THE ESCHATOLOGICAL CHARACTER
OF THE PILGRIM CHURCH
From the encyclical Lumen Gentium1
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The Church, to which we are called in Christ Jesus, and in which by the
grace of God we acquire holiness, will receive its perfection only in the glory of
heaven, when the time comes for the renewal of all things, and the whole
universe, as well as the human race, is completely united in Christ. For the
universe has an intimate connection with us, and through us it reaches its
destined end.
Lifted up from the earth, Christ has drawn all to himself; rising from the
dead, he has sent his life-giving Spirit upon his disciples; through the Spirit he
has established his Body, which is the Church, as the universal sacrament of
salvation. Sitting at the right hand of the Father, he is unceasingly at work in
the world to bring men and women to the Church, to join them more closely to
himself through her, and to give them a share in his glorious life by feeding them
on his own Body and Blood.
The promised restoration to which we look forward has already had its
beginning in Christ. It receives impetus from the sending of the Holy Spirit and
through him continues in the Church, where we also receive instruction, by
faith, in the significance of our earthly life. Meanwhile, in expectation of a good
future, we are bringing to completion the work in the world entrusted to us by
the Father, and are working out our salvation.
The end of the ages has already reached us, and the world is irrevocably
set on the renewal which is anticipated in a real way in this life. Already the
Church is marked on earth by a genuine, if imperfect, holiness. The Church is11
on pilgrimage until the coming of the new heavens and the new earth in which
righteousness dwells. In her sacraments and organization, which belong to this
life, she carries the mark of this world which will pass, and she herself takes her
place among the creatures who groan in travail as they wait for the revealing of
the children of God.