Page:Sermons for all the Sundays in the year.djvu/259

 hour, the moment, in which each of us shall leave this earth, and enter into eternity; but this moment he has resolved not to make known to us. And justly, says St. Augustine, has the Lord concealed it; for, had he manifested to all the day fixed for their death, many should be induced to continue in the habit of sin by the certainty of not dying before the appointed day. ” Si statuisset viam omnibus, faceret abundare peccata de securitate ” (in Ps. cxliv). Hence the holy doctor teaches that God has concealed from us the day of our death, that we may spend all our days well. ” Latet ultimus dies, ut observentur omnes dies. ” (Hom. xii. inter 50.) Hence Jesus Christ says: “Be you also ready; for at what hour you think not the Son of Man will come." (Luke xii. 40.) That we may be always prepared to die, he wishes us to be persuaded that death will come when we least expect it. ” Of death," says St. Gregory, ” we are uncertain, that we may be found always prepared for death." St. Paul likewise admonishes us that the day of the Lord that is, the day on which the Lord shall judge us shall come unexpectedly, like a thief in the night, ” The day of the Lord shall so come as a thief in the night." (1 Thess. v. 2.) Since, then, says St. Bernard, death may assail you and take away your life in every place and at every time, you should, if you wish to die well and to save your soul, be at all times and places in expectation of death: ” Mors ubique te expectat tu ubique earn expectabis :" and St. Augustine says: ” Latet ultimus dies, ut observentur omnes dies.  ” (Hom, xii.) The Lord conceals from us the last day of our life, that we may always have ready the account which we must render to God after death. 9. Many Christians are lost, because many, even among the old, who feel the approach of death, flatter themselves that it is at a distance, and that it will not come without giving them time to prepare for it.  ” Dura mente," says St. Gregory,  ” abesse longe mors creditur etiam cum sentitur." (Moral, lib. 8.) Death, even when it is felt, is believed to be far off. O brethren, are these your sentiments? How do you know that your death is near or distant? What reason have you to suppose that death will give you time to prepare for it? How