There
is a growing interest in what has come to be known as ‘Near-Death Experiences.’
If you Google NDE you will be amazed at the results. You’ll find dozens of
people giving personal testimonies, videos, and even support groups for people
who have had a near-death experiences. For many, these experiences have been
life-changing, especially for those who previously were agnostic or did not
believe in God. Most say that they were overwhelmed by the all-embracing love
of God and because of that are convinced of the existence of heaven and no
longer have any fear of death.
One
of the most pressing questions any of us has in this life is what happens when
our life is over? For Christians “Belief in the resurrection of the dead has
been an essential element of Christian faith from its beginnings” (CCC 991).
“For those who die in Christ’s grace, it is a participation in the death of the
Lord so that they can share in his resurrection” (CCC 1006). Our belief in the
resurrection of the dead is based upon a faith relationship with God. We
believe that “those who die in God’s grace and friendship live forever with
Christ. As we read in the Catechism, “Heaven is the ultimate end and fulfillment
of the deepest human longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness” (CCC
1024). But there are many in the world who don’t believe or are not convinced
of this concept of heaven.
Our
gospel reading today presents us with the Sadducees, who did not believe in the
afterlife, posing a hypothetical case to Jesus. The Sadducees were basically a
sect within the Jewish community. They included many of the priestly class and elite
wealthy families. They were not as numerous as the Pharisees, but they held the
highest offices. They did not accept beliefs found in other parts of the Hebrew
bible. They refused to believe in the existence of angels or the resurrection
from the dead.
I
was reminded of that dramatic scene in the Acts of the Apostles when Paul is
brought before the Sanhedrin, the ruling council of the Jews, and said, “My
brothers, I am on trial for hope in the resurrection of the dead.” When he said
this, a rowdy dispute broke out between the Pharisees and the Sadducees. The Sadducees say that there is no resurrection or angels or spirits, while the
Pharisees acknowledge all three. (See Acts chapters 22 and 23)
To
put this reading in context, it is important to know that the Sadducees only
accepted the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, known as the Pentateuch, the
Torah. They said that they found no evidence of the resurrection in those five
books, so they rejected the idea. It was based on this that they presented a
problem to Jesus designed to show how false the whole idea of resurrection was.
They
used as their argument Levirate marriage, (Deut. 25: 5-10) by which a man was
expected to marry the childless widow of his brother. This was so that the dead
man’s name would be carried on to the next generation. However, in their
challenge, the Sadducees propose an extreme case where seven brothers, all who
die before having children, are married successively to the same woman. They
conclude by asking, “At the resurrection which of the brothers will be the
wife’s husband, since she was married to them all?” The Sadducees felt that
without belief in life after death, there is no problem, their hypothetical
question was unanswerable, if not absurd.
Jesus
answers their question on various levels. First, he implies that life after
death is not the same as the physical existence that we now experience.
Secondly, Jesus raises a point that is woven through the whole of the Gospel
message. All those who are in Christ enter into a new relationship with God and
other people. These relationships transcend family ties and marriage. Jesus
says, “The children of this age marry and remarry; but those who are deemed
worthy to attain the coming age, and to the resurrection of the dead, neither
marry nor are given in marriage. They can no longer die, for they are like
angels, and they are the children of God because they are the ones who will
rise.” In this light, the argument of the Sadducees collapses. It is seen as
very ‘this-worldly’ and narrow-minded.
Jesus
ends his response by quoting a passage from Exodus, about Moses and the Burning
Bush. “That the dead will rise,” Jesus says, “even Moses made known in the
passage about the bush, when the Lord called out, “I am the God of Abraham, the
God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, (Ex 3:6).” And God, Jesus tells the
Sadducees, is God, “not of the dead, but of the living; for to him, all are in
fact alive.” The Sadducees fall silent. They could not contradict the Word of
God coming through Moses.
In
general, the theme of today’s Mass is that Jesus is the Lord of life, a life
that is not terminated by physical death. We see this in today’s first reading
from the Book of Maccabees. The mother and her seven sons willingly die
rather than transgress the laws and customs of their ancestors. All of whom
give their life because of their belief in the resurrection. As the second
brother said before dying, “The King of the world will raise us up to live
forever.” And the same with the fourth, “It is my choice to die at the hands of
men with the hope God gives of being raised up by Him.”
We
must admit that we do not possess adequate knowledge or the language to
describe what the resurrection will be like. I remember that soon before Fr.
Gerald died one of the brothers asked him, “what is it like to die?” With his
typical dry humor Fr. Gerald answered, “I don’t know, I’ve never done it
before.” Jesus’s teaching in today’s gospel is that heaven cannot be understood
as an extension of our present existence. We can’t simply assume that the life
we live now will be the life we have in eternity. To this, I think many would
say, ‘thank God.’
The
stories in today’s liturgy present human situations which cry out to teach us
the resurrection of the dead. Innocent suffering on behalf of truth, as
depicted in the Maccabees, demands that the just God give a final rationale for
human suffering, which is the perennial question of every generation.
Christian
belief in immortality is unique and special. The Gospel of Jesus Christ, we
believe, is the Good News of the fullness of life in this age, and of resurrection
in the age to come.
In the final line of the Creed we say, “and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.” This belief, that at our resurrection our body joins with our spirit to continue our existence in eternal life, no one fully understands, at least not in this life. What we do know is that this life isn’t all there is.
Today's homily by Father Emmanuel.