Let Us Banish the Fear of Death
and Think of the Eternal
Life that Follows It
Our obligation is
to do God’s will, and not our own. We must remember this if the prayer that our
Lord commanded us to say daily is to have any meaning on our lips. How
unreasonable it is to pray that God’s will be done, and then not promptly obey
it when he calls us from this world! Instead we struggle and resist like
self-willed slaves and are brought into the Lord’s presence with sorrow and
lamentation, not freely consenting to our departure, but constrained by
necessity. And yet we expect to be rewarded with heavenly honors by him to whom
we come against our will! Why then do we pray for the kingdom of heaven to come
if this earthly bondage pleases us? What is the point of praying so often for
its early arrival if we should rather serve the devil here than reign with
Christ.
The world hates
Christians, so why give your love to it instead of following Christ, who loves
you and has redeemed you? John is most urgent in his epistle when he tells us
not to love the world by yielding to sensual desires. Never give your love to the world, he warns, or to anything in it. A man cannot love the Father and love the
world at the same time. All that the world offers is the lust of the flesh, the
lust of the eyes and earthly ambition. The world and its allurements will pass
away, but the man who has done the will of God shall live for ever.
Our part, my dear
brothers, is to be single-minded, firm in faith, and steadfast in courage,
ready for God’s will, whatever it may be. Banish the fear of death and think of
the eternal life that follows. That will show people that we really live our
faith.
We ought never to
forget, beloved, that we have renounced the world. We are living here now as
aliens and only for a time. When the day of our homecoming puts an end to our
exile, frees us from the bonds of the world, and restores us to paradise and to
a kingdom, we should welcome it. What man, stationed in a foreign land, would
not want to return to his own country as soon as possible?
Well, we look upon
paradise as our country, and a great crowd of our loved ones awaits us there, a
countless throng of parents, brothers and children longs for us to join them.
Assured though they are of their own salvation, they are still concerned about
ours. What joy both for them and for us to see one another and embrace! O the
delight of that heavenly kingdom where there is no fear of death! O the supreme
and endless bliss of everlasting life!
There, is the
glorious band of apostles, there, the exultant assembly of prophets, there, the
innumerable host of martyrs, crowned for their glorious victory in combat and
in death. There, in triumph, are the virgins who subdued their passions by the
strength of continence. There, the merciful are rewarded, those who fulfilled
the demands of justice by providing for the poor. In obedience to the Lord’s
command, they turned their earthly patrimony into heavenly treasure.
My dear brothers,
let all our longing be to join them as soon as we may. May God see our desire,
may Christ see this resolve that springs from faith, for he will give the
rewards of his love more abundantly to those who have longed for him more
fervently.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Sermon on Man’s Mortality by Saint Cyprian
From a Sermon on Man’s Mortality by Saint Cyprian
Image Credit Waiting for the Word
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