In the readings today, the Church presents for us a strong reminder and teaching on the resurrection. Jesus himself leads the charge against those who would deny the resurrection from the dead and the seven Brothers of the first reading along with their mother bring up the rear. Let’s take a look at what we are taught in three stages.
I. Ridicule of the Resurrection – The Gospel opens with the observation that Some Sadducees, who deny there is a resurrection, came forward and put [a] question to Jesus. These Sadducees propose to Jesus a ridiculous example about a woman who was married seven times to successively dying brothers and had no children by any of them. They suggest that the resurrection will cause there to be a real confusion in determining whose husband she really is! Now we’re all supposed to laugh, according to these Sadducees, and conclude that the idea of resurrection is ludicrous.
Jesus will dismiss their absurdity handily as we shall see in a moment. But let’s take a moment and consider why the Sadducees disbelieved the resurrection.
Fundamentally, they rejected the resurrection due to the fact that they accepted only the first five books of the Bible: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. Now this is somewhat debated among scholars but for our purposes we can surely say that if something was not explicitly in the Law of Moses, they were unlikely to accept it. All the other Old Testament books such as the prophets, the historical books, the psalms, and the wisdom tradition were set aside by them as authoritative sources.
They further claimed that, in these first five books, the resurrection of the dead was not taught. Most other Jews of Jesus’ time did accept the complete Old Testament, and teachings such as the resurrection of the dead which are set forth there, but the Sadducees simply did not. They were a small party within Judaism (Josephus said they were able to persuade none but the rich). Nevertheless they were influential due especially to their wealth and to the fact that they predominated among the Temple leadership. You can read more of them here: Sadducees
Hence the Sadducees arrive to poke fun at Jesus and all others who held that the dead would rise.
They are no match for Jesus who easily dispatches their arguments. And Jesus uses the Book of Exodus, a book they accept, to do it. In effect Jesus argument proceeds as such:
- You accept Moses, do you not?
- (To which they would surely reply yes)
- But Moses teaches that the dead will rise.
- (Jesus must have gotten puzzled looks but he presses on).
- You accept that God is a God of the living and not the dead?
- (To which they would surely reply yes).
- Then why does God in Exodus identify himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, all of whom have been dead some 400 years? How can he call himself their God if they are dead?
- Obviously they are alive, for he could not call himself their God, for he is not a God of the dead but of the living.
- So they are alive to God. They are not dead.
Hence Jesus dispatches their view. For us, the point is to see how forcefully and clearly Jesus upholds the fact that the dead are alive in the Lord. He powerfully asserts an essential doctrine of the Church and we should rejoice at how firmly Jesus rebukes their disbelief in the resurrection of the dead.
Rejoice! For your loved ones are alive before God . To this world they may seem dead, but Jesus tells us firmly and clearly today, they live. Likewise we too, who will face physical death will also live on. Let the world ridicule this, but hear what Jesus says and how he easily dispatches them. Though ridiculed, the resurrection is real.
II. Resplendence of the Resurrection– Jesus also sets aside the silly scenario that the Sadducees advance by teaching in effect that earthly realities cannot simply be projected in to heaven. Marriage scenarios, perceived in earthly ways, cannot be used to understand heavenly realities. The Saints in heaven live beyond earthly categories.
Heaven is more than the absence of bad things and more than the accumulation of good things. Heaven is far beyond anything this world can offer. Scripture says, No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no human mind has conceived — the things God has prepared for those who love him (1 Cor 2:9). And Again, The sufferings of this world cannot compare to the glory that will be revealed in us (Rom 8:18).
Do you see the majesty of this teaching? We have a glory waiting for us beyond imagining. Consider your greatest pleasure, your happiest experience, your most fulfilled moment. Now multiply them by ten trillion. You are not even close understanding the glory that waits.
And this glory will personally transform us. The Lord once told Catherine of Siena that if she ever saw the glory of a Saint in heaven she would fall down and worship because she would think she was looking at God. This is our dignity, to be transformed into the very likeness of God and reflect his glory. Here is an elaboration of Catherine’s vision of the soul of a saint in heaven:
It was so beautiful that she could not look on it; the brightness of that soul dazzled her. Blessed Raymond, her confessor, asked her to describe to him, as far as she was able, the beauty of the soul she had seen. St. Catherine thought of the sweet light of that morning, and of the beautiful colors of the rainbow, but that soul was far more beautiful. She remembered the dazzling beams of the noonday sun, but the light which beamed from that soul was far brighter. She thought of the pure whiteness of the lily and of the fresh snow, but that is only an earthly whiteness. The soul she had seen was bright with the whiteness of Heaven, such as there is not to be found on earth. ” My father,” she answered. “I cannot find anything in this world that can give you the smallest idea of what I have seen. Oh, if you could but see the beauty of a soul in the state of grace, you would sacrifice your life a thousand times for its salvation. I asked the angel who was with me what had made that soul so beautiful, and he answered me, “It is the image and likeness of God in that soul, and the Divine Grace which made it so beautiful.” [1].
Yes, heaven is glorious and we shall be changed. Scripture says we shall be like the Lord for we shall see him as he is(1 John 3:2).It also says, He will change our lowly body to conform with his glorified Body by the power that enables him also to bring all things into subjection to himself. (Phil 3:19) I have written more on our resurrected bodies here: What will our resurrected bodies be like?
Further, too many people have egocentric notions of heaven where “I” will have a mansion, I will see My relatives, I will play all the golf I want. But the heart of heaven is to be with God for whom our heart longs. In God we will experience fulfillment and peace beyond any earthly thing. There is more to heaven than golf, reunions and mansions, certainly more than clouds and harps. The “more” can never be told for it is beyond words. St Paul speaks of a man (himself) who was caught up into heaven and affirms it cannot be described, it is ineffable, it is unspeakable:
I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven…. And I know that this man—whether in the body or apart from the body I do not know, but God knows— was caught up to paradise and heard inexpressible things, things that no one is permitted to tell. (2 cor 12:2-3).
Do you long for heaven? Do you meditate on it? Is there a part of you that can’t wait to get there? There’s an Old Spiritual that says, “I’m gonna ride the Chariot in the mornin’ Lord. I’m getting ready for the judgment say, Mah Lord, Mah Lord! And this leads us to the final point.
III. Response to the Resurrection– What difference does the resurrection make other than to give us joy if we meditate upon it? To see that answer, look to the first reading today, where the seven brothers are willing to accept torture and death. If there is a great reward waiting for those who remain faithful and we see that reward as the greatest thing we have , then we will endure anything to get there. Notice how the vision of heaven spurs them on to reject demands of their persecutors that they deny their faith:
We are ready to die rather than transgress the laws of our ancestors…. You are depriving us of this present life, but the King of the world will raise us up to live again forever. It is for his laws that we are dying….. the king and his attendants marveled at the young man’s courage, because he regarded his sufferings as nothing (2 Maccabees, 7:2,9, 12)
Only their vision of the rewards waiting for them could motivate them to endure the awful sufferings described in the 7th Chapter of 2nd Maccabees
And what of us? Do we meditate on heaven and value it’s reward enough to be willing to endure suffering to get there? We need a strong vision of heaven to be able to endure and stand fast. Too many today have lost a deep appreciation for heaven. Too many pray to God merely for worldly comforts and rewards. But these will pass. We ought to ask God for a deep desire and drive for heaven and the things waiting for us there.
What athlete will discipline his body, as severely as they do, without the deep motivation of reward and the satisfaction of meeting goals? What college student attends thousands of hours of school, reads lengthy books and writes lengthy papers if it is not for the pot of gold and career at the end of the trail? Then, who of us will endure the trials of faith if we are not deeply imbued with the vision of glory and deeply desirous of its fulfillment no matter the cost? Without this our moral and spiritual life become tepid and our willingness to endure trials falls away. An old hymn says:
When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say,
It is well, it is well, with my soul.
And Lord, haste the day when my faith shall be sight,
The clouds be rolled back as a scroll;
The trump shall resound, and the Lord shall descend,
Even so, it is well with my soul.
Meditate on heaven often. Although we can never fully grasp its glory here, we ought not let that stop us from imagining what we can. Read Revelation Chapters 4,5, 8, 21 & 22. But above all, ask God for an ever deepening desire for Him and the good things waiting for you in heaven. Look to heaven, long for heaven, desire God and deeply root your life in him. Heaven will not disappoint!
This African American Spiritual says, I’m gonna ride the chariot in the morning Lord! I’m gettin ready for the judgment day, My Lord, My Lord! Are you ready my brother? (Oh yes!) Are you ready for the journey? (Oh Yes!), do you want to see Jesus (Yes, Yes!) I’m waiting for the Chariot ’cause I ready to go. I never can forget that day, (Ride in the chariot to see my Lord), My feet were snatched from the miry clay! (Ride in the chariot to see my Lord!)
As I understand it, heaven is falling in love, with all the excitement that that brings. And it goes on, and on, and on forever. It is a falling in love which never ends. It is always new. It never grows stale. We fall in love with the most beautiful Being there is and He reflects that love back to us. It is a never ending excitement, and it is a never ending fulfillment.
Amen msgr..another day of grace and blessings from god thru you. Let me share funny-tickling stories of heaven here in the philippines.
One day in heaven, as jesus was walking in his kingdom, he noticed 2 ugly-looking souls chanting with praise, bowing facing east, seemed so very joyful at the sight of beauty in heaven. Jesus, didnt mind them at first but was curious who where they, he asked St. Peter who was manning the gate if he noticed them, St. Peter replied, master i noticed them too but i do not have the slightest idea who were they too. 2nd day, as jesus was walking in his kingdom, he noticed hundreds of ugly-looking souls again but this time they were in large groups chanting praise all facing east, jesus curiosity lead him to asked St.peter again who was manning the gate of heaven who were really they and where they come from, St.peter humbly replied, master and my rabbi, i really do not have the slightest idea who were they and where they come from, i too, am really curious my lord. St. Peter’s replied made jesus skeptic as though he was the one in-charge manning the gate of heaven and he do not know who were they, jesus scolded St.peter and told him that ifever i caught you telling a lie to me i will throw you out of here,this thing shouldnt be happening in our house, but jesus realized St.peter must be telling the truth. On the 3rd day, due to St. Peter’s and jesus curiosity, they hid in a column nearest the gate of heaven, waited in suspicion who will approached the gate, as it was noon time. A little moment passed and they saw a lady with a crown, accompanied by a few arch angels, slowly walking towards the gate, while turning their heads back and front as if checking who was looking at them. It was the blessed virgin mary, who opened the gates and let the poor souls enter the kingdom, while souls are entering, they saw the mother of god telling these souls to keep quite and slowly walk towards their room. Now jesus knew who was the one responsible for this, St. Peter asks jesus, my lord, it was your mother who is doing these, what shall you do then my lord? Jesus replied, my child, heaven is for all my children, just let them enter…and i saw nothing today and dont tell the other apostles of mine ok?
the power of the mother of god and her rosaries, being the mediatrix of all her beloved children is as potent as being meditated upon too.
Msgr. Pope,
Your reflections truly are a gift from God.
I was watching a program of the pictures sent back from the Hubble Telescope and put the Chemical make up of the object into a digital photo. I was stunned by one they called the “Three Spire Nebula” it was what I have meditated Heaven to be, that and the beautiful music of the Angels and Saints. Giving Praise to the Almighty God our Father.
Thank you for your beautiful language of words.
Well, I’m off to church and this explanation of God’s Word is very helpful! Thank you!
In Hebrews 11:34-36, we read:
Women received back their dead, raised to life again. There were others who were tortured, refusing to be released so that they might gain an even better resurrection.
Paul (?) includes this woman and her sons in the long list of those who demonstrated faith in action. All those Protestants out there who won’t acknowledge the books of the Maccabees because they are “apocryphal” (false) lose testimony that would help them better understand Jesus’s and Paul’s words.
As for the concept of “resurrection”, our daily life gives many clues: every night we lie down to sleep (die) and every morning we rise. Every night the sun sinks beneath the earth, only to rise again the next morning. The acorn dies in the ground and gives birth to a transformed life. Every winter the trees “die” and spring to life in the spring. I believe that many people, when they die and rise again, will say, “It was so obvious! How did I miss it?!”
I would be questioning how it is seven brothers who all married the same woman mannaged to succesively die and she would be the prime suspect.
Amen.
Also, this passage is important because of where Jesus says, “. . . they will be as the angels in heaven. . . (Luke 20:36)” That passage together with Revelation 8:3-4: ” 3 There was another angel that came and took his stand at the altar, with a censer of gold; and incense was given him in plenty, so that he could make an offering on the golden altar before the throne, out of the prayers said by all the saints.[1] 4 So, from the angel’s hand, the smoke of the incense went up in God’s presence, kindled by the saints’ prayer.[2]” supports the Catholic teaching about intercessory prayer to saints–who are now like angels in heaven. St. Paul referred to living believers as ‘saints’.
To me, the important thing to remember is that we are blind to the thing we most want to see–the face of God–and to the extent that we are caught up in carnal desires and such we become blind to our blindness.
Sandi Patty’s voice is wonderful! Thank you for including this song…
So thankful for your blog – your writings Msgr. Pope. Happy Sunday from the left coast!
thanks for the reflection.i believe in death and resurrection of the body.st. catherine of siena describes the angelic appearance of the saints in heaven.heaven is our destination to be glorified by our God.
If you cannot read the Bible, get an album of old Negro spirituals.