Jan 10 Sat
What is the mystery of death?
The mystery of death has always raised profound questions in human beings. The desire for life and eternity that we all feel for ourselves and for the people we love makes us see death as a sentence, as a ‘contradiction.’
For some, death seems to be a kind of taboo, an event that must be kept at a distance; something that must be spoken of in hushed tones, so as not to disturb our sensibilities and peace of mind. Often, for this reason, people even avoid visiting cemeteries.
Is death really the last word on our lives? Only human beings ask themselves this question, because only they know that they must die. But being aware of this does not save them from death; rather, in a certain sense, it "weighs" on them more than on all other living creatures.
Considering this aspect, one might then think that we are paradoxical, unhappy creatures, not only because we die, but also because we are certain that this event will happen, even though we do not know how or when. We are aware of it, and yet powerless.
Death is not opposed to life, but rather is a constitutive part of it, as the passage to eternal life, and it gives us a foretaste, in this time still full of suffering and trials, of the fullness of what will happen after death.
The evangelist Luke seems to capture this foreshadowing of light in the darkness when, at the end of that afternoon, when darkness had enveloped Calvary, he writes: "It was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath was beginning" (Lk 23:54).
The lights of Saturday, for the first and only time, announce the dawn of the day after Saturday: the new light of the Resurrection. Only this event is capable of illuminating the mystery of death to its depths.
Only the Resurrection is capable of illuminating the mystery of death to its full extent. In this light, and only in this, what our heart desires and hopes becomes true: that death is not the end, but the passage towards full light, towards a happy eternity.
The Risen One has gone before us in the great trial of death, emerging victorious thanks to the power of divine Love. Thus, He has prepared for us the place of eternal rest, the home where we are awaited; He has given us the fullness of life in which there are no longer any shadows and contradictions.
Only in light of Christ’s Resurrection can one be able to call death our “sister,” as St. Francis did, while concluding that waiting for death in the hope of Jesus' Resurrection preserves us from the fear of disappearing forever and prepares us for the joy of life without end.
Praying, understanding what is beneficial for the kingdom of heaven, and letting go of the superfluous things that bind us to ephemeral things is the secret to living authentically, with the awareness that our time on earth prepares us for eternity.
Excerpts from Pope Leo XIV's catechesis.











