Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Terrance KleinNovember 01, 2013

Why do we long for the whole?  We never find it in this life, yet we don’t stop seeking it.  We’ve never known a truth, never found a love, never acted, even once, in a way that couldn’t be bettered.  Still, we struggle on.  Why won’t the human heart simply accept the notion that there is no more truth to find, no more love to seek, no more complete way of being in the world?  Why yearn for some whole we’ve never found?

 
The Greeks defined God by crossing out human limitations.  We are bound by time; God is eternal.  We suffer change; God is immutable.  We live with weakness; God is omnipotent.  We must die; God is immortal.  Skeptics might suggest that this is no more than humanity’s longing for wholeness writ large.
 
Is that evolution’s cruelest accomplishment?  Fashioning a creature that can’t stop longing for something beyond itself?  Or is our desire for wholeness a great cipher to the mystery of God?
 
Perhaps a pattern has been impressed into our hearts.  We desire more than we can ever attain, we long for some whole we cannot even envision, because we seek holiness.  The English word “holy,” like the German word “heilig,” comes from an Indo-European root meaning “whole.”  
 
Purgatory, and our prayers for the dead, can be explained by way of this simple truth.  God is wholeness.  Nothing of God is partial, incomplete, or passing.  Those who would come to God must be made whole, complete, perpetual.  If our life on earth fails to accomplish that single task, purgatory is the means whereby the Holy makes us whole.
 
Purgatory doesn’t belong to time or space.  It redeems both.  It is the resurrection working itself out in our flesh, our history.  “For Christ, while we were still helpless, died at the appointed time for the ungodly” (Rom 5: 6).  Christ died to redeem us, but there can be no healing for the human heart save the wholeness of God.  
 
There’s little to be achieved in trying to picture purgatory, the process of purgation.  There is everything to be gained in praying for our dead.  We ask that God’s grace finish its work in them, rewriting their stories into something single, something whole.  “The souls of the just are in the hands of God”(Wis 3: 1), and God will fulfill their deepest longing.  God will make them whole.
 
Wisdom 3: 1-9   Romans 5: 5-11   John 6: 37-40
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

In this homily for the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (Corpus Christi), Year C, the Rev. Hank Hilton draws on ancient philosophy, childhood boat rides on the Jersey Shore and his mother’s steady wisdom to reflect on the transformative power of Christ’s kindness.
PreachJune 16, 2025
My primary problem with the parade wasn’t just that it broke a norm. My problem is that it reminded me how easily we tell ourselves comforting stories instead of asking hard questions.
Peter LucierJune 16, 2025
The USCCB wrote a letter to Congress on May 20 mildly refuting certain aspects of Trump's Big Beautiful Bill.
Thomas J. ReeseJune 16, 2025
Two new books give a multi-hued portrait of Seamus Heaney as he pursued a late-20th-century vocation as a public advocate of poetry and as a somewhat private advocate of Catholicism as a folk culture.
Atar HadariJune 16, 2025