Pastor’s Letter: November 5, 2023

Pastor’s Letter: November 5, 2023

Pastor’s Letter: November 5, 2023

3 Nov 2023 | Posted by: chadmin

Dear friend,

The past week we celebrated All Hallows’ Eve, All Saints’ Day, and All Souls’ Day. These spiritual days encourage us to reflect on the beauty of our Catholic Christian faith and the dignity of every soul. We all came from God and we all will return to God. The gift of the Life, Death and Resurrection of Jesus is all about revealing the truth of God and bringing all souls to salvation. All Saints’ Day gives us the opportunity to thank God for the example of all the saints in heaven, those we know and those we don’t. The Church has the process to canonize saints to investigate a saint’s life and miraculous intercession in order to establish that saint must be with God in heaven. However, as Christians we believe every soul in heaven is a saint, as heaven is God’s house of perfection. There are thousands of canonized saints in our Church tradition, but there are millions of saints in heaven that we don’t recognize on our Church calendar. All Saints’ Day gives us the opportunity to recognize the saints we know as well as the saints we don’t, while we ask all of them to pray for us.

On the celebration of All Souls’ Day, we remember and celebrate all of our faithful departed. The month of November is set aside to remember our deceased loved ones and pray for their eternal salvation. The Bible is clear that we are all sinners and fall short of the glory of God. None of us can save oneself. We all need Jesus the savior. As we remember all our deceased loved ones, the Church invites us to pray for forgiveness and mercy. At death we are all judged by God, as each person then passes to heaven, hell or purgatory. Heaven and hell are eternal states of existence, while the state of purgatory is a time of God purifying a soul prior to entering heaven. Since heaven is God’s house and God is perfect, then everyone in heaven must be perfect.  Purgatory purifies the soul for heavenly entrance. The Bible reveals that the greatest gift of God to humans is freedom. We are encouraged by the Church to use our freedom to pray God forgive all our deceased loved ones that they might pass from death into eternal life. We offer a Mass, or say the Mass Intention, for our deceased loved ones, that the Father might take the efficacious grace of Jesus Christ Crucified and apply it to our deceased loved ones. While we don’t know that exact state of existence in purgatory or the length of one’s presence in the purgatory state, we know God honors the prayers of those who use their freedom to prayer for others and to do works of love and sacrifice. The month of November gives us the opportunity to visit cemeteries or the graves of our loved ones as we pray for their salvation and thank God for the gift of life.

Each year on All Saints’ Day, our St. Philomena School 5th grade students choose a saint to study and dress as for the school Mass. After Communion at the school Mass, one of the 5thgraders reads the following words to put the saints into perspective. Have a great week.

 

Why were the Saints Saints?

Because they were cheerful when it was difficult to be cheerful…

Patient when it was difficult to be patient…

And because they pushed on when they wanted to stand still…

And kept silent when they wanted to talk…

and were agreeable when they wanted to be disagreeable.

That was all.  It was quite simple and always will be.

 

God bless,

Father David