Pope at Mass: Take time to think about death
(Vatican Radio) With today’s readings, the Church invites us
to reflect on the end of the world, but also on the end of our own lives. Pope
Francis based his homily on the Gospel reading, where the Lord speaks about the
daily lives of men and women in the days before the great Flood, or in the days
of Lot – they lived normal lives, eating and drinking, doing business,
marrying. But the “day of the manifestation of the Lord” came – and things
changed.
The Church, our Mother, wants us to take time to consider our
own death, the Pope said. We are all used to the routine of daily life. We
think things will never change. But, Pope Francis continued, the day will come
when we will be called by the Lord. For some it will be unexpected; for others
it might come after a long illness – but the call will come. And then, the Pope
said, there will be another surprise from the Lord: eternal life.
This is why the Church asks us to “pause for a moment, take
a moment to think about death.” We should not become accustomed to earthly
life, as though it were eternity. “A day will come,” the Pope said, echoing the
words of Jesus in the Gospel, “when you will be taken away” to go with the
Lord. And so it is good to reflect upon the end of our life.
“Thinking about death is not a gruesome fantasy,” the Pope
said. “Whether it is gruesome or not depends on me, and how I think about it –
but what will be, will be.” When we die, we will meet the Lord – “this is the
beauty of death, it will be an encounter with the Lord, it is Him coming to
meet you, saying, “Come, come, [you who are] blessed by My Father, come with
me.”
The Holy Father concluded his homily with a story about an
elderly priest who was not feeling well. When he went to the doctor, the doctor
told him he was sick. “Perhaps we’ve caught it in time to treat it,” the doctor
told him. “We will try this treatment, and if this doesn’t work, we’ll try
something else. And if that doesn’t work, we will begin to walk [together], and
I will accompany you to the very end.”
Like the doctor, we too, the Pope said, must accompany one
another on this journey. We must do everything we can in order to assist the
sick; but always looking toward our final destiny, to the day when the Lord
will come to take us with Himself to our heavenly home.
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