[[!meta author=“Luke Schierer”]]
- Only God is eternal.
- Only God is necessary in his own being. That is, only God has to exist.
- Our relationship with God is eternal because God is eternal.
- Our relationship with God is necessary for our being.
- The book starts with the statement that every reader of the book will die.
This is true.
- However, it lead to the question (in class), did Mary die?
- Definitively, we do not know.
- The Church teaches “at the end of her life” she was assumed, body and soul, into heaven.
- Some church fathers believe and have argued that this statement means that she was assumed at the moment she would have died.
- Other church fathers believe and have argued that this statement means that she was assumed just after she died.
- The Church has refused to clarify this point. It definitively does not teach which set of church fathers is correct. This is a nearly unique situation. A matter of significant debate on a matter of faith for literally centuries is left entirely undefined.
- Death means the separation of the body from the soul.
- remember, we as human are created to be both body and soul.
- Death comes to man because of sin.
- Death is natural in that we are part of material creation
- death is unnatural in that we have immortal souls
- death is supernatural in that it is our path to eternal life.
- to be properly understood, we must keep in mind all three
- death is not extinction (atheism)
- death is not reincarnation
- at death we do not become angels.
- However, it lead to the question (in class), did Mary die?
- The resurrection of the body was slowly revealed
- the further back you go in the Old Testament, the less clearly any Jews understood it.
- Even in Jesus' time some important groups of Jews denied this concept. This is part of why the Jews expected the Messiah to be king here on Earth.
- The Christian attitude towards death is best summarized in the single word
“readiness”
- We are ready for God to call us to live longer here on Earth.
- We are ready for God to call us to join Him in heaven at any time.
- Now.
- Tomorrow.
- 100 years from now.
- We work to avoid sin, particularly mortal sin(summarizing the books' summary
of CCC 1014)
- partly to maintain this readiness (fear of hell)
- partly for love of God (the better we are, the more true this one is)
- The Church encourages us to pray for deliverance from “a sudden and unforeseen death.” (CCC 1014).
- after death comes Particular Judgment
- you face God alone and are both judged and judge yourself. The two judgments will be identical. There is no denial or lying in the face of God.
- as a result of this Judgment, you face heaven or hell.
- your road to heaven may involve going through purgatory.
- all who attain heaven do so because of God’s mercy.
- This mercy is experienced through the Church.
- first through the grace of Baptism.
- we did not discuss this this class.
- secondly through the grace of the sacrament of Reconciliation
- there was some discussion on this. It will be further discussed later in the year, in hopefully better clarity when I am not trying to focus on other things.
- first through the grace of Baptism.
- This mercy is experienced through the Church.
- at the end of time comes the “General Judgment”
- everyone from all of history will stand before God and be, individually,
judged a second time, this time publicly.
- the results of this second judgment will in no way ever differ from the results of the first, particular, judgment.
- This second judgment exists to meet the demands of Justice.
- why do good things happen to bad people?
- why do bad things happen to good people?
- Why did God allow xyz to happen?
- Justice demands these questions be answered definitively.
- We will be reunited body and soul.
- the good will be reunited with their bodies, to better experience heaven.
- the bad will be reunited with their bodies to better experience hell (that is, to experience even more pain).
- Our resurrected bodies will differ from our present bodies ( I draw on
some material not available in the book here)
- We are conformed to Christ.
- We will be approximately the age Christ was at his Ascension.
- Our bodies will be perfectly obedient to our will
- we will not be clumsy
- that does not mean we will have abilities we do not already have
- we will not suffer temptation from disordered desire
- We will be able to travel as Christ did between the Resurrection and
the Ascension.
- instantaneously over distance
- through walls
- We will be recognizable, but only if someone takes the time to really look, we will not look precisely like a photograph of us.
- We will have an actual body, it will eat, it can be touched.
- We are told in the bible that the idea of marriage will not make sense. Why it will not make sense is not explained.
- everyone from all of history will stand before God and be, individually,
judged a second time, this time publicly.
- belief in the resurrection of the body is important
- God created the body and called it “good”
- God created us to be fully human - both body and soul, the top of the physical world. Our eternal life needs to reflect that.
- Because our bodies are destined for eternity, both our own bodies, and those of others, are to be treated with respect.( CCC 1004)