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Every year, on November 1st, we
celebrate the feast day of All Saints, and the very next day, we honor All
Souls. Much has been written about "worshipping saints," and that is not
what we do. We pray to the saints and blesseds, people who have gone before
us and have been Beatified and perhaps, later, Canonized, by the Roman
Catholic Church, as well as the Eastern Catholic Church, to ask for
intercession to obtain a particular favor. Our prayer is thus directed to
God via the Saints and Blesseds.
"Christ
glorified in the Court of Heaven" Fra. Angelico (1428) |
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All Saints Day is a
Solemnity celebrated on the first of November. It is instituted to honor all
the saints, known and unknown, and, according to Urban IV, to supply any
deficiencies in the faithful's celebration of saints' feasts during the
year.
Ephrem Syrus (d.
373) mentions a Feast dedicated to the saints in his writings. St.
Chrysostom of Constantinople (d. 407) was the first Christian we know of to
assign the Feast to a particular day: the first Sunday after Pentecost. The
Feast did not become established in the Western Church, however, until the
Roman bishop Boniface IV consecrated the Pantheon at Rome to Christian usage
as a church on May 13, 609 or 610. The Feast was observed annually on
this date until the time of Bishop of Rome, Gregory III (d. 741) when its
observance was shifted to Nov. 1, since on this date Gregory dedicated a
chapel in the Basilica of St. Peter's to "All the Saints." It was Gregory IV
(d. 844), who in 835 ordered the Feast of All Saints to be universally
observed on Nov. 1.
"Most people are
shocked the first time they visit Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine
Chapel. They cannot believe their eyes when they see what the great master
had painted. The colors are so vivid, so stunning! The blues, the deep,
deep blues, the reds and pinks, the brilliant flesh colors.
Michelangelo's
great masterpiece, from Creation to Last Judgment was unveiled on All
Saints Day of 1541. I think of this great masterpiece on All Saints
Day 1996 in all of its vivid brightness as but a shadow of God's own
creation of the human soul leading through faith to an appreciation of God
himself. And how grateful I am for my Catholic faith: faith that makes it
possible for me, for the me that I so often hate with such good cause, for
so many sins of commission and omission, so much that is repulsive in one
who is supposed to be a "man of God" and a leader of others, it is
possible for me to be a saint.
What a marvel,
what a mystery, what a joy that to be a saint is never more than a step
away, a step into the Sacrament of Penance, a step into total
reconciliation, into perfect sanctity. And if that is possible for me, is
it not wonderfully possible for millions who are immeasurably better than
I, even though many think they are far worse?
Just as with the
saints, God constantly offers his grace to us. And grace seldom comes in a
form we might welcome. It demands the abandonment of every security to
which we cling. Grace rarely comes in the shape of a gentle invitation to
change. More often than not it appears in the form of an assault -
something we are at first tempted to flee. That was the prophetic
experience of Jonah and Jeremiah. Receiving God's grace is more like being
hit in the head with a book and called a warthog from hell, Ruby Turpin's
disconcerting experience in Flannery O'Connor's story, Revelation. Grace
takes on as many forms as there are people and times and human events.
Grace cannot
always be "nice". Sometimes only in harshness can it heal. O'Connor tried
to explain this to those readers (including her own mother) who thought
she ought to write pleasant things that people would like. O'Connor
despaired of the idea that good Christian stories should offer instant
uplift, happy endings and easy transitions that leave the reader
undisturbed and feeling good. Is that not the same with our spiritual
lives?
The saints teach
us that the spiritual life is seldom a matter of painless, uninterrupted
growth. And sometimes we do not have a very sharp eye for the almost
imperceptible intrusions of grace because God's grace bursts forth from
absurd sources. Sometimes we have to reconsider the way we have come to
picture God. God does not replace personality. He works through it. Grace
takes on a thousand different faces, but the unifying element for the
saints, for us is a generous loving God who created the world, sent the
gift of himself in Jesus and who continues to be present and active
through the Holy Spirit.
O'Connor wrote,
"To the hard of hearing you shout and for the almost-blind you draw large
and startling figures." Repeatedly with the saints we discover men and
women dealing with a God who makes himself accessible in pathos and tears.
God is never what Peter, Augustine, Martha or Teresa expect. This is God
as mystery.
On this Feast of
All Saints, we remember that grace is thanks, grace is assault, grace is
real, grace brings us to sainthood." (Quoted
text by Fr. Michael F. Dogali, appearing in "Spirituality For Today" ©1996
by Clemons Productions Inc. and the Diocese of Bridgeport. Used with
permission)
On November 2nd, we
celebrate All Souls Day. "The theological basis for the feast is the
doctrine that the souls which, on departing from the body, are not perfectly
cleansed from venial sins, or have not fully atoned for past transgressions,
are debarred from the Beatific Vision, and that the faithful on earth can
help them by prayers, alms, deeds and especially by the sacrifice of the
Mass."
"In the early days
of Christianity the names of the departed brethren were entered in the
diptychs. Later, in the sixth century, it was customary in Benedictine
monasteries to hold a commemoration of the deceased members at
Whitsuntide. In Spain there was such a day on Saturday before Sexagesima
or before Pentecost, at the time of St. Isidore (d. 636). In Germany there
existed (according to the testimony of Widukind, Abbot of Corvey, c. 980)
a time-honored ceremony of praying to the dead on 1 October. This was
accepted and sanctified by the Church. St. Odilo of Cluny (d. 1048)
ordered the commemoration of all the faithful departed to he held annually
in the monasteries of his congregation. Thence it spread among the other
congregations of the Benedictines and among the Carthusians. Of the
dioceses, Liège was the first to adopt it under Bishop Notger (d. 1008).
It is then found in the martyrology of St. Protadius of Besançon
(1053-66). Bishop Otricus (1120-25) introduced it into Milan for the 15
October. In Spain, Portugal, and Latin America, priests on this day say
three Masses. A similar concession for the entire world was asked of Pope
Leo XIII. He would not grant the favor but ordered a special Requiem on
Sunday, 30 September, 1888.
In the Greek Rite this commemoration is held on the eve of Sexagesima
Sunday, or on the eve of Pentecost. The Armenians celebrate the passover
of the dead on the day after Easter."
(Catholic Encyclopedia on-line ed. © 2003 by K. Knight)
For a long time now,
All Souls Day is celebrated on the day following All Saints Day. And that
makes sense. The Souls in Purgatory are going to Heaven, they are being
prepared for the Beatific Vision, to see God the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit in their full glory along with all those already there. There
are many people in Heaven, not only those Beatified or Canonized by the
Church, those are just the souls we know about through miracles that have
occurred that have proven to us that he or she is a Saint or Blessed in
Heaven. To those we can ask for intercession to help us pray and to have our
favor granted. Many times people ask others to pray with them, and
certainly, this is good to involve your brother or sister in Christ in
asking for something. But all to often we forget that a tremendous cadre of
Saints and Blesseds and many other holy people are in Heaven, ready and
waiting to help us when we but ask. |