Preface
of Bellarmine
I have therefore considered it would be useful to exhort myself, in the first place, and then my Brethren, highly to esteem the "Art of dying Well." And if there be any who, as yet, have not acquired this Art from other learned teachers, I trust they will not despise, at least those Precepts which I have endeavoured to collect, from Holy Writ and the Ancient Fathers.
But before I treat of these Precepts, I think
it useful to inquire into the nature of death; whether it is to be ranked among
good or among evil things. Now if death be considered absolutely in itself,
without doubt it must be called an evil, because that which is opposed to life
we must admit cannot be good. Moreover, as the Wise man saith: "God made
not death, but by the envy of the devil, death came into the world."!
Wisdom i. 11. verses 13 24. With these words St. Paul also agrees, when he
saith: "Wherefore as by one man sin entered into this world, and by sin
death: and so death passed upon all men in whom all have sinned." Romans
v. 12. If then God did not make death, certainly it cannot be good, because
every thing which God hath made is good, according to the words of Moses:
"And God saw all things that he had made, and they were very good."
But although death cannot be considered good in itself, yet the wisdom of God
hath so seasoned it as it were, that from death many blessings arise. Hence
David exclaims; "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his
saints: " and the Church speaking of Christ saith: "Who by His death
hath destroyed our death, and by His resurrection hath regained life." Now
death that hath destroyed death and regained life, cannot but be very good:
wherefore if every death cannot be called good, yet at least some may. Hence
St. Ambrose did not hesitate to write a book entitled, "On the Advantages
of Death;" in which treatise he clearly proves that death, although
produced by sin, possesses its peculiar advantages.
There is also another reason which proves
that death, although an evil in itself, can, by the grace of God, produce many
blessings. For, first, there is this great blessing, that death puts an end to
the numerous miseries of this life. Job thus eloquently complains of the evils
of this our present state: "Man born of a woman, living for a short time,
is filled with many miseries. Who cometh forth like a flower and is destroyed,
and fleeth as a shadow, and never continueth in the same state." Chap. iv
And Ecclesiastes saith: "I praised the dead rather than the living: and I
judged him happier than them both, that is not yet born, nor hath seen the evils
that are under the sun" Ecclesiasticus iv. verses 2, 3 likewise adds:
"Great labour is created for all men, and a heavy yoke is upon the
children of Adam, from the day of their coming out of their mother's womb,
until the day of their burial into the mother of all. (chap, xl.) The Apostle
too complains of the miseries of this life: "Unhappy man that I am, who
shall deliver me from the body of this death?" (Epistle to Romans, vii.
24.)
From these testimonies, therefore, of Holy
Writ it is quite evident, that death possesses an advantage, in freeing us from
the miseries of this life. But it also hath a still more excellent advantage,
because it may become the gate from a prison to a Kingdom. This was revealed by
our Lord to St. John the Evangelist, when for his faith he had been exiled
into, the isle of Patmos: "And I heard a voice from heaven saying to me:
Write, blessed are the dead who die in the Lord. From henceforth now, saith the
spirit, that they may rest from their labours: for their works follow them."
Apocalypse xiv. 13
Truly "blessed" is the death of the
saints, which by the command of the Heavenly King frees the soul from the
prison of the flesh, and conducts her to a celestial Kingdom; where just souls
sweetly rest after all their labours, and for the reward of their good works,
receive a crown of glory. To the souls in purgatory also, death brings no
slight benefit, for it delivers them from the fear of death, and makes them
certain of possessing one day, eternal Happiness. Even to wicked men
themselves, death seems to be of some advantage; for in freeing them from the
body, it prevents the measure of their punishment from increasing. On account
of these excellent advantages, death to good men seems not horrible, but sweet;
not terrible, but lovely. Hence St. Paul securely exclaims: "For to me, to
live is Christ; and to die is gain having a desire to be dissolved and to be
with Christ:" and his first Epistle to the Thessalonians, he saith:
"We will not have you ignorant, brethren, concerning them that are asleep,
that you be not sorrowful, even as others who have not hope" (iv. 12.)
There lived some time ago a certain holy
lady, named Catherine Adorna, of Genoa; she was so inflamed with the love of
Christ, that with the most ardent desires she wished to be "dissolved,"
and to depart to her Beloved: hence, seized as it were with a love for death,
she often praised it as most beautiful and most lovely, blaming it only for
this that it fled from those who desired it, and was found by those who fled
from it.
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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