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JOHN PAUL II
GENERAL AUDIENCE
Wednesday 28 October 1998
"Life in the Spirit transcends even death"
1. God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that
whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life (Jn
3:16). In these words from the Gospel of John, the gift of eternal
life represents the ultimate purpose of the Fathers loving
plan. This gift gives us access through grace to the ineffable communion
of love of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit: This is eternal
life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have
sent (Jn 17:3).
The eternal life that flows from the Father is communicated
to us in its fullness by Jesus in his paschal mystery through the Holy
Spirit. By receiving it we share in the risen Jesus definitive
victory over death. Death and life, we proclaim in the
liturgy, have contended in that combat stupendous: the Prince of
life, who died, reigns immortal (Sequence for Easter Sunday).
In this decisive event of salvation, Jesus gives human beings eternal
life in the Holy Spirit.
2. In the fullness of time Christ thus fulfils, beyond all
expectation, that promise of eternal life which the Father has
inscribed in the creation of man in his image and likeness since the
beginning of the world (cf. Gn 1:26).
As we sing in Psalm 104, man experiences that life in the cosmos and,
particularly, his own life have their beginning in the breath
communicated by the Spirit of the Lord: When you hide your face,
they are dismayed; when you take away their breath, they die and return to
their dust. When you send forth your Spirit, they are created; and you
renew the face of the earth (vv. 29-30).
Communion with God, the gift of his Spirit, more and more becomes for
the chosen people the pledge of a life that is not limited to earthly
existence but mysteriously transcends and prolongs it forever.
In the harsh period of the Babylonian exile, the Lord rekindles his
peoples hope, proclaiming a new and definitive covenant that will be
sealed with an abundant outpouring of the Spirit (cf. Ez
36:24-28): Behold, I will open your graves, and raise you from your
graves, O my people; and I will bring you home into the land of Israel.
And you shall know that I am the Lord, when I open your graves, and raise
you from your graves, O my people. And I will put my Spirit within you,
and you shall live (Ez 37:12-14).
With these words God announces the messanic renewal of Israel after the
sufferings of the exile. The symbols used are well suited to suggesting
the faith journey that Israel is slowly making, to the point of intuiting
the truth of the resurrection of the flesh which the Spirit will
accomplish at the end of time.
3. This truth becomes firmly established in the period shortly before
the coming of Jesus Christ (cf. Dn 12:2; 2 Mc 7:9-14, 23,
36; 12:43-45), who vigorously confirms it and rebukes those who deny it: Is
not this why you are wrong, that you know neither the Scriptures nor the
power of God? (Mk 12:24). According to Jesus, belief in the
resurrection is based on belief in God, who is not God of the dead,
but of the living (Mk 12:27).
Moreover, Jesus links belief in the resurrection to his own person: I
am the Resurrection and the Life (Jn 11:25). In him, through
the mystery of his Death and Resurrection, the divine promise of the gift
of eternal life is fulfilled. This life implies total victory
over death: The hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will
hear the voice [of the Son] and come forth, those who have done good, to
the resurrection of life ... (Jn 5:28-29). For this is
the will of my Father, that everyone who sees the Son and believes in him
should have eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day (Jn
6:40).
4. Christs promise will thus be mysteriously fulfilled at the end
of time, when he returns in glory to judge the living and the dead
(2 Tm 4:1; cf. Acts 10:42; 1 Pt 4:5). Then our
mortal bodies will live again through the power of the Holy Spirit, who
has been given to us as the pledge of our inheritance, the first
payment against the full redemption (Eph 1:14; cf. 2 Cor
1:21-22).
However, there is no need to think that life after death begins only
with the final resurrection. The latter is preceded by the special state
in which every human being finds himself after physical death. There is an
intermediate stage in which, as the body decomposes, a spiritual
element survives and subsists after death, an element endowed with
consciousness and will, so that the 'human self' subsists, although
lacking the complement of its body (Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, Letter on Certain Questions Concerning Eschatology,
17 May 1979: AAS 71 [1979], 941).
Believers also have the certitude that their life-giving relationship
with Christ cannot be destroyed by death but continues in the hereafter.
Christ in fact said: He who believes in me, though he die, yet shall
he live (Jn 11:25). The Church has always professed this
belief and has particularly expressed it in the prayer of praise she
offers to God in communion with all the saints and in her prayer for the
dead who are not fully purified. On the other hand, the Church insists on
respect for the mortal remains of every human being because of the dignity
of the person to which they belonged and because of the honour which is
owed the bodies of those who became temples of the Holy Spirit through
Baptism. Particular evidence of this is the funeral liturgy and the
veneration given to the relics of the saints, which has developed from the
earliest centuries. The latters bones, St Paulinus of Nola says, never
lose the presence of the Holy Spirit, whence a living grace comes to the
sacred tombs (Carmen XXI, 632-633).
5. Thus we see the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of life not only in every
stage of our earthly existence, but equally so in that state which, after
death, precedes the full life that the Lord has promised even for our
mortal bodies. All the more so, thanks to the Spirit, we will make in
Christ our final journey to the Father. St Basil the Great
notes: If anyone reflects carefully, he will understand that, even
as we await the Lords appearing from heaven, the Holy Spirit will
not be absent, as some believe; no, he will also be present on the day of
the Lords revelation, when he will judge the world in justice as its
blessed and only sovereign (De Spiritu Sancto, XVI, 40).
To the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors the Holy Father said:
I extend a special greeting to the priests taking part in the Institute
for Continuing Theological Education at the Pontifical North American
College, to the members of the Gregorian University Foundation, and to the
Across Trust. I warmly welcome the Lutheran visitors from Sweden
and the choir from Taiwan. Upon all the English-speaking pilgrims and
visitors, especially those from England, Ireland, Sweden, Denmark,
Malaysia, Belize, Taiwan, Canada and the United States of America, I
invoke the grace and peace of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Now I would like to invite you to pray with me for several
intentions that are particularly close to my heart:
1. The Mixed Commission of the Orthodox and Greek Catholic
Churches in Romania, established to promote mutual dialogue between the two
communities, is beginning its work today. I commend this initiative to your
prayer, that it may bear the desired fruits for the good of the Church and of
all Roanian society.
2. Four months of armed conflict in Guinea-Bissau have caused
enormous displacements of people. Many have taken refuge in mission stations,
where the ecclesiastical and religious personnel — whom I strongly encourage —
are doing everything possible to alleviate their suffering. Let us pray together
that all the parties in conflict will put an end to this prolonged suffering.
3. War continues in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
causing destruction and involving neighbouring countries. Let us beseech the
Queen of Peace to calm hearts and to let the noble quest for honourable and
peaceful solutions prevail over designs to intensify the conflict.
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