Readings: Malachi 3:19-20a; Psalm 98:5-9; 2 Thessalonians 3:7-12; Luke 21:5-19
When it’s all said and done what remains? What is left when everything is reduced to rubble? What can you take with you when you die? Why does it matter?
With the elapse of many centuries, even a couple of millennia, the eschatological or “apocalyptic” dimension of Christianity grows more attenuated. Much of the urgency expressed in Paul’s letters is tamped down. Given our increasingly empirical and existential attitudes, even when it comes to our faith, we may be in danger of losing this vital dimension of Christianity entirely.
Today is the penultimate Sunday of the liturgical year, which culminates with the great Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe. Add to that the fact that November is the month during which we remember as well as pray and sacrifice for our beloved dead, you get the feeling that it’s the end of the world.
This is precisely the feeling these observances are meant to evoke. Perhaps it’s better to say that what we look forward to during the final weeks of each year is the end of time. Time is up either when you die or when Christ returns. This realization should cause each of us to consider what really matters and to pattern our lives accordingly.
One spiritual discipline it’s important not to overlook is the practice of
memento mori- “remember death.” Far from being a futile exercise in morbidity,
memento mori helps one live
sub specie aeternitatis- “under the aspect of eternity.” At the beginning of the first week of his
Spiritual Exercises, Saint Ignatius of Loyola set forth their “Principle and Foundation.” The first sentence states: “Man is created to praise, reverence, and serve God our Lord, and by this means to save his soul.”
1
This echoes one of the first questions asked in the
Baltimore Catechism. The response to the question
Why did God make you? is
God made me to know Him, love Him, and serve Him in this world and to be happy with Him forever in heaven.
2 Saint Ignatius goes on to insist, “It is necessary to keep as aim the end for which I am created.”
3
In other words, everything should be done with the end for which I am made and redeemed firmly in mind. This is what it means to live under the aspect of eternity. Made in the image of God, each and every human person has a transcendent, that is, a spiritual dimension.
Despite various fanciful theories, at least the way we experience it, time only flows in one direction. This observation is what led the pre -Socratic Greek philosopher Heraclitus to note, “No one ever steps in the same river twice.”
4 Or, as the Steve Miller band sang: “Time keeps on slippin’, slippin’, slippin’ into the future.”
5
None of us knows how much time we have left. Being a Christian, therefore, requires that I live not so much with a sense of urgency as with sense of purpose. Even so, scripture urges us to “consider the patience of our Lord as salvation.”
6
Living purposefully requires an intention. The intention that shapes Christian life is realizing the end for which God created, redeemed, and for which He now seeks to sanctify you.
During the first two weeks of Advent, the Church remains focused on Christ’s return at the end of time. The aim is not fear but genuine conversion. Another word for this is repentance, which is usually reduced to being sorry for one’s sins.
But acknowledging and being contrite for your sins is only the beginning of repentance. It’s the mere recognition that you need to change and the stark realization of specifically how you must change to be transformed into the image of Christ.
Christ has no accidental disciples. Following Christ is an intentional choice that leads the one who makes it to live purposefully. What is the intention that constitutes this way of life? To abide by Christ’s teachings.
“This is the way we may know we are union with [the Lord],” scripture teaches, that we strive “to live just as he lived.”
7 Is it possible to live this way? Yes, but not because it’s something you can achieve on your own. Living
this way is not an achievement that earns you a reward. “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not from you; it is the gift of God; it is not from works so no one can boast.”
8
In addition to making
memento mori more than some goth-inspired fetish, hope is what enables, invites, entices you to live
this way. Optimism is not synonymous with hope. The beginning of the fifth chapter of Romans gives us the topology of hope:
Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access [by faith] to this grace in which we stand, and we boast in hope of the glory of God9
Without Christ, there is no hope in death.
Because we boast in the hope of the glory of God, which is Jesus Christ raised from the dead, the apostle continues,
…we even boast of our afflictions, knowing that affliction produces endurance, and endurance, proven character, and proven character, hope, and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the holy Spirit that has been given to us10
Did you get that? Hope does not disappoint because God has poured His love into the heart of believers. Let’s ask again, When it’s all said and done what remains? What is left when everything is reduced to rubble? What can you take with you when you die? Let’s let Saint Paul respond:
So faith, hope, love remain, these three; but the greatest of these is love11
But the last of the questions with which we started remains unanswered:
Why does it matter? Modified slightly,
What difference does it make? Well, for the person who has experienced the outpouring of God’s love, the difference is out of this world. Christ invites you to experience this for yourself.
1 Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Spiritual Exercises, First Week “Principle and Foundation.”↩
2 Baltimore Catechism. Catechism 1, Lesson First: One the End of Man, Q6.↩
3 Spiritual Exercises, The First Way, To Make a Sound and Good Election.↩
4 Plato. Cratylus, 402a.↩
5 Steve Miller Band. “Fly Like an Eagle.”↩
6 2 Peter 3:15.↩
7 See 1 John 2:5-6.↩
8 Ephesians 2:8-9.↩
9 Romans 5:1-2.↩
10 See Romans 5:3-8.↩
11 1 Corinthians 13:13.↩