| PART FOUR: The Apostles' Creed VI - VIII
Sixth Article: "He ascended into heaven, and sits at the
right hand of God the Father almighty"
1. The Ascension of Christ and His Glorified Existence
After 40 days He ascended. During this period, He
actually gave the primacy He had promised to Peter, as we
read in John 21. The many events between His resurrection
and ascension preclude the theory that He ascended on
Easter. His ascension does not mean that heaven is somewhere
up in space. This was a way of making clear that He was
leaving the present mode of existence. St. Paul in
Colossians 3:1 urges us to live our lives now as if we had
already died, had risen, and had ascended with Him. In a
mystical sense we have done that, in that our Head has done
that. In the physical sense it is still in the future.
He ascended to receive the glory of the conqueror of sin
and death (Philippians 2:8-11); to be our Mediator and
advocate with the Father (Hebrews 9:24); to send the Holy
Spirit as He had promised at the Last Supper (John 16:7);
and to prepare a place for us as He also promised (John
14:2).
Now He is seated at the Father's right, which means He
has had as He said "all power given to Him in heaven and on
earth (Matthew 28:18). He always had that power as God, but
now exercises it as man, as King of the Universe, with His
Mother beside Him as Queen of the Universe.
As God He is everywhere, but not as man, though He is
present most widely in the Holy Eucharist even as man.
Besides this real bodily presence, there are other lesser
forms of presence. Vatican II explained the various forms of
presence, in the Constitution on the Liturgy , # 7:
Christ is always present to His Church, especially in
liturgical actions. He is present in the Sacrifice of
the Mass in the person of the priest, 'He is the same
one, now offering by the ministry of priests, who then
offered Himself on the Cross [citing the Council of
Trent].' But He is most greatly present under the
Eucharistic species. He is present by His power in the
Sacraments, so that when anyone baptizes, Christ Himself
baptizes. He is present in His word, for He speaks when
the Sacred Scriptures are read in the Church. He is
present, finally, when the Church prays and sings the
Psalms, He who promised 'Where two or three are gathered
in my name, there I am in their midst.'(Matthew 18:20)
Seventh Article: "From thence He shall come to judge
the living and the dead"
1. General and Particular Judgment
Jesus will come at the end of time to judge all human
beings. This is called the parousia, His second coming. It
was foretold by the angels as He ascended: "This Jesus who
is taken up from you to heaven, will come in the way in
which you saw Him going into heaven" (Acts 1:11).
There are two judgments for each one of us. At once after
death we will be judged on our life. The Epistle to the
Hebrews says (9:27): " It is appointed to men to die once,
and after that comes the judgment". Then. "Each one will
receive his pay, according to his works" (1 Cor 3:8).
The general judgment at the end of time simply solemnly
confirms the particular judgments of each one, with the
difference that then the body as well as the soul will
receive what is due it. And all God's judgments will be
revealed as most just.
We do not know what form it will take. In Matthew
25:31-46 we read a picture of that judgment, with the good
on the right of the Judge, the wicked on the left. We know
there will be such a judgement, but its precise form we do
not know, for there is no place on the globe where all men
of all centuries could stand before the Judge. It will
however certainly give the solemn sentence, and will, as we
said, reveal to each one the justice of all the judgments of
God. God can reveal this interiorly by one touch as it were,
as He does at times in Interior Locutions, which can convey
any amount of knowledge at one stroke.
2. Eternal Punishment
There can be no change of heart towards God, for or
against His will, after death. Hence hell and heaven must
both be without end.
The chief suffering of hell is the loss of God. In this
life, we can go comfortably without thinking of Him. But
then it will be different. For one thing, our senses now
keep telling us this world and this life are the only
important things. Then that din of the senses will be gone.
But more especially, when we cross into the next life, as it
were, the light goes on. In this life, our intelligence has
two components, the spirit intellect that is proper to the
spiritual soul, which is tied to the marvelous, but yet
material instrument in our heads. The latter limits us
greatly. But at death, that limit is gone. Then even if the
soul does not at once see God, it carries with it the
information on Him, but then really understands, and wants
Him intensely. To lose Him forever, or to be in a twisted
state of wanting Him, yet in revolt against Him — this is
the chief pain of hell. Scripture often speaks of fire in
hell. On May 17, 1979, the Sacred Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith explained: "She [the Church] believes
that there will be eternal punishment for the sinner, who
will be deprived of the sight of God, and that this
punishment will have a repercussion on the whole being of
the sinner." This will be, then a bodily pain. The imagery
of fire means it will be a suffering as intense as that
caused by earthly fire.
Of course, those who have sinned more will suffer more.
But for all, there is no end to suffering and despair.
3. Purgatory
Mere reason suggests there must be a Purgatory. So many
people seem to be good, but not so greatly good that they
should be fit for heaven at once. Again, not nearly all are
so evil as to deserve hell. So there should be a means of
purification and paying the debt of temporal punishment for
those not fit for hell, nor for heaven at once. (Of course
Luther would say we can sin all we want and still go to
heaven at once, if only we believe it is all covered by
Christ's merits: Epistle 501 to Melanchthon).
There is not much in Scripture on Purgatory except that
in Second Maccabees 12:45 Judas sends a collection to the
Temple for those fallen in battle, found with amulets on,
"that they might be freed from this sin." Luther saw so
clearly that this referred to Purgatory — which he rejected
— that he rejected this book too, declaring it not part of
Scripture. Some have tried to see an implication of
Purgatory in Matthew 12:32. There Jesus speaks of the sin
against the Holy Spirit that will be forgiven "neither in
this world nor in the next." But the expression quoted is
known in Rabbinic literature, where it means merely "never".
Still less could we deduce purgatory from First Corinthians
3:11-15. Paul means if the work of some Christian worker has
been of such low quality that it burns down, he himself will
be saved "as through fire." But the fire seems to mean the
apocalyptic fire of the last day, not a fire of purgatory.
But our belief in Purgatory rests on the definitions of the
Church, at the Councils of Lyons II, Florence, and Trent.
The essential, perhaps the only suffering of Purgatory is
the loss of God — it is like what we described in speaking
of hell, except that in Purgatory there is no despair,
rather, great consolation from assurance of salvation. Is
there also something like fire in Purgatory? A host of
private apparitions say there is; the Church has never
pronounced on it. In fact the Eastern part of the Catholic
Church has no such tradition. Many theologians say the
suffering is greater than anything on earth. Neither
Scripture nor Tradition tells us if that be so. We do know
that the souls there cannot merit or help themselves in any
way anymore, they can only suffer. We know we can by prayers
and penances relieve them, and somehow, they are enabled to
know it when we do that, and they pray for us. How long
should we pray and sacrifice for a particular soul? We do
not know. St. Augustine in his Confessions (9:13), written
10 to 15 years after the death of his mother, St. Monica,
still asked for prayers for her. If we can believe the
private apparitions, Purgatory may last the equivalent of
many years (we speak thus, for there is no time in
Purgatory). For certain, it is terribly wrong to virtually
canonize a person at the funeral, as Protestants do under
the influence of Luther's sad mistake. Sadly not a few
Catholics are imitating them.
Eighth Article: "I believe in the Holy Spirit"
1. The Holy Spirit in the Trinity and His Mission in
the World.
We already said the most essential things about the Holy
Spirit in explaining Article One. Let us add a few things
here.
He makes holy the souls of the just by His presence. But
a Spirit is not present in the sense of taking up space. We
say a Spirit is present wherever it causes an effect. In the
soul, the Holy Spirit transforms it, making it basically
capable of taking in, after death, the infinite streams of
knowledge and love that flow within the Holy Trinity. Thus
we are really "sharers in the divine nature" ( 2 Peter 1:4).
This is a dignity so great that any earthly honor is
insignificant besides it.
He comes with his Seven Gifts. These make the soul
capable of taking in the special lights and inspirations He
sends in a much higher way than what is had in ordinary
graces. We do not notice much of any effects from these
Gifts until we have advanced rather far in the spiritual
life, for great docility and purity of heart are needed.
On Pentecost the Holy Spirit came down visibly on the
Apostles. He gave them the power to speak in strange tongues
to the crowds that came to Jerusalem for that Feast. He also
transformed them, from selfish and timid men into giants of
courage and faith. |