ALL SOULS’ DAY
PENITENTIAL
RITE:
Today’s
commemoration is an extension of yesterday’s feast, since the faithful departed
also belong to the Communion of Saints. The only difference is that our dear
departed are shadowed over by our human sense of temporary separation and loss.
So as we
prayerfully remember our parents, brothers and sisters, teachers and friends,
we pray the Lord to spare us the torture of the memory of our sins at the hour
of our death.
All Souls' Day
It is All Souls’
Day. Let us listen to the dear departed’s entreaties for our prayers and Masses
on their behalf. Here is one such entreaty:
“It is All
Souls’ Day
Have you
forgotten me, dear earthly friends?
Have you a
prayer to spare for one you once loved well?
Do you still
remember the happy hours we spent together in the past?
Have you
forgotten the scalding tears you wept when I was dead?
The promises you
breathed over my still form?
The Masses you
had intended to have offered up for me?
Across the
eternal silence I lean forward now to remind you!
Think of me,
help me, and when your last hour
comes,
you will find
your goodness to me has not been in vain.
For the dead
forget not; the dead are never untrue;
they live forever in the changeless love of
God,
which permeates
all, sanctifies all, immortalises all.
The flowers of
his heaven are your fervent prayers!
For your loved
and seeming lost, then,
make a wreath of
them for me to lay at his holy feet.”
(From “Prayers of an Irish mother”)
When we who are now on earth have
died, we will in our turn need to make that entreaty. During our brief sojourn
here we remember the departed. This age-old tradition of praying for the dead
is rooted in the early Church’s trust in the mercy of God and faith in a
personal resurrection with Jesus Christ. We pray for the faithful who are
indeed assured of their eternal salvation; though after death they undergo
purification, so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of
heaven. We don’t quite know the nature of this purification, but it certainly
has to do with the advent of God’s purifying love.
Today’s
commemoration is, in fact, an extension of yesterday’s Feast of All Saints’,
since the faithful departed also belong to the Communion of Saints, which is
animated and electrified by divine love. It is a truth that is based on the
teaching of Scripture, namely, that the Church is Christ’s body. Christ has
only one body, not one on earth and another in heaven. Christians are not
separated from one another by a death that makes no difference to their love
and service of one another. The moment they closed their eyes to this world and
opened them to the light of eternity, all was suffused in the love of God and
the saints, and in a flash they were rejuvenated forever. Such is the advent of
the purifying love of God.
One day, during a catechism class on
All Saint’s Day, the teacher asked, “Who or what are the saints?” One youngster stood up and happened to look
at the stained glass window that had a saint portrayed, with the sunlight
streaming through. The little fellow got a bright idea and answered, “The
saints are those who let in the sunlight.” Splendid answer, the teacher
thought. The saints let the light of Christ into our life by their prayer and
example. But what happens when there is no sunlight, when the outside is dark
and we are seated in a well lit church? That is when we send our light and
prayer to our friends in the semi-darkness as they walk towards the pearly
gates. They are grateful for our prayers and sacrifices that serve as so many
points of light on their way to the perpetual light of the Heavenly Jerusalem.
And as they march in they hear the words of the prophet Jeremiah, Chapter 31:
“I have loved you. I will guard you as a shepherd guards his flock. They will
come and sing for joy on Mt. Sion. I will turn their mourning into joy.” And
from the book of Revelation, Chapter One: I turned round to see who was
speaking to me, and when I turned, I saw.....one like a Son of Man, dressed in
a long white robe tied at the waist with a belt of gold. His head and hair were
white with the whiteness of wool like snow, his eyes like a burning flame, his
feet like burnished bronze when it has been refined in a furnace. His face was
like the sun shining in full strength. When I saw him I fell at his feet as
though dead, but he laid his hand on me and said, “Do not be afraid...I was,
and look...I am alive for ever and ever. Look at my hands and feet; it’s me.
Touch me and feel secure.”
PRAYER
Lord God, we
thank you for your ineffable gift of eternal life in you. We thank you for
inviting us to pray for our loved ones who wait to enter there. Grant them a
speedy entrance into your joy forever. We beg to intercede also for those who
have no one to pray for them. Grant them eternal rest. Amen.
ALL SOULS’ DAY 2017
Lord, grant that the greater harvest
Which we came on earth to save,
May be golden and ripe for the reaping
‘Ere we go the lonely grave;
That our souls in the last dread autumn
May be clean as the hill and lea,
When we bring life’s grain to the haggard
and offer it all to thee.
O great and merciful God,
We praise and thank you
that you have brought our dearest
parents,
brothers, sisters, and friends,
at their last awakening,
into your house and gate of
heaven,
to enter into that gate
and dwell in that house
where shall be no darkness nor
dazzling,
but one equal light,
no noise nor silence, but one
equal music,
no fears nor hopes, but one equal
possession,
no ends nor beginnings, but one
equal eternity
in the habitations of your glory and
dominion,
where there is continuous
happiness
and profounder joy in your
presence
wherein they see you as you are,
for ever and ever. Amen.
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