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Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
LETTER ON CERTAIN QUESTIONS CONCERNING ESCHATOLOGY
May 17, 1979
The recent Synods of Bishops dealing with evangelization and catechesis
have created increasing awareness of the need for perfect fidelity to
the fundamental truths of faith, especially at the present time, when
profound changes in human society and the concern to integrate the
Christian faith into the various cultures require that a greater effort
be made than in the past to make that faith accessible and
communicable. This latter need, so urgent at present, requires that
greater care than ever be given to safeguarding the true meaning and
the integrity of the faith.
Hence, those responsible in this matter must be extremely attentive to
anything that might introduce into the general attitude of the faithful
a gradual debasement or progressive extinction of any element of the
baptismal Creed necessary for the coherence of the faith and
inseparably connected with important practices in the life of the
Church.
We think it urgently necessary to call one of these elements to the
attention of those to whom God has entrusted the function of advancing
and protecting the faith, in order that they may forestall the dangers
that could threaten this faith in the minds of the faithful.
The element in question is the article of the Creed concerning life
everlasting and so everything in general after death. When setting
forth this teaching, it is not permissible to remove any point, nor can
a defective or uncertain outlook be adopted without endangering the
faith and salvation of Christians.
The importance of this final article of the baptismal Creed is obvious:
it expresses the goal and purpose of God's plan, the unfolding of which
is described in the Creed. If there is no resurrection, the whole
structure of faith collapses, as St. Paul states so forcefully (cf. 1
Cor. 15). If the content of the words "life everlasting" is uncertain
for Christians, the promises contained in the Gospel and the meaning of
creation and Redemption disappear, and even earthly life itself must be
said to be deprived of all hope (cf. Heb. 11:1).
But one cannot ignore the unease and disquiet troubling many with
regard to this question. It is obvious that doubt is gradually
insinuating itself deeply into people's minds. Even though, generally
speaking, the Christian is fortunately not yet at the point of positive
doubt, he often refrains from thinking about his destiny after death,
because he is beginning to encounter questions in his mind to which he
is afraid of having to reply, questions such as: Is there really
anything after death? Does anything remain of us after we die? Is it
nothingness that is before us?
Part of the cause of this is the unintentional effect on people's minds
of theological controversies given wide publicity today, the precise
subject and the significance of which is beyond the discernment of the
majority of the faithful. One encounters discussions about the
existence of the soul and the meaning of life after death, and the
question is put of what happens between the death of the Christian and
the general resurrection. All this disturbs the faithful, since they no
longer find the vocabulary they are used to and their familiar ideas.
There is no question here of restricting or preventing the theological
research that the faith of the Church needs and from which it should
profit. But this does not permit any omission of the duty to safeguard
promptly the faith of Christians on points called into doubt.
In the present serious situation, it is our intention to recall briefly
the nature and various features of this difficult twofold duty.
To begin with, those who act as teachers must clearly discern what the
Church considers to pertain to the essence of the faith; theological
research cannot have any other aim in view than to investigate this
more deeply and develop it.
The Sacred Congregation, whose task is to advance and protect the
doctrine of the faith, here wishes to recall what the Church teaches in
the name of Christ, especially concerning what happens between the
death of the Christian and the general resurrection.
1. The Church believes (cf. the Creed) in the resurrection of the dead.
2. The Church understands this resurrection as referring to the
whole person; for the elect it is nothing other than the extension to
human beings of the resurrection of Christ itself.
3. The Church affirms that a spiritual element survives and
subsists after death, an element endowed with consciousness and will,
so that the "human self" subsists. To designate this element, the
Church uses the word "soul," the accepted term in the usage of
Scripture and Tradition. Although not unaware that this term has
various meanings in the Bible, the Church thinks that there is no valid
reason for rejecting it; moreover, she considers that the use of some
word as a vehicle is absolutely indispensable in order to support the
faith of Christians.
4. The Church excludes every way of thinking or speaking that
would render meaningless or unintelligible her prayers, her funeral
rites and the religious acts offered for the dead. All these are, in
their substance, loci theologici.
5. In accordance with the Scriptures, the Church looks for "the
glorious manifestation of our Lord. Jesus Christ" (Dei Verbum. I. 4),
believing it to be distinct and deferred with respect to the situation
of people immediately after death.
6. In teaching her doctrine about man's destiny after death, the
Church excludes any explanation that would deprive the assumption of
the Virgin Mary of its unique meaning, namely the fact that the bodily
glorification of the Virgin is an anticipation of the glorification
that is the destiny of all the other elect.
7. In fidelity to the New Testament and Tradition, the Church
believes in the happiness of the just who will one day be with Christ.
She 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. She believes in
the possibility of a purification for the elect before they see God, a
purification altogether different from the punishment of the damned.
This is what the Church means when speaking of Hell and Purgatory.
When dealing with man's situation after death, one must especially
beware of arbitrary imaginative representations: excess of this kind is
a major cause of the difficulties that Christian faith often
encounters. Respect must, however, be given to the images employed in
the Scriptures. Their profound meaning must be discerned, while
avoiding the risk of over-attenuating them, since this often empties of
substance the realities designated by the images.
Neither Scripture nor theology provides sufficient light for a proper
picture of life after death. Christians must firmly hold the two
following essential points: on the one hand they must believe in the
fundamental continuity, thanks to the power of the Holy Spirit, between
our present life in Christ and the future life (charity is the law of
the kingdom of God and our charity on earth will be the measure of our
sharing in God's glory in heaven); on the other hand they must be
clearly aware of the radical break between the present life and the
future one, due to the fact that the economy of faith will be replaced
by the economy of fullness of life: we shall be with Christ and "we
shall see God" (cf. 1 Jn. 3:2), and it is in these promises and
marvelous mysteries that our hope essentially consists. Our imagination
may be incapable of reaching these heights, but our heart does so
instinctively and completely.
Having recalled these points of doctrine, we would now like to clarify
the principal features of the pastoral responsibility to be exercised
in the present circumstances in accordance with Christian prudence.
The difficulties connected with these questions impose serious
obligation on theologians, whose function is indispensable. Accordingly
they have every right to encouragement from us and to the margin of
freedom lawfully demanded by their methodology. We must, however,
unceasingly remind Christians of the Church's teaching, which is the
basis both of Christian life and of scholarly research. Efforts must
also be made to ensure that theologians share in our pastoral concern,
so that their studies and research may not be thoughtlessly set before
the faithful, who today more than ever are exposed to dangers to their
faith.
The last Synod highlighted the attention given by the bishops to the
essential points of catechesis with a view to the good of the faithful.
All who are commissioned to transmit these points must have a clear
idea of them. We must therefore provide them with the means to be firm
with regard to the essence of the doctrine and at the same time careful
not to allow childish or arbitrary images to be considered truths of
faith.
A Diocesan or National Doctrinal Commission should exercise constant
and painstaking vigilance with regard to publications, not only to give
timely warning to the faithful about writings that are unreliable in
doctrine but also and especially to acquaint them with works that can
nourish and support their faith. This is a difficult and important
task, but it is made urgent both by the wide circulation of printed
publications and by the decentralization of responsibilities demanded
by circumstances and desired by the Ecumenical Council.
At an audience granted to the undersigned Cardinal Prefect, the Supreme
Pontiff John Paul II approved the present Letter, decided upon at an
Ordinary Meeting of this Sacred Congregation, and ordered its
publication.
In Rome, at the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, on May 17, 1979.
Franjo Cardinal Seper,
Prefect
Fr. Jerome Hamer. O.P.,
Titular Archbishop of Lorium
Secretary
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