There are two
truths of faith affirmed in
this article of the Creed.
The first is that after
Christ died, His soul –
separated from the body –
visited the souls of the
faithful departed in what
has come to be called the
Limbo of the Fathers. The
second truth is the
Resurrection of Christ from
the grave on Easter Sunday.
While the Resurrection of
Christ is far more
significant, His descent
“into hell” deserves to be
better known.
The Descent
of Christ
It is not
difficult to trace the
origins of the statement
that, after He died, Jesus
“descended into hell.” Pre-
Christian Judaism is clear
on the point. By whatever
name it was called, Jewish
believers by the time of
Christ held that there was
an abode of the departed
just. It was assumed to be a
place or state of happiness,
temporary, and was to be
replaced by a condition of
final or permanent bliss
when the Messiah came to
establish His kingdom.
On the
strength of this tradition,
the Apostles’ Creed affirms
the existence of a limbo –
distinct from hell and
purgatory – for the just who
had died before Christ’s
ascension into heaven.
Because of the Fall, heaven
was closed to human beings.
In other words, actual
possession of the beatific
vision was postponed even
for those who were purified
of all sin. They would enjoy
the vision of God only after
the Redemption was
historically completed by
Christ’s visible ascension
into heaven. This was
implied in the Savior’s
promise to the penitent
thief on Calvary. “This day,”
he was assured, “you will be
with me in Paradise” (Luke
24:43).
The reason
for Christ’s visit to the
faithful departed seems
evident from the
circumstances. He wished to
reassure these justified
souls that they were, indeed,
redeemed and their entrance
into heaven was near at hand.
The
Resurrection
Christianity
as the religion of history
and Christ as the living God
made man depend on His
resurrection from the dead.
We shall
therefore examine the
Resurrection in a series of
questions: What is the
Resurrection? Why did Jesus
Christ rise from the grave?
And how are we to make the
Resurrection more meaningful
in our lives?
What is the
Resurrection? The
Resurrection is the historic
event of Christ reuniting
His human body and soul,
which had been separated by
His death on Calvary.
Christ had a
true human nature, like ours
except for sin. Since he had
no sin, He need not have
died. He chose to die. But
by the same free will by
which He chose death, He
also chose to conquer death
and return to the human life
He possessed before the
first Good Friday.
It was the
same Jesus Christ who rose
on Easter Sunday. It was the
same Divine Person united
with His human nature. St.
Luke describes the scene on
Easter Sunday when the Lord
appeared to the eleven
disciples as they huddled
together in the upper
chamber in Jerusalem. They
were listening to the two
disciples who had just been
with Jesus on their way to
Emmaus:
Now while
they were talking of
these things, Jesus
stood in their midst,
and said to them, “Peace
to you! It is I, do not
be afraid.” But they
were startled and panic-stricken,
and thought they saw a
spirit. And He said to
them, ”Why are you
disturbed, and why do
doubts arise in your
hearts? See my hands and
feet, that it is I
myself. Feel me and see;
for a spirit does not
have flesh and bones, as
you see I have.” And
having said this, He
showed them His hands
and feet. But as they
still disbelieved and
marvelled for joy, He
said, “Have you anything
here to eat?” And they
offered Him a piece of
broiled fish and a
honeycomb. And when He
had eaten in their
presence He took what
remained and gave it to
them (Luke 24:36-43).
The apostles
were absolutely certain
about Christ's bodily
resurrection from the dead.
This became the foundation
of all their preaching. On
Pentecost Sunday, Peter told
the Jews that the Jesus whom
they had crucified had come
back to life. And he rested
the credibility of the
Christian faith on this
historical fact.
Why the Resurrection? Christ
rose from the dead as the
crowning miracle of His
visible stay on earth. He
worked many miracles during
His three years of public
ministry: paralytics began
to use their limbs, the
blind were restored their
sight, deaf-mutes could hear
and speak; Christ calmed the
storm at sea with a single
command, He walked on water
and gave Peter the power to
do the same; the dead were
raised from the grave. And
not long before His Passion,
He called the dead Lazarus
out of the tomb.
On this level,
His own resurrection was
only the culmination of a
series of wonders that made
Christ’s astounding doctrine
acceptable by the human mind.
Moreover, by
rising from the dead, He
proved that He had overcome
sin, which was the original
cause of death.
Finally,
Christ’s resurrection is the
promise and prelude of our
own final resurrection on
the last day. He is, as St.
Paul tells us, the first
fruits of those who sleep.
The mystery of death, which
we all naturally fear, is
balanced by the confident
hope that we, too, will rise
from the grave.
Our souls are
naturally immortal. When
they leave the body they
remain alive, to enter an
eternity whose happiness or
misery depends on how well
we have served God during
our mortal life on earth.
Our bodies
will decay and return to the
dust from which they come.
But only for awhile. In
God’s own time, provided we
have been faithful to the
divine will before death,
these dead bodies will walk
and speak and hear and see
again. They will be
glorified. This means they
will be immortal, never to
die again. They will be
resplendent with beauty,
never again endure pain, and
will be able to move through
space and matter, not unlike
the risen body of Jesus
Christ.
The Risen Christ Is
Alive. Having
become man, the Son of god
will always remain man. The
expression, “Jesus Christ,
yesterday, today, and
forever” has been literally
verified until now and is
prophesied into the endless
reaches of eternity.
In the next
article of the Creed, we
profess to believe in
Christ’s ascension into
heaven. But there would have
been no ascension unless
there had first been a true
bodily resurrection. So, too,
when we reflect on the Holy
Eucharist, the key to
understanding the Real
Presence is the fact that
God became man, died, and
rose from the dead. Why is
this the key? Because the
Eucharist is the Risen
Christ living in our midst
in the Blessed Sacrament