Commemoration of the Faithful Departed
All Souls Day
Our Lady of Purgatory
O.D.M. pinxit
The
Church teaches us that the souls of the just who have left this world
with traces of venial sin remain for a time in a place of expiation,
where they suffer whatever punishment may be due to their offenses. Even
if pardon has been obtained for our sins, satisfaction must be made to
God, our Creator, in this world or in the next; for His sanctity has
been, as it were, insulted by the self-will of one of His ignoble
creatures. The more noble the person offended, the more serious the
offense, even according to human laws. It is a dogma of our faith that
the suffering souls are relieved by the intercession of the Saints in
heaven and by the prayers of the faithful upon earth. To pray for the
dead is therefore an act of charity and of piety, certainly obligatory
for a Christian who professes to have charity in his heart. We read in
Holy Scripture: It is a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead,
that they may be loosed from their sins. (II Maccabees 12:46)O.D.M. pinxit
When towards the close of the tenth century, Our Lord inspired Saint Odilon, Abbot of Cluny, to establish in his Benedictine Order a general commemoration of all the faithful departed, the practice was soon afterwards adopted by the entire Western Church and has been continued unceasingly to our day. Let us always bear in mind the departed who have died in the love of God, and offer up our prayers and sacrifices to help expiate for them. By showing this mercy to the suffering souls in purgatory, we gain for ourselves very devoted friends, who will in their turn pray for us. We shall then be entitled to be treated with mercy at our departure from this world, and to share more abundantly in the suffrages of the Church, continually offered for all who have fallen asleep in Christ.
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