ENCYCLICAL LETTER
SPE SALVI
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF
BENEDICT XVI
TO THE BISHOPS
PRIESTS AND DEACONS
MEN AND WOMEN RELIGIOUS
AND ALL THE LAY FAITHFUL
ON CHRISTIAN HOPE
Introduction
1. “SPE SALVI facti sumus”—in hope we were
saved, says Saint Paul to the Romans, and likewise to us (Rom
8:24). According to the Christian faith, “redemption”—salvation—is
not simply a given. Redemption is offered to us in the sense that we have
been given hope, trustworthy hope, by virtue of which we can face our
present: the present, even if it is arduous, can be lived and accepted if
it leads towards a goal, if we can be sure of this goal, and if this goal
is great enough to justify the effort of the journey. Now the question
immediately arises: what sort of hope could ever justify the statement
that, on the basis of that hope and simply because it exists, we are
redeemed? And what sort of certainty is involved here?
Faith is Hope
2. Before turning our attention to these timely
questions, we must listen a little more closely to the Bible's testimony
on hope. “Hope”, in fact, is a key word in Biblical faith—so much so that
in several passages the words “faith” and “hope” seem interchangeable.
Thus the Letter to the Hebrews closely links the “fullness of
faith” (10:22) to “the confession of our hope without wavering” (10:23).
Likewise, when the First Letter of Peter exhorts Christians to be
always ready to give an answer concerning the logos—the meaning and
the reason—of their hope (cf. 3:15), “hope” is equivalent to “faith”. We
see how decisively the self-understanding of the early Christians was
shaped by their having received the gift of a trustworthy hope, when we
compare the Christian life with life prior to faith, or with the situation
of the followers of other religions. Paul reminds the Ephesians that
before their encounter with Christ they were “without hope and without God
in the world” (Eph 2:12). Of course he knew they had had gods, he
knew they had had a religion, but their gods had proved questionable, and
no hope emerged from their contradictory myths. Notwithstanding their
gods, they were “without God” and consequently found themselves in a dark
world, facing a dark future. In nihil ab nihilo quam cito recidimus
(How quickly we fall back from nothing to nothing)[1]:
so says an epitaph of that period. In this phrase we see in no uncertain
terms the point Paul was making. In the same vein he says to the
Thessalonians: you must not “grieve as others do who have no hope” (1
Th 4:13). Here too we see as a distinguishing mark of Christians the
fact that they have a future: it is not that they know the details of what
awaits them, but they know in general terms that their life will not end
in emptiness. Only when the future is certain as a positive reality does
it become possible to live the present as well. So now we can say:
Christianity was not only “good news”—the communication of a hitherto
unknown content. In our language we would say: the Christian message was
not only “informative” but “performative”. That means: the Gospel is not
merely a communication of things that can be known—it is one that makes
things happen and is life-changing. The dark door of time, of the future,
has been thrown open. The one who has hope lives differently; the one who
hopes has been granted the gift of a new life.
3. Yet at this point a question arises: in what does
this hope consist which, as hope, is “redemption”? The essence of the
answer is given in the phrase from the Letter to the Ephesians
quoted above: the Ephesians, before their encounter with Christ, were
without hope because they were “without God in the world”. To come to know
God—the true God—means to receive hope. We who have always lived with the
Christian concept of God, and have grown accustomed to it, have almost
ceased to notice that we possess the hope that ensues from a real
encounter with this God. The example of a saint of our time can to some
degree help us understand what it means to have a real encounter with this
God for the first time. I am thinking of the African Josephine Bakhita,
canonized by Pope John Paul II. She was born around 1869—she herself did
not know the precise date—in Darfur in Sudan. At the age of nine, she was
kidnapped by slave-traders, beaten till she bled, and sold five times in
the slave-markets of Sudan. Eventually she found herself working as a
slave for the mother and the wife of a general, and there she was flogged
every day till she bled; as a result of this she bore 144 scars throughout
her life. Finally, in 1882, she was bought by an Italian merchant for the
Italian consul Callisto Legnani, who returned to Italy as the Mahdists
advanced. Here, after the terrifying “masters” who had owned her up to
that point, Bakhita came to know a totally different kind of “master”—in
Venetian dialect, which she was now learning, she used the name “paron”
for the living God, the God of Jesus Christ. Up to that time she had known
only masters who despised and maltreated her, or at best considered her a
useful slave. Now, however, she heard that there is a “paron” above
all masters, the Lord of all lords, and that this Lord is good, goodness
in person. She came to know that this Lord even knew her, that he had
created her—that he actually loved her. She too was loved, and by none
other than the supreme “Paron”, before whom all other masters are
themselves no more than lowly servants. She was known and loved and she
was awaited. What is more, this master had himself accepted the destiny of
being flogged and now he was waiting for her “at the Father's right hand”.
Now she had “hope” —no longer simply the modest hope of finding masters
who would be less cruel, but the great hope: “I am definitively loved and
whatever happens to me—I am awaited by this Love. And so my life is good.”
Through the knowledge of this hope she was “redeemed”, no longer a slave,
but a free child of God. She understood what Paul meant when he reminded
the Ephesians that previously they were without hope and without God in
the world—without hope because without God. Hence, when she was
about to be taken back to Sudan, Bakhita refused; she did not wish to be
separated again from her “Paron”. On 9 January 1890, she was
baptized and confirmed and received her first Holy Communion from the
hands of the Patriarch of Venice. On 8 December 1896, in Verona, she took
her vows in the Congregation of the Canossian Sisters and from that time
onwards, besides her work in the sacristy and in the porter's lodge at the
convent, she made several journeys round Italy in order to promote the
missions: the liberation that she had received through her encounter with
the God of Jesus Christ, she felt she had to extend, it had to be handed
on to others, to the greatest possible number of people. The hope born in
her which had “redeemed” her she could not keep to herself; this hope had
to reach many, to reach everybody.
The concept of faith-based hope in the New
Testament and the early Church
4. We have raised the question: can our encounter with
the God who in Christ has shown us his face and opened his heart be for us
too not just “informative” but “performative”—that is to say, can it
change our lives, so that we know we are redeemed through the hope that it
expresses? Before attempting to answer the question, let us return once
more to the early Church. It is not difficult to realize that the
experience of the African slave-girl Bakhita was also the experience of
many in the period of nascent Christianity who were beaten and condemned
to slavery. Christianity did not bring a message of social revolution like
that of the ill-fated Spartacus, whose struggle led to so much bloodshed.
Jesus was not Spartacus, he was not engaged in a fight for political
liberation like Barabbas or Bar- Kochba. Jesus, who himself died on the
Cross, brought something totally different: an encounter with the Lord of
all lords, an encounter with the living God and thus an encounter with a
hope stronger than the sufferings of slavery, a hope which therefore
transformed life and the world from within. What was new here can be seen
with the utmost clarity in Saint Paul's Letter to Philemon. This is
a very personal letter, which Paul wrote from prison and entrusted to the
runaway slave Onesimus for his master, Philemon. Yes, Paul is sending the
slave back to the master from whom he had fled, not ordering but asking:
“I appeal to you for my child ... whose father I have become in my
imprisonment ... I am sending him back to you, sending my very heart ...
perhaps this is why he was parted from you for a while, that you might
have him back for ever, no longer as a slave but more than a slave, as a
beloved brother ...” (Philem 10-16). Those who, as far as their
civil status is concerned, stand in relation to one an other as masters
and slaves, inasmuch as they are members of the one Church have become
brothers and sisters—this is how Christians addressed one another. By
virtue of their Baptism they had been reborn, they had been given to drink
of the same Spirit and they received the Body of the Lord together,
alongside one another. Even if external structures remained unaltered,
this changed society from within. When the Letter to the Hebrews
says that Christians here on earth do not have a permanent homeland, but
seek one which lies in the future (cf. Heb 11:13-16; Phil
3:20), this does not mean for one moment that they live only for the
future: present society is recognized by Christians as an exile; they
belong to a new society which is the goal of their common pilgrimage and
which is anticipated in the course of that pilgrimage.
5. We must add a further point of view. The First
Letter to the Corinthians (1:18-31) tells us that many of the early
Christians belonged to the lower social strata, and precisely for this
reason were open to the experience of new hope, as we saw in the example
of Bakhita. Yet from the beginning there were also conversions in the
aristocratic and cultured circles, since they too were living “without
hope and without God in the world”. Myth had lost its credibility; the
Roman State religion had become fossilized into simple ceremony which was
scrupulously carried out, but by then it was merely “political religion”.
Philosophical rationalism had confined the gods within the realm of
unreality. The Divine was seen in various ways in cosmic forces, but a God
to whom one could pray did not exist. Paul illustrates the essential
problem of the religion of that time quite accurately when he contrasts
life “according to Christ” with life under the dominion of the “elemental
spirits of the universe” (Col 2:8). In this regard a text by Saint
Gregory Nazianzen is enlightening. He says that at the very moment when
the Magi, guided by the star, adored Christ the new king, astrology came
to an end, because the stars were now moving in the orbit determined by
Christ[2]. This scene, in fact,
overturns the world-view of that time, which in a different way has become
fashionable once again today. It is not the elemental spirits of the
universe, the laws of matter, which ultimately govern the world and
mankind, but a personal God governs the stars, that is, the universe; it
is not the laws of matter and of evolution that have the final say, but
reason, will, love—a Person. And if we know this Person and he knows us,
then truly the inexorable power of material elements no longer has the
last word; we are not slaves of the universe and of its laws, we are free.
In ancient times, honest enquiring minds were aware of this. Heaven is not
empty. Life is not a simple product of laws and the randomness of matter,
but within everything and at the same time above everything, there is a
personal will, there is a Spirit who in Jesus has revealed himself as
Love[3].
6. The sarcophagi of the early Christian era illustrate
this concept visually—in the context of death, in the face of which the
question concerning life's meaning becomes unavoidable. The figure of
Christ is interpreted on ancient sarcophagi principally by two images: the
philosopher and the shepherd. Philosophy at that time was not generally
seen as a difficult academic discipline, as it is today. Rather, the
philosopher was someone who knew how to teach the essential art: the art
of being authentically human—the art of living and dying. To be sure, it
had long since been realized that many of the people who went around
pretending to be philosophers, teachers of life, were just charlatans who
made money through their words, while having nothing to say about real
life. All the more, then, the true philosopher who really did know how to
point out the path of life was highly sought after. Towards the end of the
third century, on the sarcophagus of a child in Rome, we find for the
first time, in the context of the resurrection of Lazarus, the figure of
Christ as the true philosopher, holding the Gospel in one hand and the
philosopher's travelling staff in the other. With his staff, he conquers
death; the Gospel brings the truth that itinerant philosophers had
searched for in vain. In this image, which then became a common feature of
sarcophagus art for a long time, we see clearly what both educated and
simple people found in Christ: he tells us who man truly is and what a man
must do in order to be truly human. He shows us the way, and this way is
the truth. He himself is both the way and the truth, and therefore he is
also the life which all of us are seeking. He also shows us the way beyond
death; only someone able to do this is a true teacher of life. The same
thing becomes visible in the image of the shepherd. As in the
representation of the philosopher, so too through the figure of the
shepherd the early Church could identify with existing models of Roman
art. There the shepherd was generally an expression of the dream of a
tranquil and simple life, for which the people, amid the confusion of the
big cities, felt a certain longing. Now the image was read as part of a
new scenario which gave it a deeper content: “The Lord is my shepherd: I
shall not want ... Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of
death, I fear no evil, because you are with me ...” (Ps 23 [22]:1,
4). The true shepherd is one who knows even the path that passes through
the valley of death; one who walks with me even on the path of final
solitude, where no one can accompany me, guiding me through: he himself
has walked this path, he has descended into the kingdom of death, he has
conquered death, and he has returned to accompany us now and to give us
the certainty that, together with him, we can find a way through. The
realization that there is One who even in death accompanies me, and with
his “rod and his staff comforts me”, so that “I fear no evil” (cf. Ps
23 [22]:4)—this was the new “hope” that arose over the life of believers.
7. We must return once more to the New Testament. In
the eleventh chapter of the Letter to the Hebrews (v. 1) we find a
kind of definition of faith which closely links this virtue with hope.
Ever since the Reformation there has been a dispute among exegetes over
the central word of this phrase, but today a way towards a common
interpretation seems to be opening up once more. For the time being I
shall leave this central word untranslated. The sentence therefore reads
as follows: “Faith is the hypostasis of things hoped for; the proof
of things not seen”. For the Fathers and for the theologians of the Middle
Ages, it was clear that the Greek word hypostasis was to be
rendered in Latin with the term substantia. The Latin translation
of the text produced at the time of the early Church therefore reads:
Est autem fides sperandarum substantia rerum, argumentum non apparentium—faith
is the “substance” of things hoped for; the proof of things not seen.
Saint Thomas Aquinas[4], using
the terminology of the philosophical tradition to which he belonged,
explains it as follows: faith is a habitus, that is, a stable
disposition of the spirit, through which eternal life takes root in us and
reason is led to consent to what it does not see. The concept of
“substance” is therefore modified in the sense that through faith, in a
tentative way, or as we might say “in embryo”—and thus according to the
“substance”—there are already present in us the things that are hoped for:
the whole, true life. And precisely because the thing itself is already
present, this presence of what is to come also creates certainty: this
“thing” which must come is not yet visible in the external world (it does
not “appear”), but because of the fact that, as an initial and dynamic
reality, we carry it within us, a certain perception of it has even now
come into existence. To Luther, who was not particularly fond of the
Letter to the Hebrews, the concept of “substance”, in the context of
his view of faith, meant nothing. For this reason he understood the term
hypostasis/substance not in the objective sense (of a reality
present within us), but in the subjective sense, as an expression of an
interior attitude, and so, naturally, he also had to understand the term
argumentum as a disposition of the subject. In the twentieth century
this interpretation became prevalent—at least in Germany—in Catholic
exegesis too, so that the ecumenical translation into German of the New
Testament, approved by the Bishops, reads as follows: Glaube aber ist:
Feststehen in dem, was man erhofft, Überzeugtsein von dem, was man nicht
sieht (faith is: standing firm in what one hopes, being convinced of
what one does not see). This in itself is not incorrect, but it is not the
meaning of the text, because the Greek term used (elenchos) does
not have the subjective sense of “conviction” but the objective sense of
“proof”. Rightly, therefore, recent Prot- estant exegesis has arrived at a
different interpretation: “Yet there can be no question but that this
classical Protestant understanding is untenable”[5].
Faith is not merely a personal reaching out towards things to come that
are still totally absent: it gives us something. It gives us even now
something of the reality we are waiting for, and this present reality
constitutes for us a “proof” of the things that are still unseen. Faith
draws the future into the present, so that it is no longer simply a “not
yet”. The fact that this future exists changes the present; the present is
touched by the future reality, and thus the things of the future spill
over into those of the present and those of the present into those of the
future.
8. This explanation is further strengthened and related
to daily life if we consider verse 34 of the tenth chapter of the
Letter to the Hebrews, which is linked by vocabulary and content to
this definition of hope-filled faith and prepares the way for it. Here the
author speaks to believers who have undergone the experience of
persecution and he says to them: “you had compassion on the prisoners, and
you joyfully accepted the plundering of your property (hyparchonton—Vg.
bonorum), since you knew that you yourselves had a better possession (hyparxin—Vg.
substantiam) and an abiding one.” Hyparchonta refers to
property, to what in earthly life constitutes the means of support, indeed
the basis, the “substance” for life, what we depend upon. This
“substance”, life's normal source of security, has been taken away from
Christians in the course of persecution. They have stood firm, though,
because they considered this material substance to be of little account.
They could abandon it because they had found a better “basis” for their
existence—a basis that abides, that no one can take away. We must not
overlook the link between these two types of “substance”, between means of
support or material basis and the word of faith as the “basis”, the
“substance” that endures. Faith gives life a new basis, a new foundation
on which we can stand, one which relativizes the habitual foundation, the
reliability of material income. A new freedom is created with regard to
this habitual foundation of life, which only appears to be capable
of providing support, although this is obviously not to deny its normal
meaning. This new freedom, the awareness of the new “substance” which we
have been given, is revealed not only in martyrdom, in which people resist
the overbearing power of ideology and its political organs and, by their
death, renew the world. Above all, it is seen in the great acts of
renunciation, from the monks of ancient times to Saint Francis of Assisi
and those of our contemporaries who enter modern religious Institutes and
movements and leave everything for love of Christ, so as to bring to men
and women the faith and love of Christ, and to help those who are
suffering in body and spirit. In their case, the new “substance” has
proved to be a genuine “substance”; from the hope of these people who have
been touched by Christ, hope has arisen for others who were living in
darkness and without hope. In their case, it has been demonstrated that
this new life truly possesses and is “substance” that calls forth life for
others. For us who contemplate these figures, their way of acting and
living is de facto a “proof” that the things to come, the promise
of Christ, are not only a reality that we await, but a real presence: he
is truly the “philosopher” and the “shepherd” who shows us what life is
and where it is to be found.
9. In order to understand more deeply this reflection
on the two types of substance—hypostasis and hyparchonta—and
on the two approaches to life expressed by these terms, we must continue
with a brief consideration of two words pertinent to the discussion which
can be found in the tenth chapter of the Letter to the Hebrews. I
refer to the words hypomone (10:36) and hypostole (10:39).
Hypo- mone is normally translated as “patience”—perseverance,
constancy. Knowing how to wait, while patiently enduring trials, is
necessary for the believer to be able to “receive what is promised”
(10:36). In the religious context of ancient Judaism, this word was used
expressly for the expectation of God which was characteristic of Israel,
for their persevering faithfulness to God on the basis of the certainty of
the Covenant in a world which contradicts God. Thus the word indicates a
lived hope, a life based on the certainty of hope. In the New Testament
this expectation of God, this standing with God, takes on a new
significance: in Christ, God has revealed himself. He has already
communicated to us the “substance” of things to come, and thus the
expectation of God acquires a new certainty.
It is the expectation of things to come from the
perspective of a present that is already given. It is a looking-forward in
Christ's presence, with Christ who is present, to the perfecting of his
Body, to his definitive coming. The word hypostole, on the other
hand, means shrinking back through lack of courage to speak openly and
frankly a truth that may be dangerous. Hiding through a spirit of fear
leads to “destruction” (Heb 10:39). “God did not give us a spirit
of timidity but a spirit of power and love and self-control”—that, by
contrast, is the beautiful way in which the Second Letter to Timothy
(1:7) describes the fundamental attitude of the Christian.
Eternal life – what is it?
10. We have spoken thus far of faith and hope in the
New Testament and in early Christianity; yet it has always been clear that
we are referring not only to the past: the entire reflection concerns
living and dying in general, and therefore it also concerns us here and
now. So now we must ask explicitly: is the Christian faith also for us
today a life-changing and life-sustaining hope?
Is it “performative” for us—is it a message which
shapes our life in a new way, or is it just “information” which, in the
meantime, we have set aside and which now seems to us to have been
superseded by more recent information? In the search for an answer, I
would like to begin with the classical form of the dialogue with which the
rite of Baptism expressed the reception of an infant into the community of
believers and the infant's rebirth in Christ. First of all the priest
asked what name the parents had chosen for the child, and then he
continued with the question: “What do you ask of the Church?” Answer:
“Faith”. “And what does faith give you?” “Eternal life”. According to this
dialogue, the parents were seeking access to the faith for their child,
communion with believers, because they saw in faith the key to “eternal
life”. Today as in the past, this is what being baptized, becoming
Christians, is all about: it is not just an act of socialization within
the community, not simply a welcome into the Church. The parents expect
more for the one to be baptized: they expect that faith, which includes
the corporeal nature of the Church and her sacraments, will give life to
their child—eternal life. Faith is the substance of hope. But then the
question arises: do we really want this—to live eternally? Perhaps many
people reject the faith today simply because they do not find the prospect
of eternal life attractive. What they desire is not eternal life at all,
but this present life, for which faith in eternal life seems something of
an impediment. To continue living for ever —endlessly—appears more like a
curse than a gift. Death, admittedly, one would wish to postpone for as
long as possible. But to live always, without end—this, all things
considered, can only be monotonous and ultimately unbearable. This is
precisely the point made, for example, by Saint Ambrose, one of the Church
Fathers, in the funeral discourse for his deceased brother Satyrus: “Death
was not part of nature; it became part of nature. God did not decree death
from the beginning; he prescribed it as a remedy. Human life, because of
sin ... began to experience the burden of wretchedness in unremitting
labour and unbearable sorrow. There had to be a limit to its evils; death
had to restore what life had forfeited. Without the assistance of grace,
immortality is more of a burden than a blessing”[6].
A little earlier, Ambrose had said: “Death is, then, no cause for
mourning, for it is the cause of mankind's salvation”[7].
11. Whatever precisely Saint Ambrose may have meant by
these words, it is true that to eliminate death or to postpone it more or
less indefinitely would place the earth and humanity in an impossible
situation, and even for the individual would bring no benefit. Obviously
there is a contradiction in our attitude, which points to an inner
contradiction in our very existence. On the one hand, we do not want to
die; above all, those who love us do not want us to die. Yet on the other
hand, neither do we want to continue living indefinitely, nor was the
earth created with that in view. So what do we really want? Our
paradoxical attitude gives rise to a deeper question: what in fact is
“life”? And what does “eternity” really mean? There are moments when it
suddenly seems clear to us: yes, this is what true “life” is—this is what
it should be like. Besides, what we call “life” in our everyday language
is not real “life” at all. Saint Augustine, in the extended letter on
prayer which he addressed to Proba, a wealthy Roman widow and mother of
three consuls, once wrote this: ultimately we want only one thing—”the
blessed life”, the life which is simply life, simply “happiness”. In the
final analysis, there is nothing else that we ask for in prayer. Our
journey has no other goal—it is about this alone. But then Augustine also
says: looking more closely, we have no idea what we ultimately desire,
what we would really like. We do not know this reality at all; even in
those moments when we think we can reach out and touch it, it eludes us.
“We do not know what we should pray for as we ought,” he says, quoting
Saint Paul (Rom 8:26). All we know is that it is not this. Yet in
not knowing, we know that this reality must exist. “There is therefore in
us a certain learned ignorance (docta ignorantia), so to speak”, he
writes. We do not know what we would really like; we do not know this
“true life”; and yet we know that there must be something we do not know
towards which we feel driven[8].
12. I think that in this very precise and permanently
valid way, Augustine is describing man's essential situation, the
situation that gives rise to all his contradictions and hopes. In some way
we want life itself, true life, untouched even by death; yet at the same
time we do not know the thing towards which we feel driven. We cannot stop
reaching out for it, and yet we know that all we can experience or
accomplish is not what we yearn for. This unknown “thing” is the true
“hope” which drives us, and at the same time the fact that it is unknown
is the cause of all forms of despair and also of all efforts, whether
positive or destructive, directed towards worldly authenticity and human
authenticity. The term “eternal life” is intended to give a name to this
known “unknown”. Inevitably it is an inadequate term that creates
confusion. “Eternal”, in fact, suggests to us the idea of something
interminable, and this frightens us; “life” makes us think of the life
that we know and love and do not want to lose, even though very often it
brings more toil than satisfaction, so that while on the one hand we
desire it, on the other hand we do not want it. To imagine ourselves
outside the temporality that imprisons us and in some way to sense that
eternity is not an unending succession of days in the calendar, but
something more like the supreme moment of satisfaction, in which totality
embraces us and we embrace totality—this we can only attempt. It would be
like plunging into the ocean of infinite love, a moment in which time—the
before and after—no longer exists. We can only attempt to grasp the idea
that such a moment is life in the full sense, a plunging ever anew into
the vastness of being, in which we are simply overwhelmed with joy. This
is how Jesus expresses it in Saint John's Gospel: “I will see you again
and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you”
(16:22). We must think along these lines if we want to understand the
object of Christian hope, to understand what it is that our faith, our
being with Christ, leads us to expect[9].
Is Christian hope individualistic?
13. In the course of their history, Christians have
tried to express this “knowing without knowing” by means of figures that
can be represented, and they have developed images of “Heaven” which
remain far removed from what, after all, can only be known negatively, via
unknowing. All these attempts at the representation of hope have given to
many people, down the centuries, the incentive to live by faith and hence
also to abandon their hyparchonta, the material substance for their
lives. The author of the Letter to the Hebrews, in the eleventh
chapter, outlined a kind of history of those who live in hope and of their
journeying, a history which stretches from the time of Abel into the
author's own day. This type of hope has been subjected to an increasingly
harsh critique in modern times: it is dismissed as pure individualism, a
way of abandoning the world to its misery and taking refuge in a private
form of eternal salvation. Henri de Lubac, in the introduction to his
seminal book Catholicisme. Aspects sociaux du dogme, assembled some
characteristic articulations of this viewpoint, one of which is worth
quoting: “Should I have found joy? No ... only my joy, and that is
something wildly different ... The joy of Jesus can be personal. It can
belong to a single man and he is saved. He is at peace ... now and always,
but he is alone. The isolation of this joy does not trouble him. On the
contrary: he is the chosen one! In his blessedness he passes through the
battlefields with a rose in his hand”[10].
14. Against this, drawing upon the vast range of
patristic theology, de Lubac was able to demonstrate that salvation has
always been considered a “social” reality. Indeed, the Letter to the
Hebrews speaks of a “city” (cf. 11:10, 16; 12:22; 13:14) and therefore
of communal salvation. Consistently with this view, sin is understood by
the Fathers as the destruction of the unity of the human race, as
fragmentation and division. Babel, the place where languages were
confused, the place of separation, is seen to be an expression of what sin
fundamentally is. Hence “redemption” appears as the reestablishment of
unity, in which we come together once more in a union that begins to take
shape in the world community of believers. We need not concern ourselves
here with all the texts in which the social character of hope appears. Let
us concentrate on the Letter to Proba in which Augustine tries to
illustrate to some degree this “known unknown” that we seek. His point of
departure is simply the expression “blessed life”. Then he quotes Psalm
144 [143]:15: “Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord.” And he
continues: “In order to be numbered among this people and attain to ...
everlasting life with God, ‘the end of the commandment is charity that
issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and sincere faith' (1
Tim 1:5)”[11]. This real
life, towards which we try to reach out again and again, is linked to a
lived union with a “people”, and for each individual it can only be
attained within this “we”. It presupposes that we escape from the prison
of our “I”, because only in the openness of this universal subject does
our gaze open out to the source of joy, to love itself—to God.
15. While this community-oriented vision of the
“blessed life” is certainly directed beyond the present world, as such it
also has to do with the building up of this world—in very different ways,
according to the historical context and the possibilities offered or
excluded thereby. At the time of Augustine, the incursions of new peoples
were threatening the cohesion of the world, where hitherto there had been
a certain guarantee of law and of living in a juridically ordered society;
at that time, then, it was a matter of strengthening the basic foundations
of this peaceful societal existence, in order to survive in a changed
world. Let us now consider a more or less randomly chosen episode from the
Middle Ages, that serves in many respects to illustrate what we have been
saying. It was commonly thought that monasteries were places of flight
from the world (contemptus mundi) and of withdrawal from
responsibility for the world, in search of private salvation. Bernard of
Clairvaux, who inspired a multitude of young people to enter the
monasteries of his reformed Order, had quite a different perspective on
this. In his view, monks perform a task for the whole Church and hence
also for the world. He uses many images to illustrate the responsibility
that monks have towards the entire body of the Church, and indeed towards
humanity; he applies to them the words of pseudo-Rufinus: “The human race
lives thanks to a few; were it not for them, the world would perish ...”[12].
Contemplatives—contemplantes—must become agricultural labourers—laborantes—he
says. The nobility of work, which Christianity inherited from Judaism, had
already been expressed in the monastic rules of Augustine and Benedict.
Bernard takes up this idea again. The young noblemen who flocked to his
monasteries had to engage in manual labour. In fact Bernard explicitly
states that not even the monastery can restore Paradise, but he maintains
that, as a place of practical and spiritual “tilling the soil”, it must
prepare the new Paradise. A wild plot of forest land is rendered
fertile—and in the process, the trees of pride are felled, whatever weeds
may be growing inside souls are pulled up, and the ground is thereby
prepared so that bread for body and soul can flourish[13].
Are we not perhaps seeing once again, in the light of current history,
that no positive world order can prosper where souls are overgrown?
The transformation of Christian faith-hope in the
modern age
16. How could the idea have developed that Jesus's
message is narrowly individualistic and aimed only at each person singly?
How did we arrive at this interpretation of the “salvation of the soul” as
a flight from responsibility for the whole, and how did we come to
conceive the Christian project as a selfish search for salvation which
rejects the idea of serving others? In order to find an answer to this we
must take a look at the foundations of the modern age. These appear with
particular clarity in the thought of Francis Bacon. That a new era
emerged—through the discovery of America and the new technical
achievements that had made this development possible—is undeniable. But
what is the basis of this new era? It is the new correlation of experiment
and method that enables man to arrive at an interpretation of nature in
conformity with its laws and thus finally to achieve “the triumph of art
over nature” (victoria cursus artis super naturam)[14].
The novelty—according to Bacon's vision—lies in a new correlation between
science and praxis. This is also given a theological application: the new
correlation between science and praxis would mean that the dominion over
creation —given to man by God and lost through original sin—would be
reestablished[15].
17. Anyone who reads and reflects on these statements
attentively will recognize that a disturbing step has been taken: up to
that time, the recovery of what man had lost through the expulsion from
Paradise was expected from faith in Jesus Christ: herein lay “redemption”.
Now, this “redemption”, the restoration of the lost “Paradise” is no
longer expected from faith, but from the newly discovered link between
science and praxis. It is not that faith is simply denied; rather it is
displaced onto another level—that of purely private and other-worldly
affairs—and at the same time it becomes somehow irrelevant for the world.
This programmatic vision has determined the trajectory of modern times and
it also shapes the present-day crisis of faith which is essentially a
crisis of Christian hope. Thus hope too, in Bacon, acquires a new form.
Now it is called: faith in progress. For Bacon, it is clear that
the recent spate of discoveries and inventions is just the beginning;
through the interplay of science and praxis, totally new discoveries will
follow, a totally new world will emerge, the kingdom of man[16].
He even put forward a vision of foreseeable inventions—including the
aeroplane and the submarine. As the ideology of progress developed
further, joy at visible advances in human potential remained a continuing
confirmation of faith in progress as such.
18. At the same time, two categories become
increasingly central to the idea of progress: reason and freedom. Progress
is primarily associated with the growing dominion of reason, and this
reason is obviously considered to be a force of good and a force for
good. Progress is the overcoming of all forms of dependency—it is progress
towards perfect freedom. Likewise freedom is seen purely as a promise, in
which man becomes more and more fully himself. In both concepts—freedom
and reason—there is a political aspect. The kingdom of reason, in fact, is
expected as the new condition of the human race once it has attained total
freedom. The political conditions of such a kingdom of reason and freedom,
however, appear at first sight somewhat ill defined. Reason and freedom
seem to guarantee by themselves, by virtue of their intrinsic goodness, a
new and perfect human community. The two key concepts of “reason” and
“freedom”, however, were tacitly interpreted as being in conflict with the
shackles of faith and of the Church as well as those of the political
structures of the period. Both concepts therefore contain a revolutionary
potential of enormous explosive force.
19. We must look briefly at the two essential stages in
the political realization of this hope, because they are of great
importance for the development of Christian hope, for a proper
understanding of it and of the reasons for its persistence. First there is
the French Revolution—an attempt to establish the rule of reason and
freedom as a political reality. To begin with, the Europe of the
Enlightenment looked on with fascination at these events, but then, as
they developed, had cause to reflect anew on reason and freedom. A good
illustration of these two phases in the reception of events in France is
found in two essays by Immanuel Kant in which he reflects on what had
taken place. In 1792 he wrote Der Sieg des guten Prinzips über das böse
und die Gründung eines Reiches Gottes auf Erden (“The Victory of the
Good over the Evil Principle and the Founding of a Kingdom of God on
Earth”). In this text he says the following: “The gradual transition of
ecclesiastical faith to the exclusive sovereignty of pure religious faith
is the coming of the Kingdom of God”[17].
He also tells us that revolutions can accelerate this transition from
ecclesiastical faith to rational faith. The “Kingdom of God” proclaimed by
Jesus receives a new definition here and takes on a new mode of presence;
a new “imminent expectation”, so to speak, comes into existence: the
“Kingdom of God” arrives where “ecclesiastical faith” is vanquished and
superseded by “religious faith”, that is to say, by simple rational faith.
In 1794, in the text Das Ende aller Dinge (“The End of All Things”)
a changed image appears. Now Kant considers the possibility that as well
as the natural end of all things there may be another that is unnatural, a
perverse end. He writes in this connection: “If Christianity should one
day cease to be worthy of love ... then the prevailing mode in human
thought would be rejection and opposition to it; and the Antichrist ...
would begin his—albeit short—regime (presumably based on fear and
self-interest); but then, because Christianity, though destined to be the
world religion, would not in fact be favoured by destiny to become so,
then, in a moral respect, this could lead to the (perverted) end of all
things”[18].
20. The nineteenth century held fast to its faith in
progress as the new form of human hope, and it continued to consider
reason and freedom as the guiding stars to be followed along the path of
hope. Nevertheless, the increasingly rapid advance of technical
development and the industrialization connected with it soon gave rise to
an entirely new social situation: there emerged a class of industrial
workers and the so-called “industrial proletariat”, whose dreadful living
conditions Friedrich Engels described alarmingly in 1845. For his readers,
the conclusion is clear: this cannot continue; a change is necessary. Yet
the change would shake up and overturn the entire structure of bourgeois
society. After the bourgeois revolution of 1789, the time had come for a
new, proletarian revolution: progress could not simply continue in small,
linear steps. A revolutionary leap was needed. Karl Marx took up the
rallying call, and applied his incisive language and intellect to the task
of launching this major new and, as he thought, definitive step in history
towards salvation—towards what Kant had described as the “Kingdom of God”.
Once the truth of the hereafter had been rejected, it would then be a
question of establishing the truth of the here and now. The critique of
Heaven is transformed into the critique of earth, the critique of theology
into the critique of politics. Progress towards the better, towards the
definitively good world, no longer comes simply from science but from
politics—from a scientifically conceived politics that recognizes the
structure of history and society and thus points out the road towards
revolution, towards all-encompassing change. With great precision, albeit
with a certain onesided bias, Marx described the situation of his time,
and with great analytical skill he spelled out the paths leading to
revolution—and not only theoretically: by means of the Communist Party
that came into being from the Communist Manifesto of 1848, he set it in
motion. His promise, owing to the acuteness of his analysis and his clear
indication of the means for radical change, was and still remains an
endless source of fascination. Real revolution followed, in the most
radical way in Russia.
21. Together with the victory of the revolution,
though, Marx's fundamental error also became evident. He showed precisely
how to overthrow the existing order, but he did not say how matters should
proceed thereafter. He simply presumed that with the expropriation of the
ruling class, with the fall of political power and the socialization of
means of production, the new Jerusalem would be realized. Then, indeed,
all contradictions would be resolved, man and the world would finally sort
themselves out. Then everything would be able to proceed by itself along
the right path, because everything would belong to everyone and all would
desire the best for one another. Thus, having accomplished the revolution,
Lenin must have realized that the writings of the master gave no
indication as to how to proceed. True, Marx had spoken of the interim
phase of the dictatorship of the proletariat as a necessity which in time
would automatically become redundant. This “intermediate phase” we know
all too well, and we also know how it then developed, not ushering in a
perfect world, but leaving behind a trail of appalling destruction. Marx
not only omitted to work out how this new world would be organized—which
should, of course, have been unnecessary. His silence on this matter
follows logically from his chosen approach. His error lay deeper. He
forgot that man always remains man. He forgot man and he forgot man's
freedom. He forgot that freedom always remains also freedom for evil. He
thought that once the economy had been put right, everything would
automatically be put right. His real error is materialism: man, in fact,
is not merely the product of economic conditions, and it is not possible
to redeem him purely from the outside by creating a favourable economic
environment.
22. Again, we find ourselves facing the question: what
may we hope? A self-critique of modernity is needed in dialogue with
Christianity and its concept of hope. In this dialogue Christians too, in
the context of their knowledge and experience, must learn anew in what
their hope truly consists, what they have to offer to the world and what
they cannot offer. Flowing into this self-critique of the modern age there
also has to be a self-critique of modern Christianity, which must
constantly renew its self-understanding setting out from its roots. On
this subject, all we can attempt here are a few brief observations. First
we must ask ourselves: what does “progress” really mean; what does it
promise and what does it not promise? In the nineteenth century, faith in
progress was already subject to critique. In the twentieth century,
Theodor W. Adorno formulated the problem of faith in progress quite
drastically: he said that progress, seen accurately, is progress from the
sling to the atom bomb. Now this is certainly an aspect of progress that
must not be concealed. To put it another way: the ambiguity of progress
becomes evident. Without doubt, it offers new possibilities for good, but
it also opens up appalling possibilities for evil—possibilities that
formerly did not exist. We have all witnessed the way in which progress,
in the wrong hands, can become and has indeed become a terrifying progress
in evil. If technical progress is not matched by corresponding progress in
man's ethical formation, in man's inner growth (cf. Eph 3:16; 2
Cor 4:16), then it is not progress at all, but a threat for man and
for the world.
23. As far as the two great themes of “reason” and
“freedom” are concerned, here we can only touch upon the issues connected
with them. Yes indeed, reason is God's great gift to man, and the victory
of reason over unreason is also a goal of the Christian life. But when
does reason truly triumph? When it is detached from God? When it has
become blind to God? Is the reason behind action and capacity for action
the whole of reason? If progress, in order to be progress, needs moral
growth on the part of humanity, then the reason behind action and capacity
for action is likewise urgently in need of integration through reason's
openness to the saving forces of faith, to the differentiation between
good and evil. Only thus does reason become truly human. It becomes human
only if it is capable of directing the will along the right path, and it
is capable of this only if it looks beyond itself. Otherwise, man's
situation, in view of the imbalance between his material capacity and the
lack of judgement in his heart, becomes a threat for him and for creation.
Thus where freedom is concerned, we must remember that human freedom
always requires a convergence of various freedoms. Yet this convergence
cannot succeed unless it is determined by a common intrinsic criterion of
measurement, which is the foundation and goal of our freedom. Let us put
it very simply: man needs God, otherwise he remains without hope. Given
the developments of the modern age, the quotation from Saint Paul with
which I began (Eph 2:12) proves to be thoroughly realistic and
plainly true. There is no doubt, therefore, that a “Kingdom of God”
accomplished without God—a kingdom therefore of man alone—inevitably ends
up as the “perverse end” of all things as described by Kant: we have seen
it, and we see it over and over again. Yet neither is there any doubt that
God truly enters into human affairs only when, rather than being present
merely in our thinking, he himself comes towards us and speaks to us.
Reason therefore needs faith if it is to be completely itself: reason and
faith need one another in order to fulfil their true nature and their
mission.
The true shape of Christian hope
24. Let us ask once again: what may we hope? And what
may we not hope? First of all, we must acknowledge that incremental
progress is possible only in the material sphere. Here, amid our growing
knowledge of the structure of matter and in the light of ever more
advanced inventions, we clearly see continuous progress towards an ever
greater mastery of nature. Yet in the field of ethical awareness and moral
decision-making, there is no similar possibility of accumulation for the
simple reason that man's freedom is always new and he must always make his
decisions anew. These decisions can never simply be made for us in advance
by others—if that were the case, we would no longer be free. Freedom
presupposes that in fundamental decisions, every person and every
generation is a new beginning. Naturally, new generations can build on the
knowledge and experience of those who went before, and they can draw upon
the moral treasury of the whole of humanity. But they can also reject it,
because it can never be self-evident in the same way as material
inventions. The moral treasury of humanity is not readily at hand like
tools that we use; it is present as an appeal to freedom and a possibility
for it. This, however, means that:
a) The right state of human affairs, the moral
well-being of the world can never be guaranteed simply through structures
alone, however good they are. Such structures are not only important, but
necessary; yet they cannot and must not marginalize human freedom. Even
the best structures function only when the community is animated by
convictions capable of motivating people to assent freely to the social
order. Freedom requires conviction; conviction does not exist on its own,
but must always be gained anew by the community.
b) Since man always remains free and since his
freedom is always fragile, the kingdom of good will never be definitively
established in this world. Anyone who promises the better world that is
guaranteed to last for ever is making a false promise; he is overlooking
human freedom. Freedom must constantly be won over for the cause of good.
Free assent to the good never exists simply by itself. If there were
structures which could irrevocably guarantee a determined—good—state of
the world, man's freedom would be denied, and hence they would not be good
structures at all.
25. What this means is that every generation has the
task of engaging anew in the arduous search for the right way to order
human affairs; this task is never simply completed. Yet every generation
must also make its own contribution to establishing convincing structures
of freedom and of good, which can help the following generation as a
guideline for the proper use of human freedom; hence, always within human
limits, they provide a certain guarantee also for the future. In other
words: good structures help, but of themselves they are not enough. Man
can never be redeemed simply from outside. Francis Bacon and those who
followed in the intellectual current of modernity that he inspired were
wrong to believe that man would be redeemed through science. Such an
expectation asks too much of science; this kind of hope is deceptive.
Science can contribute greatly to making the world and mankind more human.
Yet it can also destroy mankind and the world unless it is steered by
forces that lie outside it. On the other hand, we must also acknowledge
that modern Christianity, faced with the successes of science in
progressively structuring the world, has to a large extent restricted its
attention to the individual and his salvation. In so doing it has limited
the horizon of its hope and has failed to recognize sufficiently the
greatness of its task—even if it has continued to achieve great things in
the formation of man and in care for the weak and the suffering.
26. It is not science that redeems man: man is redeemed
by love. This applies even in terms of this present world. When someone
has the experience of a great love in his life, this is a moment of
“redemption” which gives a new meaning to his life. But soon he will also
realize that the love bestowed upon him cannot by itself resolve the
question of his life. It is a love that remains fragile. It can be
destroyed by death. The human being needs unconditional love. He needs the
certainty which makes him say: “neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor
height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to
separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom
8:38- 39). If this absolute love exists, with its absolute certainty,
then—only then—is man “redeemed”, whatever should happen to him in his
particular circumstances. This is what it means to say: Jesus Christ has
“redeemed” us. Through him we have become certain of God, a God who is not
a remote “first cause” of the world, because his only-begotten Son has
become man and of him everyone can say: “I live by faith in the Son of
God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (Gal 2:20).
27. In this sense it is true that anyone who does not
know God, even though he may entertain all kinds of hopes, is ultimately
without hope, without the great hope that sustains the whole of life (cf.
Eph 2:12). Man's great, true hope which holds firm in spite of all
disappointments can only be God—God who has loved us and who continues to
love us “to the end,” until all “is accomplished” (cf. Jn 13:1 and
19:30). Whoever is moved by love begins to perceive what “life” really is.
He begins to perceive the meaning of the word of hope that we encountered
in the Baptismal Rite: from faith I await “eternal life”—the true life
which, whole and unthreatened, in all its fullness, is simply life. Jesus,
who said that he had come so that we might have life and have it in its
fullness, in abundance (cf. Jn 10:10), has also explained to us
what “life” means: “this is eternal life, that they know you the only true
God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent” (Jn 17:3). Life in its
true sense is not something we have exclusively in or from ourselves: it
is a relationship. And life in its totality is a relationship with him who
is the source of life. If we are in relation with him who does not die,
who is Life itself and Love itself, then we are in life. Then we “live”.
28. Yet now the question arises: are we not in this way
falling back once again into an individualistic understanding of
salvation, into hope for myself alone, which is not true hope since it
forgets and overlooks others? Indeed we are not! Our relationship with God
is established through communion with Jesus—we cannot achieve it alone or
from our own resources alone. The relationship with Jesus, however, is a
relationship with the one who gave himself as a ransom for all (cf. 1
Tim 2:6). Being in communion with Jesus Christ draws us into his
“being for all”; it makes it our own way of being. He commits us to live
for others, but only through communion with him does it become possible
truly to be there for others, for the whole. In this regard I would like
to quote the great Greek Doctor of the Church, Maximus the Confessor (†
662), who begins by exhorting us to prefer nothing to the knowledge and
love of God, but then quickly moves on to practicalities: “The one who
loves God cannot hold on to money but rather gives it out in God's fashion
... in the same manner in accordance with the measure of justice”[19].
Love of God leads to participation in the justice and generosity of God
towards others. Loving God requires an interior freedom from all
possessions and all material goods: the love of God is revealed in
responsibility for others[20].
This same connection between love of God and responsibility for others can
be seen in a striking way in the life of Saint Augustine. After his
conversion to the Christian faith, he decided, together with some
like-minded friends, to lead a life totally dedicated to the word of God
and to things eternal. His intention was to practise a Christian version
of the ideal of the contemplative life expressed in the great tradition of
Greek philosophy, choosing in this way the “better part” (cf. Lk
10:42). Things turned out differently, however. While attending the Sunday
liturgy at the port city of Hippo, he was called out from the assembly by
the Bishop and constrained to receive ordination for the exercise of the
priestly ministry in that city. Looking back on that moment, he writes in
his Confessions: “Terrified by my sins and the weight of my misery,
I had resolved in my heart, and meditated flight into the wilderness; but
you forbade me and gave me strength, by saying: ‘Christ died for all, that
those who live might live no longer for themselves but for him who for
their sake died' (cf. 2 Cor 5:15)”[21].
Christ died for all. To live for him means allowing oneself to be drawn
into his being for others.
29. For Augustine this meant a totally new life. He
once described his daily life in the following terms: “The turbulent have
to be corrected, the faint-hearted cheered up, the weak supported; the
Gospel's opponents need to be refuted, its insidious enemies guarded
against; the unlearned need to be taught, the indolent stirred up, the
argumentative checked; the proud must be put in their place, the desperate
set on their feet, those engaged in quarrels reconciled; the needy have to
be helped, the oppressed to be liberated, the good to be encouraged, the
bad to be tolerated; all must be loved”[22].
“The Gospel terrifies me”[23]—producing
that healthy fear which prevents us from living for ourselves alone and
compels us to pass on the hope we hold in common. Amid the serious
difficulties facing the Roman Empire—and also posing a serious threat to
Roman Africa, which was actually destroyed at the end of Augustine's
life—this was what he set out to do: to transmit hope, the hope which came
to him from faith and which, in complete contrast with his introverted
temperament, enabled him to take part decisively and with all his strength
in the task of building up the city. In the same chapter of the
Confessions in which we have just noted the decisive reason for his
commitment “for all”, he says that Christ “intercedes for us, otherwise I
should despair. My weaknesses are many and grave, many and grave indeed,
but more abundant still is your medicine. We might have thought that your
word was far distant from union with man, and so we might have despaired
of ourselves, if this Word had not become flesh and dwelt among us”[24].
On the strength of his hope, Augustine dedicated himself completely to the
ordinary people and to his city—renouncing his spiritual nobility, he
preached and acted in a simple way for simple people.
30. Let us summarize what has emerged so far in the
course of our reflections. Day by day, man experiences many greater or
lesser hopes, different in kind according to the different periods of his
life. Sometimes one of these hopes may appear to be totally satisfying
without any need for other hopes. Young people can have the hope of a
great and fully satisfying love; the hope of a certain position in their
profession, or of some success that will prove decisive for the rest of
their lives. When these hopes are fulfilled, however, it becomes clear
that they were not, in reality, the whole. It becomes evident that man has
need of a hope that goes further. It becomes clear that only something
infinite will suffice for him, something that will always be more than he
can ever attain. In this regard our contemporary age has developed the
hope of creating a perfect world that, thanks to scientific knowledge and
to scientifically based politics, seemed to be achievable. Thus Biblical
hope in the Kingdom of God has been displaced by hope in the kingdom of
man, the hope of a better world which would be the real “Kingdom of God”.
This seemed at last to be the great and realistic hope that man needs. It
was capable of galvanizing—for a time—all man's energies. The great
objective seemed worthy of full commitment. In the course of time,
however, it has become clear that this hope is constantly receding. Above
all it has become apparent that this may be a hope for a future
generation, but not for me.
And however much “for all” may be part of the great
hope—since I cannot be happy without others or in opposition to them—it
remains true that a hope that does not concern me personally is not a real
hope. It has also become clear that this hope is opposed to freedom, since
human affairs depend in each generation on the free decisions of those
concerned. If this freedom were to be taken away, as a result of certain
conditions or structures, then ultimately this world would not be good,
since a world without freedom can by no means be a good world. Hence,
while we must always be committed to the improvement of the world,
tomorrow's better world cannot be the proper and sufficient content of our
hope. And in this regard the question always arises: when is the world
“better”? What makes it good? By what standard are we to judge its
goodness? What are the paths that lead to this “goodness”?
31. Let us say once again: we need the greater and
lesser hopes that keep us going day by day. But these are not enough
without the great hope, which must surpass everything else. This great
hope can only be God, who encompasses the whole of reality and who can
bestow upon us what we, by ourselves, cannot attain. The fact that it
comes to us as a gift is actually part of hope. God is the foundation of
hope: not any god, but the God who has a human face and who has loved us
to the end, each one of us and humanity in its entirety. His Kingdom is
not an imaginary hereafter, situated in a future that will never arrive;
his Kingdom is present wherever he is loved and wherever his love reaches
us. His love alone gives us the possibility of soberly persevering day by
day, without ceasing to be spurred on by hope, in a world which by its
very nature is imperfect. His love is at the same time our guarantee of
the existence of what we only vaguely sense and which nevertheless, in our
deepest self, we await: a life that is “truly” life. Let us now, in the
final section, develop this idea in more detail as we focus our attention
on some of the “settings” in which we can learn in practice about hope and
its exercise.
“Settings” for learning and practising hope
I. Prayer as a school of hope
32. A first essential setting for learning hope is
prayer. When no one listens to me any more, God still listens to me. When
I can no longer talk to anyone or call upon anyone, I can always talk to
God. When there is no longer anyone to help me deal with a need or
expectation that goes beyond the human capacity for hope, he can help me[25].
When I have been plunged into complete solitude ...; if I pray I am never
totally alone. The late Cardinal Nguyen Van Thuan, a prisoner for thirteen
years, nine of them spent in solitary confinement, has left us a precious
little book: Prayers of Hope. During thirteen years in jail, in a
situation of seemingly utter hopelessness, the fact that he could listen
and speak to God became for him an increasing power of hope, which enabled
him, after his release, to become for people all over the world a witness
to hope—to that great hope which does not wane even in the nights of
solitude.
33. Saint Augustine, in a homily on the First Letter
of John, describes very beautifully the intimate relationship between
prayer and hope. He defines prayer as an exercise of desire. Man was
created for greatness—for God himself; he was created to be filled by God.
But his heart is too small for the greatness to which it is destined. It
must be stretched. “By delaying [his gift], God strengthens our desire;
through desire he enlarges our soul and by expanding it he increases its
capacity [for receiving him]”. Augustine refers to Saint Paul, who speaks
of himself as straining forward to the things that are to come (cf.
Phil 3:13). He then uses a very beautiful image to describe this
process of enlargement and preparation of the human heart. “Suppose that
God wishes to fill you with honey [a symbol of God's tenderness and
goodness]; but if you are full of vinegar, where will you put the honey?”
The vessel, that is your heart, must first be enlarged and then cleansed,
freed from the vinegar and its taste. This requires hard work and is
painful, but in this way alone do we become suited to that for which we
are destined[26]. Even if
Augustine speaks directly only of our capacity for God, it is nevertheless
clear that through this effort by which we are freed from vinegar and the
taste of vinegar, not only are we made free for God, but we also become
open to others. It is only by becoming children of God, that we can be
with our common Father. To pray is not to step outside history and
withdraw to our own private corner of happiness. When we pray properly we
undergo a process of inner purification which opens us up to God and thus
to our fellow human beings as well. In prayer we must learn what we can
truly ask of God—what is worthy of God. We must learn that we cannot pray
against others. We must learn that we cannot ask for the superficial and
comfortable things that we desire at this moment—that meagre, misplaced
hope that leads us away from God. We must learn to purify our desires and
our hopes. We must free ourselves from the hidden lies with which we
deceive ourselves. God sees through them, and when we come before God, we
too are forced to recognize them. “But who can discern his errors? Clear
me from hidden faults” prays the Psalmist (Ps 19:12 [18:13]).
Failure to recognize my guilt, the illusion of my innocence, does not
justify me and does not save me, because I am culpable for the numbness of
my conscience and my incapacity to recognize the evil in me for what it
is. If God does not exist, perhaps I have to seek refuge in these lies,
because there is no one who can forgive me; no one who is the true
criterion. Yet my encounter with God awakens my conscience in such a way
that it no longer aims at self-justification, and is no longer a mere
reflection of me and those of my contemporaries who shape my thinking, but
it becomes a capacity for listening to the Good itself.
34. For prayer to develop this power of purification,
it must on the one hand be something very personal, an encounter between
my intimate self and God, the living God. On the other hand it must be
constantly guided and enlightened by the great prayers of the Church and
of the saints, by liturgical prayer, in which the Lord teaches us again
and again how to pray properly. Cardinal Nguyen Van Thuan, in his book of
spiritual exercises, tells us that during his life there were long periods
when he was unable to pray and that he would hold fast to the texts of the
Church's prayer: the Our Father, the Hail Mary and the prayers of the
liturgy[27]. Praying must
always involve this intermingling of public and personal prayer. This is
how we can speak to God and how God speaks to us. In this way we undergo
those purifications by which we become open to God and are prepared for
the service of our fellow human beings. We become capable of the great
hope, and thus we become ministers of hope for others. Hope in a Christian
sense is always hope for others as well. It is an active hope, in which we
struggle to prevent things moving towards the “perverse end”. It is an
active hope also in the sense that we keep the world open to God. Only in
this way does it continue to be a truly human hope.
II. Action and suffering as settings for learning
hope
35. All serious and upright human conduct is hope in
action. This is so first of all in the sense that we thereby strive to
realize our lesser and greater hopes, to complete this or that task which
is important for our onward journey, or we work towards a brighter and
more humane world so as to open doors into the future. Yet our daily
efforts in pursuing our own lives and in working for the world's future
either tire us or turn into fanaticism, unless we are enlightened by the
radiance of the great hope that cannot be destroyed even by small-scale
failures or by a breakdown in matters of historic importance. If we cannot
hope for more than is effectively attainable at any given time, or more
than is promised by political or economic authorities, our lives will soon
be without hope. It is important to know that I can always continue to
hope, even if in my own life, or the historical period in which I am
living, there seems to be nothing left to hope for. Only the great
certitude of hope that my own life and history in general, despite all
failures, are held firm by the indestructible power of Love, and that this
gives them their meaning and importance, only this kind of hope can then
give the courage to act and to persevere. Certainly we cannot “build” the
Kingdom of God by our own efforts—what we build will always be the kingdom
of man with all the limitations proper to our human nature. The Kingdom of
God is a gift, and precisely because of this, it is great and beautiful,
and constitutes the response to our hope. And we cannot—to use the
classical expression—”merit” Heaven through our works. Heaven is always
more than we could merit, just as being loved is never something
“merited”, but always a gift. However, even when we are fully aware that
Heaven far exceeds what we can merit, it will always be true that our
behaviour is not indifferent before God and therefore is not indifferent
for the unfolding of history. We can open ourselves and the world and
allow God to enter: we can open ourselves to truth, to love, to what is
good. This is what the saints did, those who, as “God's fellow workers”,
contributed to the world's salvation (cf. 1 Cor 3:9; 1 Th
3:2). We can free our life and the world from the poisons and
contaminations that could destroy the present and the future. We can
uncover the sources of creation and keep them unsullied, and in this way
we can make a right use of creation, which comes to us as a gift,
according to its intrinsic requirements and ultimate purpose. This makes
sense even if outwardly we achieve nothing or seem powerless in the face
of overwhelming hostile forces. So on the one hand, our actions engender
hope for us and for others; but at the same time, it is the great hope
based upon God's promises that gives us courage and directs our action in
good times and bad.
36. Like action, suffering is a part of our human
existence. Suffering stems partly from our finitude, and partly from the
mass of sin which has accumulated over the course of history, and
continues to grow unabated today. Certainly we must do whatever we can to
reduce suffering: to avoid as far as possible the suffering of the
innocent; to soothe pain; to give assistance in overcoming mental
suffering. These are obligations both in justice and in love, and they are
included among the fundamental requirements of the Christian life and
every truly human life. Great progress has been made in the battle against
physical pain; yet the sufferings of the innocent and mental suffering
have, if anything, increased in recent decades. Indeed, we must do all we
can to overcome suffering, but to banish it from the world altogether is
not in our power. This is simply because we are unable to shake off our
finitude and because none of us is capable of eliminating the power of
evil, of sin which, as we plainly see, is a constant source of suffering.
Only God is able to do this: only a God who personally enters history by
making himself man and suffering within history. We know that this God
exists, and hence that this power to “take away the sin of the world” (Jn
1:29) is present in the world. Through faith in the existence of this
power, hope for the world's healing has emerged in history. It is,
however, hope—not yet fulfilment; hope that gives us the courage to place
ourselves on the side of good even in seemingly hopeless situations, aware
that, as far as the external course of history is concerned, the power of
sin will continue to be a terrible presence.
37. Let us return to our topic. We can try to limit
suffering, to fight against it, but we cannot eliminate it. It is when we
attempt to avoid suffering by withdrawing from anything that might involve
hurt, when we try to spare ourselves the effort and pain of pursuing
truth, love, and goodness, that we drift into a life of emptiness, in
which there may be almost no pain, but the dark sensation of
meaninglessness and abandonment is all the greater. It is not by
sidestepping or fleeing from suffering that we are healed, but rather by
our capacity for accepting it, maturing through it and finding meaning
through union with Christ, who suffered with infinite love. In this
context, I would like to quote a passage from a letter written by the
Vietnamese martyr Paul Le-Bao-Tinh († 1857) which illustrates this
transformation of suffering through the power of hope springing from
faith. “I, Paul, in chains for the name of Christ, wish to relate to you
the trials besetting me daily, in order that you may be inflamed with love
for God and join with me in his praises, for his mercy is for ever (Ps
136 [135]). The prison here is a true image of everlasting Hell: to cruel
tortures of every kind—shackles, iron chains, manacles—are added hatred,
vengeance, calumnies, obscene speech, quarrels, evil acts, swearing,
curses, as well as anguish and grief. But the God who once freed the three
children from the fiery furnace is with me always; he has delivered me
from these tribulations and made them sweet, for his mercy is for ever.
In the midst of these torments, which usually terrify others, I am, by
the grace of God, full of joy and gladness, because I am not alone —Christ
is with me ... How am I to bear with the spectacle, as each day I see
emperors, mandarins, and their retinue blaspheming your holy name, O Lord,
who are enthroned above the Cherubim and Seraphim? (cf. Ps 80:1
[79:2]). Behold, the pagans have trodden your Cross underfoot! Where is
your glory? As I see all this, I would, in the ardent love I have for you,
prefer to be torn limb from limb and to die as a witness to your love. O
Lord, show your power, save me, sustain me, that in my infirmity your
power may be shown and may be glorified before the nations ... Beloved
brothers, as you hear all these things may you give endless thanks in joy
to God, from whom every good proceeds; bless the Lord with me, for his
mercy is for ever ... I write these things to you in order that your faith
and mine may be united. In the midst of this storm I cast my anchor
towards the throne of God, the anchor that is the lively hope in my
heart”[28]. This is a letter
from “Hell”. It lays bare all the horror of a concentration camp, where to
the torments inflicted by tyrants upon their victims is added the outbreak
of evil in the victims themselves, such that they in turn become further
instruments of their persecutors' cruelty. This is indeed a letter from
Hell, but it also reveals the truth of the Psalm text: “If I go up to the
heavens, you are there; if I sink to the nether world, you are present
there ... If I say, ‘Surely the darkness shall hide me, and night shall be
my light' —for you darkness itself is not dark, and night shines as the
day; darkness and light are the same” (Ps 139 [138]:8-12; cf. also
Ps 23 [22]:4). Christ descended into “Hell” and is therefore close to
those cast into it, transforming their darkness into light. Suffering and
torment is still terrible and well- nigh unbearable. Yet the star of hope
has risen—the anchor of the heart reaches the very throne of God. Instead
of evil being unleashed within man, the light shines victorious:
suffering—without ceasing to be suffering—becomes, despite everything, a
hymn of praise.
38. The true measure of humanity is essentially
determined in relationship to suffering and to the sufferer. This holds
true both for the individual and for society. A society unable to accept
its suffering members and incapable of helping to share their suffering
and to bear it inwardly through “com-passion” is a cruel and inhuman
society. Yet society cannot accept its suffering members and support them
in their trials unless individuals are capable of doing so themselves;
moreover, the individual cannot accept another's suffering unless he
personally is able to find meaning in suffering, a path of purification
and growth in maturity, a journey of hope. Indeed, to accept the “other”
who suffers, means that I take up his suffering in such a way that it
becomes mine also. Because it has now become a shared suffering, though,
in which another person is present, this suffering is penetrated by the
light of love. The Latin word con-solatio, “consolation”, expresses
this beautifully. It suggests being with the other in his solitude,
so that it ceases to be solitude. Furthermore, the capacity to accept
suffering for the sake of goodness, truth and justice is an essential
criterion of humanity, because if my own well-being and safety are
ultimately more important than truth and justice, then the power of the
stronger prevails, then violence and untruth reign supreme. Truth and
justice must stand above my comfort and physical well-being, or else my
life itself becomes a lie. In the end, even the “yes” to love is a source
of suffering, because love always requires expropriations of my “I”, in
which I allow myself to be pruned and wounded. Love simply cannot exist
without this painful renunciation of myself, for otherwise it becomes pure
selfishness and thereby ceases to be love.
39. To suffer with the other and for others; to suffer
for the sake of truth and justice; to suffer out of love and in order to
become a person who truly loves—these are fundamental elements of
humanity, and to abandon them would destroy man himself. Yet once again
the question arises: are we capable of this? Is the other important enough
to warrant my becoming, on his account, a person who suffers? Does truth
matter to me enough to make suffering worthwhile? Is the promise of love
so great that it justifies the gift of myself? In the history of humanity,
it was the Christian faith that had the particular merit of bringing forth
within man a new and deeper capacity for these kinds of suffering that are
decisive for his humanity. The Christian faith has shown us that truth,
justice and love are not simply ideals, but enormously weighty realities.
It has shown us that God —Truth and Love in person—desired to suffer for
us and with us. Bernard of Clairvaux coined the marvellous expression:
Impassibilis est Deus, sed non incompassibilis[29]—God
cannot suffer, but he can suffer with. Man is worth so much to God
that he himself became man in order to suffer with man in an
utterly real way—in flesh and blood—as is revealed to us in the account of
Jesus's Passion. Hence in all human suffering we are joined by one who
experiences and carries that suffering with us; hence con-solatio
is present in all suffering, the consolation of God's compassionate
love—and so the star of hope rises. Certainly, in our many different
sufferings and trials we always need the lesser and greater hopes too—a
kind visit, the healing of internal and external wounds, a favourable
resolution of a crisis, and so on. In our lesser trials these kinds of
hope may even be sufficient. But in truly great trials, where I must make
a definitive decision to place the truth before my own welfare, career and
possessions, I need the certitude of that true, great hope of which we
have spoken here. For this too we need witnesses—martyrs—who have given
themselves totally, so as to show us the way—day after day. We need them
if we are to prefer goodness to comfort, even in the little choices we
face each day—knowing that this is how we live life to the full. Let us
say it once again: the capacity to suffer for the sake of the truth is the
measure of humanity. Yet this capacity to suffer depends on the type and
extent of the hope that we bear within us and build upon. The saints were
able to make the great journey of human existence in the way that Christ
had done before them, because they were brimming with great hope.
40. I would like to add here another brief comment with
some relevance for everyday living. There used to be a form of
devotion—perhaps less practised today but quite widespread not long
ago—that included the idea of “offering up” the minor daily hardships that
continually strike at us like irritating “jabs”, thereby giving them a
meaning. Of course, there were some exaggerations and perhaps unhealthy
applications of this devotion, but we need to ask ourselves whether there
may not after all have been something essential and helpful contained
within it. What does it mean to offer something up? Those who did so were
convinced that they could insert these little annoyances into Christ's
great “com-passion” so that they somehow became part of the treasury of
compassion so greatly needed by the human race. In this way, even the
small inconveniences of daily life could acquire meaning and contribute to
the economy of good and of human love. Maybe we should consider whether it
might be judicious to revive this practice ourselves.
III. Judgement as a setting for learning and
practising hope
41. At the conclusion of the central section of the
Church's great Credo—the part that recounts the mystery of Christ,
from his eternal birth of the Father and his temporal birth of the Virgin
Mary, through his Cross and Resurrection to the second coming—we find the
phrase: “he will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead”.
From the earliest times, the prospect of the Judgement has influenced
Christians in their daily living as a criterion by which to order their
present life, as a summons to their conscience, and at the same time as
hope in God's justice. Faith in Christ has never looked merely backwards
or merely upwards, but always also forwards to the hour of justice that
the Lord repeatedly proclaimed. This looking ahead has given Christianity
its importance for the present moment. In the arrangement of Christian
sacred buildings, which were intended to make visible the historic and
cosmic breadth of faith in Christ, it became customary to depict the Lord
returning as a king—the symbol of hope—at the east end; while the west
wall normally portrayed the Last Judgement as a symbol of our
responsibility for our lives—a scene which followed and accompanied the
faithful as they went out to resume their daily routine. As the
iconography of the Last Judgement developed, however, more and more
prominence was given to its ominous and frightening aspects, which
obviously held more fascination for artists than the splendour of hope,
often all too well concealed beneath the horrors.
42. In the modern era, the idea of the Last Judgement
has faded into the background: Christian faith has been individualized and
primarily oriented towards the salvation of the believer's own soul, while
reflection on world history is largely dominated by the idea of progress.
The fundamental content of awaiting a final Judgement, however, has not
disappeared: it has simply taken on a totally different form. The atheism
of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is—in its origins and aims—a
type of moralism: a protest against the injustices of the world and of
world history. A world marked by so much injustice, innocent suffering,
and cynicism of power cannot be the work of a good God. A God with
responsibility for such a world would not be a just God, much less a good
God. It is for the sake of morality that this God has to be contested.
Since there is no God to create justice, it seems man himself is now
called to establish justice. If in the face of this world's suffering,
protest against God is understandable, the claim that humanity can and
must do what no God actually does or is able to do is both presumptuous
and intrinsically false. It is no accident that this idea has led to the
greatest forms of cruelty and violations of justice; rather, it is
grounded in the intrinsic falsity of the claim. A world which has to
create its own justice is a world without hope. No one and nothing can
answer for centuries of suffering. No one and nothing can guarantee that
the cynicism of power—whatever beguiling ideological mask it adopts—will
cease to dominate the world. This is why the great thinkers of the
Frankfurt School, Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, were equally
critical of atheism and theism. Horkheimer radically excluded the
possibility of ever finding a this-worldly substitute for God, while at
the same time he rejected the image of a good and just God. In an extreme
radicalization of the Old Testament prohibition of images, he speaks of a
“longing for the totally Other” that remains inaccessible—a cry of
yearning directed at world history. Adorno also firmly upheld this total
rejection of images, which naturally meant the exclusion of any “image” of
a loving God. On the other hand, he also constantly emphasized this
“negative” dialectic and asserted that justice —true justice—would require
a world “where not only present suffering would be wiped out, but also
that which is irrevocably past would be undone”[30].
This, would mean, however—to express it with positive and hence, for him,
inadequate symbols—that there can be no justice without a resurrection of
the dead. Yet this would have to involve “the resurrection of the flesh,
something that is totally foreign to idealism and the realm of Absolute
spirit”[31].
43. Christians likewise can and must constantly learn
from the strict rejection of images that is contained in God's first
commandment (cf. Ex 20:4). The truth of negative theology was
highlighted by the Fourth Lateran Council, which explicitly stated that
however great the similarity that may be established between Creator and
creature, the dissimilarity between them is always greater[32].
In any case, for the believer the rejection of images cannot be carried so
far that one ends up, as Horkheimer and Adorno would like, by saying “no”
to both theses—theism and atheism. God has given himself an “image”: in
Christ who was made man. In him who was crucified, the denial of false
images of God is taken to an extreme. God now reveals his true face in the
figure of the sufferer who shares man's God-forsaken condition by taking
it upon himself. This innocent sufferer has attained the certitude of
hope: there is a God, and God can create justice in a way that we cannot
conceive, yet we can begin to grasp it through faith. Yes, there is a
resurrection of the flesh[33].
There is justice[34]. There
is an “undoing” of past suffering, a reparation that sets things aright.
For this reason, faith in the Last Judgement is first and foremost
hope—the need for which was made abundantly clear in the upheavals of
recent centuries. I am convinced that the question of justice constitutes
the essential argument, or in any case the strongest argument, in favour
of faith in eternal life. The purely individual need for a fulfilment that
is denied to us in this life, for an everlasting love that we await, is
certainly an important motive for believing that man was made for
eternity; but only in connection with the impossibility that the injustice
of history should be the final word does the necessity for Christ's return
and for new life become fully convincing.
44. To protest against God in the name of justice is
not helpful. A world without God is a world without hope (cf. Eph
2:12). Only God can create justice. And faith gives us the certainty that
he does so. The image of the Last Judgement is not primarily an image of
terror, but an image of hope; for us it may even be the decisive image of
hope. Is it not also a frightening image? I would say: it is an image that
evokes responsibility, an image, therefore, of that fear of which Saint
Hilary spoke when he said that all our fear has its place in love[35].
God is justice and creates justice. This is our consolation and our hope.
And in his justice there is also grace. This we know by turning our gaze
to the crucified and risen Christ. Both these things—justice and
grace—must be seen in their correct inner relationship. Grace does not
cancel out justice. It does not make wrong into right. It is not a sponge
which wipes everything away, so that whatever someone has done on earth
ends up being of equal value. Dostoevsky, for example, was right to
protest against this kind of Heaven and this kind of grace in his novel
The Brothers Karamazov. Evildoers, in the end, do not sit at table at
the eternal banquet beside their victims without distinction, as though
nothing had happened. Here I would like to quote a passage from Plato
which expresses a premonition of just judgement that in many respects
remains true and salutary for Christians too. Albeit using mythological
images, he expresses the truth with an unambiguous clarity, saying that in
the end souls will stand naked before the judge. It no longer matters what
they once were in history, but only what they are in truth: “Often, when
it is the king or some other monarch or potentate that he (the judge) has
to deal with, he finds that there is no soundness in the soul whatever; he
finds it scourged and scarred by the various acts of perjury and
wrong-doing ...; it is twisted and warped by lies and vanity, and nothing
is straight because truth has had no part in its development. Power,
luxury, pride, and debauchery have left it so full of disproportion and
ugliness that when he has inspected it (he) sends it straight to prison,
where on its arrival it will undergo the appropriate punishment ...
Sometimes, though, the eye of the judge lights on a different soul which
has lived in purity and truth ... then he is struck with admiration and
sends him to the isles of the blessed”[36].
In the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (cf. Lk 16:19-31), Jesus
admonishes us through the image of a soul destroyed by arrogance and
opulence, who has created an impassable chasm between himself and the poor
man; the chasm of being trapped within material pleasures; the chasm of
forgetting the other, of incapacity to love, which then becomes a burning
and unquenchable thirst. We must note that in this parable Jesus is not
referring to the final destiny after the Last Judgement, but is taking up
a notion found, inter alia, in early Judaism, namely that of an
intermediate state between death and resurrection, a state in which the
final sentence is yet to be pronounced.
45. This early Jewish idea of an intermediate state
includes the view that these souls are not simply in a sort of temporary
custody but, as the parable of the rich man illustrates, are already being
punished or are experiencing a provisional form of bliss. There is also
the idea that this state can involve purification and healing which mature
the soul for communion with God. The early Church took up these concepts,
and in the Western Church they gradually developed into the doctrine of
Purgatory. We do not need to examine here the complex historical paths of
this development; it is enough to ask what it actually means. With death,
our life-choice becomes definitive—our life stands before the judge. Our
choice, which in the course of an entire life takes on a certain shape,
can have a variety of forms. There can be people who have totally
destroyed their desire for truth and readiness to love, people for whom
everything has become a lie, people who have lived for hatred and have
suppressed all love within themselves. This is a terrifying thought, but
alarming profiles of this type can be seen in certain figures of our own
history. In such people all would be beyond remedy and the destruction of
good would be irrevocable: this is what we mean by the word Hell[37].
On the other hand there can be people who are utterly pure, completely
permeated by God, and thus fully open to their neighbours—people for whom
communion with God even now gives direction to their entire being and
whose journey towards God only brings to fulfilment what they already are[38].
46. Yet we know from experience that neither case is
normal in human life. For the great majority of people—we may
suppose—there remains in the depths of their being an ultimate interior
openness to truth, to love, to God. In the concrete choices of life,
however, it is covered over by ever new compromises with evil—much filth
covers purity, but the thirst for purity remains and it still constantly
re-emerges from all that is base and remains present in the soul. What
happens to such individuals when they appear before the Judge? Will all
the impurity they have amassed through life suddenly cease to matter? What
else might occur? Saint Paul, in his First Letter to the Corinthians,
gives us an idea of the differing impact of God's judgement according to
each person's particular circumstances. He does this using images which in
some way try to express the invisible, without it being possible for us to
conceptualize these images—simply because we can neither see into the
world beyond death nor do we have any experience of it. Paul begins by
saying that Christian life is built upon a common foundation: Jesus
Christ. This foundation endures. If we have stood firm on this foundation
and built our life upon it, we know that it cannot be taken away from us
even in death. Then Paul continues: “Now if any one builds on the
foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw—each man's
work will become manifest; for the Day will disclose it, because it will
be revealed with fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one
has done. If the work which any man has built on the foundation survives,
he will receive a reward. If any man's work is burned up, he will suffer
loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire” (1 Cor
3:12-15). In this text, it is in any case evident that our salvation
can take different forms, that some of what is built may be burned down,
that in order to be saved we personally have to pass through “fire” so as
to become fully open to receiving God and able to take our place at the
table of the eternal marriage-feast.
47. Some recent theologians are of the opinion that the
fire which both burns and saves is Christ himself, the Judge and Saviour.
The encounter with him is the decisive act of judgement. Before his gaze
all falsehood melts away. This encounter with him, as it burns us,
transforms and frees us, allowing us to become truly ourselves. All that
we build during our lives can prove to be mere straw, pure bluster, and it
collapses. Yet in the pain of this encounter, when the impurity and
sickness of our lives become evident to us, there lies salvation. His
gaze, the touch of his heart heals us through an undeniably painful
transformation “as through fire”. But it is a blessed pain, in which the
holy power of his love sears through us like a flame, enabling us to
become totally ourselves and thus totally of God. In this way the
inter-relation between justice and grace also becomes clear: the way we
live our lives is not immaterial, but our defilement does not stain us for
ever if we have at least continued to reach out towards Christ, towards
truth and towards love. Indeed, it has already been burned away through
Christ's Passion. At the moment of judgement we experience and we absorb
the overwhelming power of his love over all the evil in the world and in
ourselves. The pain of love becomes our salvation and our joy. It is clear
that we cannot calculate the “duration” of this transforming burning in
terms of the chronological measurements of this world. The transforming
“moment” of this encounter eludes earthly time-reckoning—it is the heart's
time, it is the time of “passage” to communion with God in the Body of
Christ[39]. The judgement of
God is hope, both because it is justice and because it is grace. If it
were merely grace, making all earthly things cease to matter, God would
still owe us an answer to the question about justice—the crucial question
that we ask of history and of God. If it were merely justice, in the end
it could bring only fear to us all. The incarnation of God in Christ has
so closely linked the two together—judgement and grace—that justice is
firmly established: we all work out our salvation “with fear and
trembling” (Phil 2:12). Nevertheless grace allows us all to hope,
and to go trustfully to meet the Judge whom we know as our “advocate”, or
parakletos (cf. 1 Jn 2:1).
48. A further point must be mentioned here, because it
is important for the practice of Christian hope. Early Jewish thought
includes the idea that one can help the deceased in their intermediate
state through prayer (see for example 2 Macc 12:38-45; first
century BC). The equivalent practice was readily adopted by Christians and
is common to the Eastern and Western Church. The East does not recognize
the purifying and expiatory suffering of souls in the afterlife, but it
does acknowledge various levels of beatitude and of suffering in the
intermediate state. The souls of the departed can, however, receive
“solace and refreshment” through the Eucharist, prayer and almsgiving. The
belief that love can reach into the afterlife, that reciprocal giving and
receiving is possible, in which our affection for one another continues
beyond the limits of death—this has been a fundamental conviction of
Christianity throughout the ages and it remains a source of comfort today.
Who would not feel the need to convey to their departed loved ones a sign
of kindness, a gesture of gratitude or even a request for pardon? Now a
further question arises: if “Purgatory” is simply purification through
fire in the encounter with the Lord, Judge and Saviour, how can a third
person intervene, even if he or she is particularly close to the other?
When we ask such a question, we should recall that no man is an island,
entire of itself. Our lives are involved with one another, through
innumerable interactions they are linked together. No one lives alone. No
one sins alone. No one is saved alone. The lives of others continually
spill over into mine: in what I think, say, do and achieve. And
conversely, my life spills over into that of others: for better and for
worse. So my prayer for another is not something extraneous to that
person, something external, not even after death. In the
interconnectedness of Being, my gratitude to the other—my prayer for
him—can play a small part in his purification. And for that there is no
need to convert earthly time into God's time: in the communion of souls
simple terrestrial time is superseded. It is never too late to touch the
heart of another, nor is it ever in vain. In this way we further clarify
an important element of the Christian concept of hope. Our hope is always
essentially also hope for others; only thus is it truly hope for me too[40].
As Christians we should never limit ourselves to asking: how can I save
myself? We should also ask: what can I do in order that others may be
saved and that for them too the star of hope may rise? Then I will have
done my utmost for my own personal salvation as well.
Mary, Star of Hope
49. With a hymn composed in the eighth or ninth
century, thus for over a thousand years, the Church has greeted Mary, the
Mother of God, as “Star of the Sea”: Ave maris stella. Human life
is a journey. Towards what destination? How do we find the way? Life is
like a voyage on the sea of history, often dark and stormy, a voyage in
which we watch for the stars that indicate the route. The true stars of
our life are the people who have lived good lives. They are lights of
hope. Certainly, Jesus Christ is the true light, the sun that has risen
above all the shadows of history. But to reach him we also need lights
close by—people who shine with his light and so guide us along our way.
Who more than Mary could be a star of hope for us? With her “yes” she
opened the door of our world to God himself; she became the living Ark of
the Covenant, in whom God took flesh, became one of us, and pitched his
tent among us (cf. Jn 1:14).
50. So we cry to her: Holy Mary, you belonged to the
humble and great souls of Israel who, like Simeon, were “looking for the
consolation of Israel” (Lk 2:25) and hoping, like Anna, “for the
redemption of Jerusalem” (Lk 2:38). Your life was thoroughly imbued
with the sacred scriptures of Israel which spoke of hope, of the promise
made to Abraham and his descendants (cf. Lk 1:55). In this way we
can appreciate the holy fear that overcame you when the angel of the Lord
appeared to you and told you that you would give birth to the One who was
the hope of Israel, the One awaited by the world. Through you, through
your “yes”, the hope of the ages became reality, entering this world and
its history. You bowed low before the greatness of this task and gave your
consent: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me according
to your word” (Lk 1:38). When you hastened with holy joy across the
mountains of Judea to see your cousin Elizabeth, you became the image of
the Church to come, which carries the hope of the world in her womb across
the mountains of history. But alongside the joy which, with your
Magnificat, you proclaimed in word and song for all the centuries to
hear, you also knew the dark sayings of the prophets about the suffering
of the servant of God in this world. Shining over his birth in the stable
at Bethlehem, there were angels in splendour who brought the good news to
the shepherds, but at the same time the lowliness of God in this world was
all too palpable. The old man Simeon spoke to you of the sword which would
pierce your soul (cf. Lk 2:35), of the sign of contradiction that
your Son would be in this world. Then, when Jesus began his public
ministry, you had to step aside, so that a new family could grow, the
family which it was his mission to establish and which would be made up of
those who heard his word and kept it (cf. Lk 11:27f).
Notwithstanding the great joy that marked the beginning of Jesus's
ministry, in the synagogue of Nazareth you must already have experienced
the truth of the saying about the “sign of contradiction” (cf. Lk
4:28ff). In this way you saw the growing power of hostility and rejection
which built up around Jesus until the hour of the Cross, when you had to
look upon the Saviour of the world, the heir of David, the Son of God
dying like a failure, exposed to mockery, between criminals. Then you
received the word of Jesus: “Woman, behold, your Son!” (Jn 19:26).
From the Cross you received a new mission. From the Cross you became a
mother in a new way: the mother of all those who believe in your Son Jesus
and wish to follow him. The sword of sorrow pierced your heart. Did hope
die? Did the world remain definitively without light, and life without
purpose? At that moment, deep down, you probably listened again to the
word spoken by the angel in answer to your fear at the time of the
Annunciation: “Do not be afraid, Mary!” (Lk 1:30). How many times
had the Lord, your Son, said the same thing to his disciples: do not be
afraid! In your heart, you heard this word again during the night of
Golgotha. Before the hour of his betrayal he had said to his disciples:
“Be of good cheer, I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33). “Let not
your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” (Jn 14:27).
“Do not be afraid, Mary!” In that hour at Nazareth the angel had also said
to you: “Of his kingdom there will be no end” (Lk 1:33). Could it
have ended before it began? No, at the foot of the Cross, on the strength
of Jesus's own word, you became the mother of believers. In this faith,
which even in the darkness of Holy Saturday bore the certitude of hope,
you made your way towards Easter morning. The joy of the Resurrection
touched your heart and united you in a new way to the disciples, destined
to become the family of Jesus through faith. In this way you were in the
midst of the community of believers, who in the days following the
Ascension prayed with one voice for the gift of the Holy Spirit (cf.
Acts 1:14) and then received that gift on the day of Pentecost. The
“Kingdom” of Jesus was not as might have been imagined. It began in that
hour, and o