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Preaching on Purgatory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
Extract
‘Then Jesus, crying with a loud voice, said, “Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit!” And having said this he breathed his last.’
According to St Luke, the Lord dies fully conscious, quoting this line from the 31st psalm: ‘Into thy hands I commit my spirit!’ And, later on, in St Luke’s second book, the Acts of the Apostles, we hear St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, saying as he is dying: ‘Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.’ And in the 1st epistle of Peter Christians suffering severe hardship are told to ‘entrust their souls to a faithful Creator’.
Trusting ourselves to God, letting go, putting ourselves in the hands of God. Down through the ages numerous holy men and women have urged us to do this, but it is not quite as easy as it sounds. There are all sorts of obstacles—our sins, hang-ups deep down inside us—that stop nearly all of us, right until the end, right until death, from letting go completely.
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- Copyright © 1990 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 Luke 23:46. The Gospel Reading at this Mass was Luke 23:44–49; 24: 1–5.
2 Enarrationes in Psalmos 30, s 3; 8 (PL 36, 252; CCL 38, p. 218).
3 ‘Eschatologie’, in Fragen der Theologie heute, pp. 407–8.
4 Cf. Denzinger‐Schönmetzer 2063; Boros, L.: The Moment of Truth, London 1962, p. 192Google Scholar.
5 In festo omnium sanctorum, sermo 3 (cf. Apoc. 6:11); sermo 4, n. 2 (PL 183, 468–73).
6 Meditationes püssimae de cognitione humanae conditionis, c. 15, n. 14 (PL 184, 495). Cf. also quotation from Claudianus Mamertus in Lubac, H. de, Catholicism, ET London 1950, pp. 242f.Google Scholar
7 Cf. de Lubac, op. cit. p. 51.