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Sharing the Savior’s Story
What's Most Important?
In 1989 Zita, the last empress of Austria and the last queen of Hungary
died. The day of her funeral, 8,000 mourners filed out of Vienna's
St. Stephen's Cathedral and fell in line behind the hearse drawn by
six black
horses. Two hours later the procession concluded at the Capuchin Church.
There, in keeping with tradition, a member of the funeral party knocked
on the door and a priest asked, “Who goes there?”
Zita’s titles were read aloud: “Zita, Queen of Bohemia,
Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia. Queen of Jerusalem. Grand Duchess
of Tuscany
and Cracow . . .”
“I do not know her,” came the voice from within the crypt.
The funeral group knocked a second time. “Who goes there?”
“Empress Zita,” was the more simple reply. Still the door
remained shut.
The mourners knocked yet a third time. “Who is there?”
“Zita, a poor sinner,” was the answer. That answer was the
right answer and the procession was allowed to enter. During the course
of her long life, Zita had seen history swirl around her. She was nobility.
She was acclaimed. But on the day of death, all of these things were meaningless.
Only one thing was important—her trust in Jesus.
Excerpt from The Lutheran Hour broadcast of: October 5, 2003
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