This is Eternal Life?
Pastor’s Column
Easter Sunday 2014
“For as the Father has life in himself, so he has given to the Son also that he might have life in himself.” John 5:26
Science fiction has had a long fascination with the idea of being able to transfer one’s consciousness, or the essence of who we are, into some kind of machine or computer. For example, I remember an old Star Trek episode that explored this possibility and the inherent drawbacks in the plot line. So it was with more than a little fascination that I ran across an article in this month’s Popular Science that highlighted research with the goal of ultimately doing just this very thing…mapping the brain in such a way as to transfer its processes to a machine and thus live forever!
Would you be willing to try this when your body wears out? Of course, one is naturally skeptical that this kind of thing could ever capture the essence of our humanity, but what kind of immorality would this bring, anyway? Is this the best we can hope to do as human beings? Such an existence, even if it were possible, ultimately sounds more like purgatory than paradise.
Christians have had another, more practical answer to the pressing issue of our mortality for almost 2000 years. Notice what Jesus says in John’s gospel: Jesus has life in himself. Our life is borrowed.
Our lives are by their very nature finite and limited. We began our existence in a moment of time, our conception, our life borrowed from our parents. Our bodies, made of dust, must one day return to the earth. In fact, our existence comes from God!
Our modern technology seeks to create and manipulate life, when in fact it cannot even sustain it. Our life is borrowed from God, whereas Jesus, as the Son of God, is life itself. He doesn’t borrow life from anyone: he is life. The Lord has existence within him and offers this eternal existence to us who believe in him. This is the very essence of our faith!
Even if it were possible to live forever on earth as some kind of android/computer consciousness, there would come a time, after eons of earthly existence, when we would have seen and done everything. What kind of world would this be if tyrants never died and the rich just kept getting richer and never had to pass it along?
Nothing on earth satisfies us in the end because God put the essence of eternity in our hearts, whether we realize it or not. This is why we are driven to try to find life in other parts of the universe and to even try to build a machine that would theoretically enable us to live forever on earth.
A life such as this, but without God, can never ultimately satisfy the human heart. Instead, we put our hope in Jesus Christ raised from the dead: “Now this is eternal life: that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, who you have sent.” (John 17:3)
Father Gary
Posted by Dr. Scott Hahn on 04.18.14 |Bible, Catholic, Christ, Easter, Jesus, Mass, Reflection, Resurrection, Scott Hahn
Readings:
Acts 10:34, 37-43
Psalm 118:1-2, 16-17, 22-23
Colossians 3:1-4
John 20:1-9
Jesus is nowhere visible. Yet todays Gospel tells us that Peter and John saw and believed.
What did they see? Burial shrouds lying on the floor of an empty tomb. Maybe that convinced them that He hadnt been carted off by grave robbers, who usually stole the expensive burial linens and left the corpses behind.
But notice the repetition of the word tomb - seven times in nine verses. They saw the empty tomb and they believed what He had promised: that God would raise Him on the third day.
Chosen to be His witnesses, todays First Reading tells us, the Apostles were commissioned to preach and testify to all that they had seen - from His anointing with the Holy Spirit at the Jordan to the empty tomb.
More than their own experience, they were instructed in the mysteries of the divine economy, Gods saving plan - to know how all the prophets bear witness to Him (see Luke 24:27,44).
Now they could understand the Scripture, could teach us what He had told them - that He was the Stone which the builders rejected, which todays Psalm prophesies His Resurrection and exaltation (see Luke 20:17; Matthew 21:42; Acts 4:11).
We are the children of the apostolic witnesses. That is why we still gather early in the morning on the first day of every week to celebrate this feast of the empty tomb, give thanks for Christ our life, as todays Epistle calls Him.
Baptized into His death and Resurrection, we live the heavenly life of the risen Christ, our lives hidden with Christ in God.
We are now His witnesses, too. But we testify to things we cannot see but only believe; we seek in earthly things what is above. We live in memory of the Apostles witness, like them eating and drinking with the risen Lord at the altar. And we wait in hope for what the Apostles told us would come - the day when we too will appear with Him in glory.