THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD TO COME
From “Sacraments and Orthodoxy” by Fr Alexander Schmemann3
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The liturgy of Christian death does not begin when one comes to the
inescapable end and their corpse lies in church for the last rites while we stand
around, the sad yet resigned witnesses of the dignified removal of one from the
world of the living. It begins every day as the Church ascending into heaven,
“puts aside all earthly care”; it begins every feast day; it begins especially in the
joy of Easter. The whole life of the Church is in a way the sacrament of our death,
because all of it is the proclamation of the Lord’s death, the confession of his
resurrection.
The Church is the entrance into the risen life of Christ, communion in life
eternal, “joy and peace in the Holy Spirit.” And it is the expectation of the “day
without evening” of the Kingdom; not of any “other world,” but of the fulfillment
of all things and all life in Christ. In him death itself has become an act of life,
for he has filled it with himself, with his love and light. In him “all things are
yours; whether the world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come;
all are yours; and you are Christ’s; and Christ is God’s.”
And if I make this new life mine, mine this hunger and thirst of the
Kingdom, mine this expectation of Christ, mine the certitude that Christ is Life,
my very death will be an act of communion with Life. For neither life nor death
can separate us from the love of Christ. I do not know when and how the
fulfillment will come. I do not know when all things will be consummated in
Christ. I know nothing about the “when’s” and “how’s.” But I know that in Christ
this great Passage, the Pascha of the world has begun, that the light of the “world
to come” comes to us in the joy and peace of the Holy Spirit, for Christ is risen
and Life reigns.