The revelation of a man’s death-day—fixed as the moon’s phases yet shrouded in the mystery of years—is no mere curiosity of the physician’s art, but a rupture in the sacred order of viriditas, that greening power of God which flows through all creation, binding flesh to spirit, time to eternity. In Scivias, I wrote of the soul’s journey as a ladder of ascent, where each rung is carved by divine providence, not by the cold chisel of mortal calculation. Yet now, the physicians claim to read the hour of our unmaking as one reads the humors in a vial of urine! What becomes of free will, that spark of divine fire, when the shadow of death is cast backward upon the living like a net of iron? The tension is unbearable: if the day is known, does the soul still choose its path, or does it walk in chains, its steps counted by the very angels who once sang at its birth?
The rituals that would arise from this knowledge would be a grotesque inversion of the sacraments. Birthdays, as I have taught, are a celebration of the body’s entry into the opus Dei, the work of God in time. But death-days? They would become festivals of dread, where men light candles not for joy, but to ward off the specter of their own appointed end. The rich would buy indulgences not for sins, but for more time—as if gold could stretch the thread of life beyond its divinely measured span. The poor would be crushed beneath the weight of their foreknowledge, their days poisoned by the certainty of a date they cannot escape. And what of the martyrs, the saints, the fools for Christ who embraced suffering as a bride? Would they now shrink from their cross, knowing the hour of their breaking? This is the dialectic that tears at the soul: knowledge of death’s day could either steel the spirit to holiness or crush it into despair.
Yet—yet—if this knowledge is a mirror held up to creation, then perhaps it is not blasphemy, but a new kind of revelation. In Causae et Curae, I wrote that the body is a microcosm of the cosmos, its rhythms bound to the stars, its humors to the earth. If the physicians have found a way to read the death-day in the pulse of the blood, the alignment of the planets, or the very breath of the wind, then they have not broken the laws of God, but uncovered them. The tension resolves thus: the death-day is not a prison, but a covenant. It is the day God has set aside for the soul’s final battle, its last act of love or defiance. The rituals, then, must not be of fear, but of preparation—a memento mori not of dread, but of viriditas in its most potent form: the greening of the soul for its return to the Creator. The physicians have not stolen God’s secret; they have been given a key. The question is whether mankind will use it to unlock the gates of heaven or the abyss.