December
2011 - Vol. 55
.The
Last Judgement in Revelation
.
by Romano Guardini
Near the end of his life, during his last visit to Jerusalem, Jesus
spoke these words:
“And immediately after the tribulation of those days, the sun
shall be darkened and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars
shall fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall be moved. And then
shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven; and then shall all tribes
of the earth mourn; and they shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds
of heaven with much power and majesty. And he shall send his angels with
a trumpet, and a great voice: and they shall gather together his elect
from the four winds, and from the farthest parts of the heavens to the
utmost bounds of them.” (Matthew 24:29-31)
And again: “When the Son of Man shall come in his majesty, and all the
angels with him, then shall he sit upon the seat of his majesty. And all
nations shall be gathered together before him, and he shall separate them
one from another, as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. And
he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on his left. Then
shall the King say to them that shall be on his right hand: ‘Come, blessed
of my Father, possess the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world. For I was hungry, and you gave me to eat; I was thirsty,
and you gave me to drink; I was a stranger, and you took me in; naked,
and you covered me; sick, and you visited me; I was in prison, and you
came to me.’ Then shall the just answer him, saying: ‘Lord, when did we
see you hungry, and feed you; thirsty, and gave you drink? And when did
we see you a stranger, and take you in? Or naked, and cover you? Or when
did we see you sick, or in prison, and come to you?’ And the King answering,
shall say to them: ‘Amen I say to you, as long as you did it to one of
these, my least brethren, you did it to me.’
And then he shall say to them also that shall be on his left hand: ‘Depart
from me, you cursed, into the everlasting fire which was prepared for the
Devil and his angels. For I was hungry, and you gave me not to eat; I was
thirsty, and you gave me not to drink. I was a stranger, and you took me
not in; naked, and you covered me not; sick and in prison, and you did
not visit me.’ Then they also shall answer him, saying: ‘Lord, when did
we see you hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in
prison, and did not minister to you?’ Then he shall answer them, saying:
‘Amen, I say to you, as long as you did it not to one of these least, neither
did you do it unto me.’ And these shall go into everlasting punishment,
but the just into life everlasting.” (Matthew 25:31-46)
If we shake off the seeming familiarity which comes from having heard them
often, these passages strike us suddenly as strange and disconcerting.
This is not how we should expect things to be. Here premises are taken
for granted to which we are not sure we can give assent. But if we have
some acquaintance with revelation, and know enough of men to treat certain
of their unconscious assumptions with caution—and these are the first steps
in Christian knowledge—it is this very feeling that here is something disconcerting
that alerts us to the fact that we are face to face with an essential and
crucial element in our faith. The disconcerting element here lies in the
concrete, the personal approach.
Habit of the modern
mind
The habit of the modern mind is to take seriously only that kind of
thinking that interprets everything in terms of natural necessity or of
intellectual laws. Existence for us has become a system of matter and energy,
of law and natural order. Every process takes place within that system.
Children or simple folk may think of natural objects as being manipulated
by superior beings, as they are in legends and fairy tales, but the educated
adult does not. For him the first condition of intelligent thinking is
to conceive of the universe as an interconnection of physical and spiritual
laws, which govern man and his destinies as well as the historical process.
If a final judgment is posited—a procedure, that is, by which the life
and deeds of man are scrutinized, judged, and given their eternal value—we
would have to think of it as a judgment in which man, or more properly
his spirit, comes into the unveiled light of God, and in that light, his
life becomes transparent, and his worth is made evident.
Christ comes as
judge
In Jesus’ discourse on the Last Judgment, however, this is not at all
what takes place. The judge is not an abstract deity, an all-wise, all-righteous
spirit, but Christ, the Son made man. Nor does man, by the mere fact of
his death, or the world, simply by coming to an end, appear before God.
Rather, it is Christ who “comes.” He comes to the world and wrests it from
a condition in which “this-sidedness” and the subjection to natural law
make possible the obscurity of history. A final investigation is carried
out which brings all existing things into the presence of Christ. Men,
not only their spirits, appear before him—men in their concrete, soul-and-body
actuality; and not individual men only, but “the world.” In order to make
this possible, the body—the deceased, corrupt body—rises up from the dead,
not by any natural necessity, but in obedience to the summons of Christ.
And the act of judgment is not simply illumination in the eternal light
and holiness of God, but an act of Jesus Christ, who was once upon earth
and now reigns in eternal glory. He reviews mankind in its whole history,
as well as each particular man, passes judgment, and assigns to each man
that form of being which accords with his worth in the sight of God.
Sheer fantasy
or myth?
To modern man, all this appears as sheer fantasy—at best as symbol.
To his mentality, this kind of thinking is on the level of children and
primitives. Mythology, folklore, and fairy tales treat universal processes
in this anthropomorphic manner, that is, as modeled on human conduct. Children,
as soon as they grow up, and primitive people, when they become civilized,
perceive that the universe is governed by inflexible laws and must be conceived
of in philosophical or scientific terms. The Christian teaching of the
Last Judgment is just a myth and must give way to a more serious and advanced
view of reality.
A direct intervention
in human history
Again we have to decide where we stand with regard to revelation. Are
we to confine our faith to our emotions, and adapt our thinking to that
of current views, or shall we be Christians in our minds also? For what
modern man describes as childish, primitive, and anthropomorphic is the
essential, distinguishing quality of our faith. For when the worth of the
world and of history are finally determined, it will not be by universal
natural or spiritual laws, nor by confrontation with an absolute, divine
reality, but by a divine act. Let it be well understood—by an act, and
not through the workings of some force of nature or spirit, just as the
economy of salvation does not rest upon some higher natural order but upon
a direct intervention of God, which takes place in the sphere of human
history and finds constant expression in this sphere; and just as the world
did not evolve as a natural reality from natural causes, but as God’s work,
summoned into being by his free and all-powerful word.
If we want to be Christians in our thinking also, then we cannot conceive
of the relation of God to the world, to man, and to the whole of existence
in terms derived from natural science or metaphysics, but only in concepts
belonging to the personal sphere; that is, precisely in the despised anthropomorphic
concepts of action, decision, destiny, and freedom. Such is the language
of Scripture, and when a man has striven for truth with sufficient sincerity
and above all with sufficient patience for false notions to fall away and
things to show themselves in their true light, he comes to see that in
the final sifting of values, what really meets the case are those so-called
anthropomorphic concepts.
A sign of contradiction
The judgment is the last in the series of God’s acts. It proceeds from
his free counsels, and is carried out by him whose intervention in history
was rejected by men at his appearance upon earth, but whose destiny, since
God is faithful, accomplished our redemption. Throughout history, he has
remained as a “sign that will be contradicted,” (Luke 2:34) as the touchstone
for men and for nations. It is he who executes the judgment. He is doing
it because he is God’s Son, because he is the Word “through whom all things
were made,” (John 1:3) and to whom the world belongs, whether the world
acknowledges it or not.
How does God’s
judgment take place?
The strangeness which reverses our scientific and philosophic notions
reaches still deeper. How does this judgment take place? On what is it
based, and according to what standards does it determine a man’s worth?
At first glance we might assume that what is judged would be a man’s
actions and omissions, his deeds as well as his character, the details
as much as the whole, each according to the multiplicity of rules and norms
pertaining to it. Instead, we see everything fused into only one thing:
love—the love that is aroused by compassion for man’s need. And what is
here in question is plainly that first and greatest commandment, and the
second which is like unto it, as Jesus taught in the Gospel, the commandment
of love, of which the apostle speaks as of “the fulfilling of the law”
(Matthew 24:37-39; Romans 13:10). Consequently, although it is only the
love for one’s neighbor that is mentioned, the commandment includes the
whole realm of love; only love is spoken of, but this love includes doing
and becoming and being what is right.
To love Christ
How will this standard of love be established and applied? The judge,
we might suppose, would say, “You have obeyed the law of love and are therefore
accepted,” or, “You have denied the law of love, and are therefore rejected.”
What he says, however, is, “You are accepted because you have shown love
to me; you are rejected because you denied me love.” This, too, is comprehensible,
we might answer, since love is the first commandment and should be practiced
toward all men, and since Christ, who enjoins this commandment and fulfilled
it himself to the uttermost, has placed himself, as it were, behind each
man to lend final weight to each individual being.
The highest standard
of love
This might well be so, but once we examine the context without bias,
we find that this is not what Christ teaches. The highest standard of love
is not the love Christ preaches and to which all are obligated, including
Christ himself; the highest standard of love is Christ himself. It begins
in him and persists through him. Outside of Christ, it is nonexistent,
and philosophical disquisitions on the subject have as little to do with
this kind of love as he who in the New Testament is called the Father has
to do with “the divinity of the heavenly sphere” or the concept of “cause
and effect” has to do with God’s providence.
The Christian
meaning of judgment
Now there opens before us the uniqueness, the awesomeness and, yes,
the scandal of the Christian meaning of judgment: man will be judged according
to his relationship to Christ. Truthfulness, justice, faithfulness, chastity,
and whatever else is considered ethical are in their deepest meaning the
right relationship to Christ. If we speak of truth, we imply a general
attitude of the mind, namely, the fact that we recognize something in the
light of eternal reality. But in the prologue to his Gospel, John gives
us to understand that this interpretation of truth is but an interpolated,
conditional link. Ultimately, truth is the Word, the Logos himself, and
knowledge, accordingly, is knowing the Logos, Christ, and all things in
him.
The same applies to judgment. If we speak of goodness, we imply the
highest value; and by right conduct, we understand the realization of good.
But according to the discourse on the Last Judgment, Christ is the good,
and to do good means to love Christ. Truth and goodness, in the final analysis,
are no mere abstract values and concepts, but someone—Jesus Christ. Reversing
the approach, we might say that every intimation of truth, however fragmentary,
is also the beginning of a knowledge of Christ. Similarly, any charitable
action is directed toward Christ, and reaches him in the end, just as any
wicked action, whatever its immediate context, is, in the end, an attack
upon him. Goodness may shine out in various places, in man, things, and
events; but in its essence it shines forth Jesus Christ. The doer need
have no thought of Christ; he may think of other people only, but his act
ultimately reaches Christ. He need not even know Christ and may never have
heard of him, yet what is done is done to Christ.
The fulfillment
of redemption
To pierce with his glance the width of the whole world and the course
of thousands of years, the life of each man and of each nation and community,
to judge and affix to each the meaning it bears eternally, is God’s act
of doom. Christ will come and execute that judgment. It will be irrevocable
because it is true, because it is the exact account without remainder of
every man, every community of men. It is irrevocable also because it is
an act of power as much as of truth, power that is absolute and irresistible.
By this judgment the state of man and of mankind will be settled before
God forever.
But Christ is not only Judge; he is also Redeemer. Even as Judge he
is Redeemer. The judgment is not the revenge of the offended Son of God,
not his personal triumph over his enemies. By saying that truth and goodness
are a person—Christ—it is not suggested that any personal element would
intrude and blur the impartial validity of truth and goodness. The judgment
is justice, yet not justice in and for itself, but justice bound up with
the living mind and love of Christ. The Last Judgment is the fulfillment
of redemption.
Greater than history
The vastness of such a view of things is overwhelming. It disrupts
and reverses modern thinking and its conception of existence as the expression
of natural law or a philosophical system. It is not ideas and laws that
matter, but reality. The most real of realities is a person, the Son of
God made man. He is what he was, Jesus of Nazareth. But he will be manifest
as Lord, mightier than the world, greater than history, and more comprehensive
than all that is called idea, value, or moral law. These things exist and
are valid, but only as rays from his light.
Seeing Christ
in everything
The doctrine of the Last Judgment is, at bottom, a revelation of Christ.
It shows us, too, the task which confronts us if we want to be Christians
in the true sense of the word. It implies seeing Christ in everything,
carrying his image in our hearts with such intensity that it lifts us above
the world, above history and the works of men, and enables us to see those
things for what they are, to weigh them and assign to them their eternal
value—in a word, to be their judges.
[This article is excerpted
from Eternal Life: What You Need to Know About Death, Judgment, and
Life Everlasting, Chapter 4, by Romano Guardini, 1998 edition by
Sophia
Institute Press, Manchester, New Hampshire, USA. Used with permission.]
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Romano Guardini (1885-1968)
was an influential Catholic philosopher, author, and priest in Germany.
He was chaplain for a Catholic youth movement and chair of the Philosophy
of Religion at the University of Berlin until the Nazis forced him to resign
in 1939. He openly opposed the Nazi ideology. His books, lectures, and
homilies influenced many Christian thinkers, especially in Central Europe,
including Josef Pieper and Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI).
Guardini's book, The Last
Things, was first published in German in 1940 and in 1966 by Werkbund-Verlag,
Würzburg, Germany, under the title Die Letzten Dinge: Die christliche
Lehre vom Tode, der Läuterung nach dem Tode, Auferstehung, Gericht
und Ewigkeit. Copyright © 1989 Matthias-Grünewald, Mainz
(second paperback edition 1995). All of the rights of the Author are vested
in the Catholic Academy in Bavaria..The 1998
edition, Eternal Life: What You Need to Know About Death, Judgment,
and Life Everlasting, published by Sophia Institute Press uses Pantheon’s
1954 translation by Charlotte E. Forsyth and Grace B. Branham, entitled
The
Last Things, with slight revisions to that text. English translation
Copyright © 1954 by Random House, Inc. This translation published
by arrangement with Pantheon Books, a Division of Random House, Inc. |
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