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Feast of All Souls -
November
2nd 2008 - In praying for the dead, the
Church above all contemplates the mystery of the Resurrection of
Christ, who obtains salvation and eternal life for us through
his Cross. Thus with St Odilo we can ceaselessly repeat: “The
Cross is my refuge, my way and my life The Cross is my
invincible weapon. The Cross repels all evil. The Cross dispels
the darkness”. The Lord’s Cross reminds us that all life is
illumined by the light of Easter and that no situation is
totally lost, for Christ conquered death and opened the way for
us to true life. Redemption “is brought about in the sacrifice
of Christ, by which man redeems the debt of sin and is
reconciled to God” (Tertio
millennio adveniente,
n. 7).
Our hope is founded on
Christ’s sacrifice. His Resurrection inaugurates the “end of the
times” (1 Pt 1:20; cf. Heb 1:2). The belief in eternal life
which we profess in the Creed is an invitation to the joyful
hope of seeing God face to face. To believe in the resurrection
of the flesh is to recognize that there is a final end, an
ultimate goal for all human life, “which so satisfies man’s
appetite that nothing else is left for him to desire” (Thomas
Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I-II, q. 1, a. 5; St Paulinus of
Nola, Letters, 1, 2). This same desire is wonderfully expressed
by St Augustine: “You have made us for yourself, and our heart
is restless until it rests in you” (Confessions, I, 1). Thus, we
are all called to live with Christ, seated at the right hand of
the Father, and to contemplate the Holy Trinity, for “God is the
principal object of Christian hope” (Alphonsus Liguori, Practice
of the Love of Jesus Christ, 16, 2); we can say with Job: “I
know that my Redeemer lives, and at last he will stand upon the
earth; and after my skin has been thus destroyed, then from my
flesh I shall see God, whom I shall see on my side, and my eyes
shall behold and not another” (Jb 19:25-27).
Let us also remember that
the Mystical Body of Christ is waiting to be reunited at the end
of history, when all its members will be in perfect beatitude
and God will be all in all (cf. Origen, Homilies on Leviticus,
n. 7). In fact, the Church hopes for the eternal salvation of
all her children and of all mankind. “We believe that the Church
is necessary to salvation, for Christ is the one mediator and
way of salvation and he becomes present to us in his Body which
is the Church, but the divine design of salvation embraces all
men. Those indeed who are in ignorance of Christ’s Gospel and of
his Church through no fault of their own, who search for God in
sincerity of heart, and who, acting according to conscience,
strive under the influence of grace to fulfil his will, belong
to his people, even though in a way we cannot see, and can
obtain eternal salvation. Their number is known only to God”
(Paul VI,
Credo of the People of God,
30 June 1968).
While waiting for death to
be overcome once and for all, “some of the disciples are
pilgrims on earth. Others have died and are being purified,
while still others are in glory”, contemplating the Trinity in
full light (Second Vatican Council,
Lumen gentium,
n. 49; cf. Eugene IV, Bull Laetantur coeli). Joined to the
merits of the saints, our fraternal prayer comes to the aid of
those who await the beatific vision. Intercession for the dead,
just as the life of those living according to the divine
commandments, obtains the merits that serve the full attainment
of salvation. It is an expression of the fraternal charity of
the one family of God, by which “we are faithful to the Church’s
deepest vocation” (Lumen
gentium, n.
51): “to save souls who will love God eternally” (Thérese of
Lisieux, Prayers, 6; cf. Manuscript A 77r). For the souls in
purgatory, waiting for eternal happiness and for meeting the
Beloved is a source of suffering, because of the punishment due
to sin which separates them from God. But there is also the
certitude that once the time of purification is over, the soul
will go to meet the One it desires (cf. Ps 42; 62).
Contemplation of the lives
of those who have followed Christ encourages us to lead a good,
upright Christian life which makes us “worthy of the kingdom of
God” (2 Thes 1:5). Thus we are called to “supernatural
vigilance”, in the words of Cardinal Perraud (Lettre a l’occasion du neuvieme centenaire de la fete pour les morts), so
that we can prepare ourselves each day for eternal life. As
Cardinal John Henry Newman emphasized: “We are not simply to
believe, but to watch; not simply to love, but to watch; not
simply to obey, but to watch; ... and thus it happens that
watching is a suitable test of a Christian”. This is because to
watch is “to be detached from what is present, and to live in
what is unseen; to live in the thought of Christ as he came
once, and as he will come again; to desire his second coming”
(Parochial and Plain Sermons, IV, 22).
The prayers of intercession
and petition which the Church never ceases to raise to God have
great value. They are “characteristic of a heart attuned to
God’s mercy” (Catechism
of the Catholic Church, n.
2635).
The Lord always lets himself be moved by his children’s
supplications, for he is the God of the living. During the
Eucharist, through the general intercessions and the Memento for
the dead, the assembled community presents to the Father of all
mercies those who have died, so that through the trial of
purgatory they will be purified, if necessary, and attain
eternal joy. In entrusting them to the Lord, we recognize our
solidarity with them and share in their salvation in this
wondrous mystery of the communion of saints. The Church believes
that the souls detained in purgatory “are helped by the prayers
of the faithful and most of all by the acceptable sacrifice of
the altar” (Council of Trent, Decree on Purgatory), as well as
by “alms and other works of piety” (Eugene IV, Bull Laetantur
coeli). “In fact, that same holiness, which is derived simply
from their participation in the Church’s holiness, represents
their first and fundamental contribution to the holiness of the
Church herself, which is the 'communion of saints'” (Christifideles
laici, n.
17).
I therefore encourage
Catholics to pray fervently for the dead, for their family
members and for all our brothers and sisters who have died, that
they may obtain the remission of the punishments due to their
sins and may hear the Lord’s call: “Come, O my dear soul, to
eternal repose in the arms of my goodness, which has prepared
eternal delights for you” (Francis de Sales, Introduction to the
Devout Life, 17, 4).
As I entrust the faithful
who will pray for the dead to the intercession of Our Lady, of
St Odilo and of St Joseph, patron of a happy death, I cordially
grant my Apostolic Blessing to them and to the members of the
diocesan community of Autun, to the members of the
Archconfraternity of Our Lady of Cluny and to the readers of the
bulletin Lumiere et vie. I willingly extend it during the
millennial year to all who pray for the intention of the souls
in purgatory, who take part in the Eucharist and who offer
sacrifices for the dead.
Letter of
his holiness Pope John Paul II for the celebration of the
millennium of the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed (2
June 1998).
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