The Four Last Things

Aside

The Four Last Things

The stadium will filled with spectators, as it was on most Sundays during the American football season, BUT this Sunday and this game was very special! The home team’s famous and very beloved quarterback had just played his last game….he was retiring from the game. There would no more last minute heroics, which thrilled the fans year after year; the hero would not be returning for the next season. After the last play of the game, he stood on the sideline with a football clutched in his right hand, held high in acknowledgement to the fans for their thunderous ovation. Under his left arm he cradled his helmet and then slowly he walked off the field. The fans grudgingly stopped applauding him. The end had occurred; both the player and the fans knew that this was the end of a wonderful relationship….something they knew must end, but which they wanted to continue. One could sense the emotion saying, “Please keep it going.” Yet they knew it was over.

After the last game, evaluations of the impact the quarterback on the game, the town, and the fans began and would continue for years. Most will be very positive, though a few will be less so. The judgments will change with the passing of time, but his fans will always be true and forgiving, if forgiving is required. The hero had played his role and had been true to his team and the fans.

As it was with the football player, so it is with all of us. There will be a time when we will walk off the field of our occupations into retirement or a new endeavor. Judgments will be rendered about our performance and our loyalty to friends and fellow employees.  How we are judged will be based on the view of each individual evaluating us. The only certainty is that we will be judged ….judgment is something that we cannot escape. It is part of our existence.

When the game of life is over and we are subject to death, we will be judged again, but this time it will be for the final time. While many people will have different evaluations of our performance in life, there is only one judgment that will count….God’s judgment! Be assured, He will judge us and His judgment will be rendered quickly….no waiting here and there will be no revisionist version. God’s judgment is quick and final for each individual. Eternal life will be ours, either in Paradise or in Hell.

Oh yes, there is no avoiding the final judgment on our lives; it will be given by God. Our eternal lives will be spent either in heaven or hell. Though God renders the final verdict, by the choices we make in this life, each one of us actually determines where our souls will spend eternity. Each individual makes the choice, choosing eternal happiness or eternal despair.  Death, judgment, heaven or hell, the four last things….only concerning the last two things will we have a choice. Choose well….while you can!

Catholicism, Revolution, and Conformity

Catholicism, Revolution, and Conformity

 It has been suggested that Catholicism is stodgy, old-fashioned, constraining, and conformist. The truth is that none of these descriptions of Catholicism are true; rather Catholicism is consistently revolutionary, challenging the demands for conformity in every age. In his masterpiece, “Orthodoxy”, G.K. Chesterton succinctly noted, “People have fallen into the foolish habit of speaking of orthodoxy as something heavy, humdrum, and safe. There never has been anything so perilous or as exciting as orthodoxy.”

 The modern world trumpets freedom and self expression, yet it is in reality conformist in the extreme. Moderns must conform to concepts of the day, to the hip music, to whatever is in vogue, and, most importantly, to the glorification of self.  Modernity is a slave to the self; its freedom is not liberating, but rather is very confining. Its sole object is the self. It has made science and government (the state), the new gods, possessing answers to all questions. The modern emphasis on the self demands that man subjugates everything to that which enhances the self. Consequently, those objects that represent an inconvenience or threat to the self can be eliminated or severely restricted, such as unwanted unborn (or even born) children, the elderly, or other supposedly “non productive” people.

On the other hand, only Catholicism is the true revolutionary, challenging each generation in every society to view liberty as the limiting of the selfish, while focusing outward on others and on the Other. For this reason, Catholicism is viewed as a great peril by those that want to limit man’s vision to the narrow confines of self. Notwithstanding the personal failures of many within the Church, Catholicism remains the only true revolutionary. It alone defines the true objection of man’s efforts – God. It is not conformist or stagnate, but rather is challenging and alive, seeking man’s fulfillment through and with God.

Catholicism is hated and feared by many as the most radical system of beliefs, not only because its belief and total acceptance of God, but also because it is seen as a threat to self-centered individualism and the power of the state.

Suggested Reading:

“Orthodoxy” by G.K. Chesterton, published by Ignatius Press