
GRAVE PROMISES:
Wealth Buys Nothing After
Death
Wealth Buys Nothing After Death, Says Pope
Comments on Blindness of Those Who Trust in Money
VATICAN CITY, OCT. 20, 2004
John Paul II warned
against the temptation of those who think that money can buy everything,
and reminded pilgrims that wealth serves for nothing in the grave.
The Pope dedicated his weekly general audience, which attracted 19,000
people, to comment on Psalm 48(49). The Psalm highlights the "vanity of
riches," an issue that Jesus addressed on several occasions.
"For all their riches mortals do not abide; they perish like the
beasts,"
the Psalm says.
"In other words, 'great wealth' is not an advantage, in fact! It is
better to be poor and to be united to God," the Holy Father added today.
The Pope had to make quite an effort to read his address, which he began
with a weak voice, although later it became stronger and clearer.
The Holy Father read some paragraphs of the prepared text and at the end
of the catechesis greeted pilgrims, gathered in St. Peter's Square, in
11 languages.
"A profound blindness takes hold of a man when he believes he will
avoid death, being determined to accumulate material goods," he warned
in his catechesis.
"The topic has also been explored by all cultures and all spiritualities
and was expressed in an essential and definitive manner by Jesus," he
said. The Pope quoted the famous question:
"What will it profit a man,
if he gains the whole world and forfeits his life?"
The rich man is convinced "that he will succeed even in 'buying'
death for himself, trying to corrupt it, as he has done with all other
things he has acquired, namely success, triumph over others in the
social and political realm, lying with impunity, avarice, comfort,
pleasures," John Paul II said.
It is a foolish illusion, he said. "Like all men and women, rich and
poor, wise and foolish, he will have to go to the grave, as has happened
to the powerful and he will have to leave on earth that much loved gold,
those material goods so idolized."
The Holy Father ended his address quoting St. Ambrose of Milan, who
reminded the faithful that God "promises pardon with the generosity of
his mercy, so that the guilty one will no longer have fear but, with
full awareness, rejoice to be able to offer himself as servant of the
good Lord, who has forgiven sins and rewarded virtues."
Zenit
www.zenit.org 20 Oct 2004
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