As we
commemorate All Souls Day today, we remember how the Church has encouraged
prayers for the faithful departed from its early days. St.
Augustine, one of our great Church fathers, commented: “If we had no care for
the dead, we would not be in the habit of praying for them.” Out of
our Church’s prayers for the dead, today’s feast is traced to a custom started
in the influential Benedictine abbey of Cluny, France almost 1,000 years ago,
which prayed for the dead on November 2, right after All Saints Day. This
practice spread to other monasteries and then to the Roman Catholic Church in
general.
We celebrate
All Souls Day as a community of faith, underscoring the frailties, weaknesses,
and imperfections we feel as human beings.
We strive toward the perfection to which God calls us, but we often
don’t hit the mark. Our 1st
reading from the book of Wisdom reflects the belief that was common in the
ancient world, a belief that many in our secular world still hold today, that
our human life ends when our bodies terminate their earthly existence. In our
Catholic faith, we are not afraid to acknowledge that so much remains a mystery
to us, that no matter how much we learn about God, there will always be much
more for us to learn, so much we don’t completely understand. Hence,
there is so much about death that remains a mystery to us.
Yet, the
writer of the book of Wisdom assures the faithful: “The
souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and no torment will ever touch
them.” Death remains a mystery, but we are confident that God is with us both in our
earthly life and in our earthly death. In this mystery, we place our trust in God, in his infinite mercy. In the spirit that came into us in the waters of our baptism, as we died with
Christ in those waters and gained new life through him, we continue to be
united with the Body of Christ even after the passing of our earthly bodies. In our reading from his letter to the Romans, Paul focuses on the link between
Christ’s death and resurrection and our own baptism, how we enter into the
resurrection of the risen Christ.
Even though there is a sense of mystery inherent in our
faith, there is also a sense of reality. Many communities, including the one right here in Saltillo, commemorate All
Souls Day in a beautiful ritual that is similar to what I witnessed in Latin
America when I was a missionary down there. It is a visual reminder of those loved ones who are no longer here in body but
are still with us in spirit, of those who passed down the faith to us. Moreover, All Souls Day reminds us that it is important for us pray for the
souls of the faithful departed, for the souls who are in purgatory who are
awaiting their union with God. Likewise, it is a comfort for us to know that the faithful departed help us and
pray for us through their prayers and intercessions as well.
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