The teachings of the Church about the last things are teachings about humanity. The point is that people are created for a future with God but they are absolutely free to decide if they will participate in that future. The future has not yet been experience but it is being realized now. We do not pretend to know everything about it nor do we need to. What our tradition has done is make certain conclusions based on our experience of the present. Primarily, we believe that the person is not abolished by death but rather transposed into another mode of living.
There are many poetic images that we use to communicate something about this. We recognize that we do not have eyewitness from the future that is why images such as angels and their trumpets, or Christ dividing the sheep from the goats are used. Poetic images are one thing and the content or meaning of them is another. We need to reflect on the meaning behind the images. Our tradition teaches us that there will be an individual judgement at the moment of death and some kind of communal judgement when Christ comes in glory at the end of history. The Council of Florence (1439) taught that after the individual judgement at death, unless in need of purification, people “see clearly…as God is, though some more perfectly than others, according to the diversity of merits” emphasizing that human differences matter and our decisions matter in an ultimate way. The idea of judgement presents the possibility of Hell. This is a troubling recognition that we cannot avoid the ambiguity of our own lives simply by flippantly saying everyone is saved. The great theologian Karl Rahner wrote that we should not try to say too much about it either, “we neither can nor must say anything about the end of an individual who suffers final loss except that a person who is still living in history and is just now exercising his freedom must reckon with this possibility…” What we do know is that God grants people freedom to respond to his love or live a totally isolated existence. Purgatory is the “process by which we are purged of our residual selfishness so that we can really become one with the God who is totally self-giving.” The Church recognizes the possibility of maturation and growth after death. We do not see this as punishment but rather a surrendering our self-centered idea of who we are so that our God-centered existence may begin. During Advent many of the readings touch on these themes. We recognize that Christ experienced death and even preached the Gospel to the dead. His redemptive work extends to people of all times and places. As the Provincial Council of Quiercy stated in 853, “there is not, has never been, and never will be a single human being for whom Christ did not suffer.”
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