Previously we spoke on the fourth article of the Apostle’s
Creed, namely wherein we exclaim that Christ “suffered under Pontius
Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.” This article describes
the manner of Christ’s redemptive suffering and alludes to the fact that secular
government will often fail to protect the innocent. The fifth article
of the creed, “He descended into hell; the third day He rose again from the
dead,” describes what Christ did after His death. This is our topic
today.
Two thousand years ago, on a Friday at 12:00 noon, our Savior was nailed
to a wood cross upon which He hung for three hours to win the salvation of
mankind. At the hour of None, 3:00 p.m., the time when the lambs were
being slaughtered in the temple, our Savior, embracing His death, voluntarily
gives up His soul. From this moment - late in the first day -
until early on the third day, Christ’s created human body will be without
its created human soul. His body is laid in the sepulcher; His soul
descends to hell. Both body and soul remain hypostatically united to
Christ’s uncreated divinity which can never suffer or not exist. Finally,
early on the third day, the soul of Christ rejoins His body in the tomb and
He triumphantly rises from the grave, conquering death.
When we say, “He descended into hell”...
We believe that after Christ died on the cross He went to the abode of the
fathers, otherwise called the limbo of the fathers (limbus patrum).
In 1215, the Fourth Lateran Council more explicitly affirmed that Christ “descendit
ad inferos...,” descended into the underworld or hell... “in anima,” in soul.
Notice that we say “hell” not in reference to the hell of the damned, who
cannot profit by Christ’s passion and death, but the hell of a temporary separation
from God only.
We believe that such a place of temporary separation from God existed in
the old testament as much as now. As heaven was closed until Christ’s
redemption, so all just men of the old testament went to the bosom of Abraham,
the limbo of the fathers, after their death. There, a place of comfort
but also of separation from God, they awaited their liberation which finally
occurs when Christ ascends into heaven. Since the advent of Christ,
the souls of men now go immediately to one of three places: to heaven, if
they die in perfection; to hell, if they die in sin; to purgatory, if they
die with venial sins only. Purgatory is a place where souls suffer the
absence of God and undergo a purging fire which removes imperfections in
the soul. Unlike the suffering souls in the hell of the damned, however,
the holy souls of purgatory have hope ~ they know that one day, they
shall be in heaven forever. Indeed, the poor souls welcome their cleansing
punishments and prefer them to seeing the all holy God in an impure state.
When we say, “the third day”...
We believe that from late Friday until early Sunday Christ was in the hell
of Limbo comforting souls but also to verify the death of the Mosaic covenant.
Christ dies on Friday at 3:00 p.m. and descends into hell where He spends
a few hours until sunset and the beginning of the Sabbath, ending day one
(I Vespers); He then spends all of the Sabbath (Saturday) in hell, before
ending day two (II Vespers); and finally, Christ rises early (Matins) on Sunday,
“rising early the first day of the week” (Mk 16:9), the third day of His
death. Again, Christ rose early on ‘the third day,’ having spent
around 36 hours in hell not 72 as three full days would imply.
Now Christ descends into hell primarily to free souls in limbo but
notice the significance in the timing of this event. Why three days
in hell? and why a full Saturday? why not four days like Lazarus or a few
hours like the daughter of Jairus (Mk 5:35)? The long awaited Messiah
of the world descends into the inferos where He spends a complete Sabbath,
the Jewish holy day, to manifest the fact that the old law is now useless,
void, and dead; as God will soon replace, fulfill, and glorify His relationship
with man in the new law of the Risen Christ and His Church.
When we say, “He rose again from the dead”...
We believe that Christ rose again from a true death in His own body.
On the third day, the human soul of Christ reunited with His human body as
caused by the Word together with the Father and the Holy Ghost. We believe
that the risen body of Christ retains its wounds and can be felt as Christ
Himself told His apostle’s after His resurrection, “See My hands and feet
that it is I Myself; handle and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones,
as you see Me to have.” (Lk 24:39)
The risen Christ is the foundation of our faith. Says St. Paul, “If
Christ be not risen again, then is our preaching vain, and your faith in vain.”(1
Cor 15:14) Recognizing its significance, the Jews paid a great sum
of money to the soldiers saying, “Say you, His disciples came by night and
stole him away when we were asleep.”(Mt 28:13) The modern Jewish Encyclopedia
dismisses the resurrection in this same way.
We believe that Christ truly rose twice, once when His soul rose from His
lifeless body on the cross to descend into hell and “again” when His soul
rose from the dead to reunite with His body in the glory of the resurrection.
And just as our dear Savior received His own body back in His resurrection,
so we shall receive our own bodies back at the second coming of Christ.
Some Christians believe that we become angels after we die. This is
false. Men are men and will remain so for all eternity, whether forever
in heaven or in hell... but more on this later.
These are some doctrines related to the fifth article of the Apostle’s Creed.
A final note: as there was no resurrection without the crucifixion, so must
we expect to suffer in this life to purchase any reward of glory. Indeed,
in the measure that we embrace our present sorrows with patience, magnanimity,
meekness, humility,... we shall reap an eternal harvest of happiness.
If, however, in the midst of suffering, we exhibit a spirit of complaint,
impatience, bitterness, jealousy, undue sadness or anger... we can expect
a diminishment or even total loss of merit for heaven.
In his letter of today, St. Paul tells us, “Many walk (many, not a few),
of whom I have told you often (often, not once or twice) and now tell you
weeping (weeping, tears of great sadness) that they are enemies of the cross
of Christ.”
To be friends of the cross of Christ, we must train ourselves to see our
suffering as opportunities to advance in virtue, to prove unselfish love for
God, and to edify our neighbor. There is no reward without a combat;
we cannot be above our Master; the heavenly glory far exceeds any earthly
trial. These are some considerations to comfort us when we bear the
wood of our own cross; when its beam weighs heavy across our shoulders; when
its rough splinters prick our back.