, 445
statue of St. Peter by, 17
Mind, influence on the body (anecdote),
21
Missionary (anecdote), 100
Monica (St.), Augustine on the death of,
164
More (Thomas) in prison (anecdote), 56
Mortal sin, knowledge of, 176
Mourning, Christian way of, 146
Murillo, “Death of St. Clare” by, 4
Nature of heaven, 186-93
Navigius at death of St. Monica, 164
Nervous lady on train (anecdote), 91
New Year's Eve, poor man on (anec-
dote), 115
Newman: epitaph of, 443 death of, 45 on
resurrection, 58
Nietzsche on dying, 143
Oath of the Israelites (anecdote), 178
Pagans: belief in hell, 1693 belief in
immortality, 73 belief in purga-
tory, 157
Pains of hell, 172
Paris, chief of police in (anecdote), 54
Pascal on immortality, 3
199
Passenger, late (anecdote), 177
Past, our loss of the, 88
Paul (St.) on the resurrection, 28, 57
Paul's imprisonment at Caesarea, 54
Perdition; see Hell
Peter (St.), Michelangelo’s statue of, 17
Pharaohs, death of the (anecdote), 73
Philip Neri (St.) on worldly honors, 56
Philosophy, Socrates on, 22
Pisa, frescoes at, 142
Plato on the death of Socrates, 22
Pleasure, object in life, 37
Possession of God: Gardonyi on, 52; in
heaven, 191; St. Augustine on, 52
Prayers for the dead, Tertullian on, 156
Prehistoric man, belief in immortality, 6
Pride, Dante on, 104
Priest, needed by the dying, 66
Primitive tribes, belief in immortality, 8
“Procession of Death,” Spangenberg’s
painting of, 71
“Professor Death” (ancedote), 84 ff.
Preparation for death, 92: (anecdote),
87, 93, 117
Purgatory, 154-66: corollaries to the doc-
trine of, 160; nature of, 158 ff. pur-
pose of, 158; warnings of, 163
Purgatory, the existence of, 155-58: pa-
gan belief in, 157; and reincarna-
tion, 1623 teachings of Scripture,
1553 teachings of tradition, 156
Radio receivers (anecdote), 19
Railway accident (anecdote), 116
Reason and existence of the soul, 15-23
Reincarnation and purgatory, 162
Rescue from the grave (anecdote), 37
Responsibility of life (anecdote), 91, roo
Resurrection: of the body, 393 from the
dead (anecdote), 134; Newton on,
58; St. Paul on, 28, 51
Reunion in heaven, 192
Rhone river (anecdote), 69
Romans, fear of death among the, 86
Sacraments, comfort to the dying, 149 £.
Science and existence of the soul, 13-15200
Self-consciousness, 18
Service of God, happiness in the, 114
Shopkeeper and the sailor (anecdote), 77
Sight of God in heaven, 190
Socrates: death of, 22, 145; on immor-
tality, 22; on philosophy, 22
Socicty of the saints in heaven, 192
Soldier on battlefield (anecdote), 3
Sorrows of death (anecdote), 129
Soul: and abstract concepts, 17; control
over the body, 21; dependence upon
the brain, 183 spontancous activity
of the, 20; Victor Hugo on powers
of the, 22
Soul, existence of the, 12-23: and ab-
stract concepts, 20; attitude of rea-
son, 15-235 attitude of science, 13-
153 and materialism, 12
Spangenberg, “Procession of Death” by,
np
Speyer, bells of (German ballad), 131
Spiritual condition at time of death, 78
Spiritualism, 163
Spontancous activity, 20
Suffering with Christ (anecdote), 140
Sysiphus, labor of, 168
‘Tamina Gorge (anecdote), 35
Tantalus, torments of, 168
Tertullian on prayers for the dead, 156
INDEX
‘Thanks to God, 102
‘Thescus, punishment of, 169
‘Thought: and the brain, 153 Claude
Bernard on, 15
‘Time: St. Augustine on the value of,
105; the uansitory nature of, 98-
100; value of (anecdote), 116
‘Torments of Tantalus, 168
‘Transientness of life, 126
Trappist Order, 164
“Triumph of Death,” painting at Pisa,
142
Truth, man’s desire for, 44
‘Tytius, punishment of, 169
Uncertainty of life (anecdote), 85
Undertakers, convention of, 61
Value of life, 115-18
Veuillot, epitaph of, 2
Vinct on Christian man, 137
Violinist (anecdote), 46
Warning of death, 97-107
Wealth: the danger of, 113; and happi-
ness, 1053 as an object in life, 37
Wine in spring (anccdotc), 48
Wisdom, earthly (anecdote), 105
Zeno and the oracle (anecdote), 51