Monday, March 10, 2008

Pope Benedict On Why Never Dying Would be Sort of Bad

Before I became Catholic and in fact for many years after I assumed that the Pope gave a homily/sermon each Sunday. You know the Pope goes across the street to St Peter's and let's her rip.

Well in fact the Holy Father does give a Mini Homily at his weekly Angelus and Wednesday audience most weeks. However the Holy Father giving a homily during the Sunday Liturgy does not happen every week.

The Holy Father as Bishop of Rome has goes to area Churches in his own Diocese and speaks. Yesterday he was at San Lorenzo di Piscibus to mark the 25th anniversary of the International Youth Center based there. The Holy Father spoke off the cuff it appears in his Homily. He has a habit at times of doing that. I think he did that last year on the topic of hell and the result being the papers around the world totally got it wrong.

I suspect no controversy over this talk. It is quite wonderful. The Ratzinger Forum has translated it for us here. Here is a part:

Now let us come to the Gospel today, dedicated to a great and fundamental topic: What is life? What is death? How should we live? And how should we die?

St. John, to make us better understand the mystery of life and Jesus's response, uses for this unique reality of life two different words to indicate the different dimensions of the reality we call 'life': the (Greek) words bios and zoé.

Bíos, as we can easily deduce, refers to this great biocosmos, the biosphere that comprises primitive single cells to the most organized and most developed organisms - this great tree of life in which are developed all the possibilities of the bios. Man belongs to this tree of life. He is part of the cosmos of life which begins with a miracle - a vital core develops within inert matter into the reality of a living organism.

But man, although he is part of this great biocosmos, transcends it because he is also part of that reality that St. John calls zoé.

It is a new level of life in which the being opens up to consciousness. Of course, man is always man with all his dignity, even if he is in a coma, even at the stage of an embryo. But if he lives only biologically, then all the potentialities of his being cannot be realized and developed. Man is called on to open up to new dimensions. He is a conscious being. Of course, even animals have 'consciousness', but only of what pertains to their biologic life. Man's consciousness goes beyond that. He wants to know everything, all of reality, reality in its totality. He wants to know what is his being, what is this world. He has a thirst to know the infinite, he wants to get to the source of life, he wants to drink at this source and find life itself. Thus we touch a second dimension of life: man is not only a cosncious being, he also lives in relationships of friendship and love.

Beyond the dimension of knowing truth and ebing, there exists, inseparable from it, the dimension of relationship, of love. In this, man approaches ever closer to the fountain of life from which he wants to drink in order to have life in abundance, to have life itself. We can say that all science is one great battle for life, above all, the science of medicine.

Ultimately, medicine is a search for an antidote to death, a quest for immortality. But can we find the medicine that will assure us immortality? That is the question posed by the Gospel today. Let us try to imagine what would happen if medicine did find this prescription against death, the prescription for immortality. Even in such a case, it would still have to do with medical means within the biosphere, medicine that is useful for our spiritual and human life, but by itself, still confined to the biosphere. It is easy to imagine what would happen if man's biological life were without end, if man were immortal.

We would find ourselves in an 'old world', a world full of aged people, a world that would leave little room for the young, for the renewal of life. So we understand that this is not the immortality that we aspire to.

This is not the possibility of drinking at the fountain of life that we all desire. At this point in which, on the one hand, we understand that we cannnot hope for an infinite prolongation of biological life, while on the other hand, we desire to drink at the fountain of life to enjoy 'life without end', the Lord intervenes and speaks to us from the Gospel to say: "I am the Resurrection and the Life: whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live; whoever lives and believes in me, will not die in eternity". "

I am the Resurrection": To drink at the fountain of life is to enter in communion with this infinite love which is the source of life. Encountering Christ, we enter into contact - better, into communion - with life itself, and we would then have crossed the threshold of death, because we are in touch - beyond biological life - with true life.

The Fathers of the Church called the Eucharist the drug of immortality. That is so, because in the Eucharist, we enter into contact and communion with the resurrected Body of Christ - we enter the space of life that has been resurrected, of eternal life. We enter into communion with this Body which has immortal life, and therefore we ourselves, now and for always, enter the space of life itself.

Thus, this Gospel is also a profound interpretaiton of what the Eucharist is and invites us to really live the Eucharist so that we can be transformed in the communion of love. This is the true life. In Johm's Gospel, the Lord says: "Ihave come so that you may have life, and have life in abundance." A life in abundance is not, as some may think, to consume everything, to have everything, to do everything one pleases.

In such a case, we would live for dead things, we would live for death. Life in abundance is to be in communion with true life, with infinite love. It is this way that we truly enter into the abundance of life and we become bearers of life even for others.

Prisoners of war who had been in Russia for ten years or more, exposed to cold and hunger, would say upon returning: "I could survive because I knew I was being awaited. I knew there were persons who waited to see me back, that I was neeeded and awaited." This love that awaited them was the effective medicine of life against all ills. In truth, we are all awaited. The Lord awaits us but more than that, he is present and holds his hand out to us. Let us accept the Lord's hand and pray to him that he may grant us to live truly, to live the abundance of life and thus be able to communicate to our contemporaries this true life, this life in abundance. Amen.

1 comment:

Ben Abba said...

What if there are already immortals living among us? What if 1 or more of these immortals is a living, breathing Old Testament prophet?

If you are serious about this subject of immortality, then you will be quite interested in my research and findings on this very topic.

I have summarized what I have found on my main blog:
www.Ben-Abba.com.

Check out the post "Summary of the Facts” when you get a chance and then my follow up book “Secrets of an Immortal - An Eyewitness Account of 2,800 Years of History”.