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Lay Witness
Letter to
the Elderly
His Holiness Pope John Paul II
Following are excerpts from Pope John Paul II’s "Letter
to the Elderly," dated October 1, 1999. The
complete text can be viewed by clicking here.
To my elderly brothers and sisters!
"Seventy is the sum of our years, or 80 if we are strong,
and most of them are fruitless toil, for they pass quickly
and we drift away" (Ps. 90:10).
Seventy years was an advanced age when the psalmist wrote
these words, and few people lived beyond it. Nowadays, thanks
to medical progress and improved social and economic conditions,
life expectancy has increased significantly in many parts
of the world. Still, it remains true that the years pass quickly,
and the gift of life, for all the effort and pain it involves,
is too beautiful and precious for us ever to grow tired of
it.
As an older person myself, I have felt the desire to engage
in a conversation with you. I do so first of all by thanking
God for the gifts and the opportunities which He has abundantly
bestowed upon me up to now. I recall the stages of my life,
which is bound up with the history of much of this century,
and I see before me the faces of countless people, some particularly
dear to me: They remind me of ordinary and extraordinary events,
of happy times, and of situations touched by suffering. Above
all else, though, I see outstretched the provident and merciful
hand of God the Father. With the psalmist, I say to Him: "You
have taught me, O God, from my youth, and till the present
I proclaim your wondrous deeds. And now that I am old and
gray, O God, forsake me not, till I proclaim your strength
to every generation that is to come" (Ps. 71:17-18).
I wish simply to express my spiritual closeness to you as
someone who with the passing of the years has come to a deeper
personal understanding of this phase of life and consequently
feels a need for closer contact with other people of his own
age, so that we can reflect together on the things we have
in common. I place all this before the eyes of God, who embraces
us with His love and who sustains us and guides us by His
providence.
Dear brothers and sisters, at our age it is natural to revisit
the past in order to attempt a sort of assessment. This retrospective
gaze makes possible a more serene and objective evaluation
of persons and situations we have met along the way. The passage
of time helps us to see our experiences in a clearer light
and softens their painful side. Sadly, struggles and tribulations
are very much a part of everyone’s life. Sometimes it is a
matter of problems and sufferings which can sorely test our
mental and physical resistance, and perhaps even shake our
faith. But experience teaches that daily difficulties, by
God’s grace, often contribute to people’s growth and to the
forging of their character.
Beyond single events, the reflection which first comes to
mind has to do with the inexorable passage of time. "Time
flies irretrievably" as the ancient Latin poet put it.
Man is immersed in time; he is born, lives, and dies within
time. Birth establishes one date, the first of his life, and
death another, the last: the alpha and the omega, the beginning
and end of his history on earth. The Christian tradition has
emphasized this by inscribing these two letters of the Greek
alphabet on tombstones.
But if the life of each of us is limited and fragile, we
are consoled by the thought that by virtue of our spiritual
souls we will survive beyond death itself. Moreover, faith
opens us to a "hope that does not disappoint" (cf.
Rom. 5:5), placing us before the perspective of the final
resurrection. It is no coincidence that the Church at the
solemn Easter Vigil uses the same two Greek letters in reference
to Christ, who lives yesterday, today, and forever: He is
"the beginning and the end, Alpha and Omega. All time
belongs to Him and all the ages."
It is natural that as the years pass we should increasingly
consider our "twilight." If nothing else, we are
reminded of it by the very fact that the ranks of our family
members, friends, and acquaintances grow ever thinner. We
become aware of this in a number of ways, when for example
we attend family reunions, gatherings of our childhood friends,
classmates from school and university, or former colleagues
from the military or the seminary. The line separating life
and death runs through our communities and moves inexorably
nearer to each of us. If life is a pilgrimage toward our heavenly
home, then old age is the most natural time to look toward
the threshold of eternity.
And yet, even we elderly people find it hard to resign ourselves
to the prospect of making this passage. In our human condition
touched by sin, death presents a certain dark side which cannot
but bring sadness and fear. How could it be otherwise? Man
has been made for life, whereas death—as Scripture tells us
from its very first pages—was not a part of God’s original
plan but came about as a consequence of sin, as a result of
"the devil’s envy" (Wis. 2:24). It is thus understandable
why when faced with this dark reality man instinctively rebels.
In this regard it is significant that Jesus, "who in
every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sinning"
(Heb. 4:15), also experienced fear in the face of death: "My
Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me"
(Mt. 26:39). How can we forget His tears at the tomb of His
friend Lazarus, despite the fact that He was about to raise
him from the dead?
However rationally comprehensible death may be from a biological
standpoint, it is not possible to experience it as something
"natural." This would contradict man’s deepest instincts.
As Vatican II observed: "It is in the face of death that
the riddle of human existence becomes most acute. Not only
is man tormented by pain and by the advancing deterioration
of his body, but even more so by a dread of perpetual extinction."
This anguish would indeed be inconsolable were death complete
destruction, the end of everything. Death thus forces men
and women to ask themselves fundamental questions about the
meaning of life itself. What is on the other side of the shadowy
wall of death? Does death represent the definitive end of
life or does something lie beyond it?
Human history, from the most ancient times down to our own
day, has provided a number of simplistic answers which limit
life to what we experience on earth. But precisely against
the backdrop of these pessimistic attitudes there shines forth
the hope-filled outlook present in revelation as a whole and
particularly in the Gospel: "God is not God of the dead,
but of the living" (cf. Lk. 20:38). St. Paul affirms
that God, who gives life to the dead, will also give life
to our mortal bodies. And Jesus says of Himself: "I am
the resurrection and the life; he who believes in me, though
he die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes
in me shall never die" (Jn. 11:25-26).
Christ, having crossed the threshold of death, has revealed
the life which lies beyond this frontier in that uncharted
"territory" which is eternity. He is the first witness
of eternal life; in Him human hope is shown to be filled with
immortality. In Christ, death—tragic and disconcerting as
it is—is redeemed and transformed; it is even revealed as
a "sister" who leads us to the arms of Our Father.
Faith thus illuminates the mystery of death and brings serenity
to old age, now no longer considered and lived passively as
the expectation of a calamity but rather as a promise-filled
approach to the goal of full maturity. These are years to
be lived with a sense of trusting abandonment into the hands
of God, our provident and merciful Father. It is a time to
be used creatively for deepening our spiritual life through
more fervent prayer and commitment to the service of our brothers
and sisters in charity.
Dear elderly brothers and sisters, I feel a spontaneous desire
to share fully with you my own feelings at this point of my
life after more than 20 years of ministry on the throne of
Peter and as we await the arrival, now imminent, of the third
millennium. Despite the limitations brought on by age, I continue
to enjoy life. For this I thank the Lord. It is wonderful
to be able to give oneself to the very end for the sake of
the kingdom of God!
At the same time, I find great peace in thinking of the time
when the Lord will call me: from life to life! And so I often
find myself saying, with no trace of melancholy, a prayer
recited by priests after the celebration of the Eucharist:
"At the hour of my death, call me and bid me to come
to you." This is the prayer of Christian hope, which
in no way detracts from the joy of the present while entrusting
the future to God’s gracious and loving care.
"Bid me to come to you!": This is the deepest yearning
of the human heart, even in those who are not conscious of
it.
Grant, O Lord of life, that we may be ever vividly aware
of this and that we may savor every season of our lives as
a gift filled with promise for the future.
Grant that we may lovingly accept Your will and place ourselves
each day in Your merciful hands.
And when the moment of our definitive "passage"
comes, grant that we may face it with serenity, without regret
for what we shall leave behind. For in meeting You, after
having sought You for so long, we shall find once more every
authentic good which we have known here on earth, in the company
of all who have gone before us marked with the sign of faith
and hope.
Mary, mother of pilgrim humanity, pray for us "now and
at the hour of our death." Keep us ever close to Jesus,
your beloved Son and our brother, the Lord of life and glory.
Amen!
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