THE FRANCISCAN FRIARS, TOR

Fransiscan Friars, TOR
The Franciscan Friars, TOR

THE FRANCISCAN FRIARS, TOR

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Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed

November 2, 2017

|Recurring Event (See all)

An event every year that begins at 12:00 AM on of November, repeating indefinitely

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  • Saint Martin de Porres »
Orthodox service for the Faithful Departed | Vasily Vereshchagin
Image: Orthodox service for the Faithful Departed | Vasily Vereshchagin

Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed

Saint of the Day for November 2

Click to hear audio clip ►

The Story of the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed

The Church has encouraged prayer for the dead from the earliest times as an act of Christian charity. “If we had no care for the dead,” Augustine noted, “we would not be in the habit of praying for them.” Yet pre-Christian rites for the deceased retained such a strong hold on the superstitious imagination that a liturgical commemoration was not observed until the early Middle Ages, when monastic communities began to mark an annual day of prayer for the departed members.

In the middle of the 11th century, Saint Odilo, abbot of Cluny, France, decreed that all Cluniac monasteries offer special prayers and sing the Office for the Dead on November 2, the day after the feast of All Saints. The custom spread from Cluny and was finally adopted throughout the Roman Church.

The theological underpinning of the feast is the acknowledgment of human frailty. Since few people achieve perfection in this life but, rather, go to the grave still scarred with traces of sinfulness, some period of purification seems necessary before a soul comes face-to-face with God. The Council of Trent affirmed this purgatory state and insisted that the prayers of the living can speed the process of purification.

Superstition easily clung to the observance. Medieval popular belief held that the souls in purgatory could appear on this day in the form of witches, toads or will-o’-the-wisps. Graveside food offerings supposedly eased the rest of the dead.

Observances of a more religious nature have survived. These include public processions or private visits to cemeteries and decorating graves with flowers and lights. This feast is observed with great fervor in Mexico.


Reflection

Whether or not one should pray for the dead is one of the great arguments which divide Christians. Appalled by the abuse of indulgences in the Church of his day, Martin Luther rejected the concept of purgatory. Yet prayer for a loved one is, for the believer, a way of erasing any distance, even death. In prayer we stand in God’s presence in the company of someone we love, even if that person has gone before us into death.

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Date:
November 2, 2017
Event Category:
Saint of the Day

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The Franciscan Friars, TOR
PO Box 139
Hollidaysburg, PA 16648
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  • About the Friars
    • Who We Are
    • Leadership
    • Province History
    • Our Ministries
    • Care 4 Creation
    • Events
    • The Secular Franciscan Order (SFO)
      • Who Are The Secular Franciscans
      • Lay Vocation: Priest, Prophet and King
      • Lay Vocation: Specific Mission is the Consecration of the Secular Order
      • How to Become a Secular Franciscan
      • Locating a Fraternity Near You
    • Reflections
      • Advent 2017
      • Lent 2018
      • Franciscan Feast Day 2018
      • Reflections for 2019
      • Franciscan Feast Days 2019
      • Advent 2019
  • Support Us
    • Support Online
    • Planned Giving
    • FAQs On Charitable and Planned Giving
  • Mass Association
    • Mass Cards
      • All Occasion
      • Gregorian
      • Health & Healing
      • Novena
      • Triduum
      • Sacraments – Holidays – Holy Days – Feast Days
      • Sympathy
    • Enrollments
      • Annual
      • Health & Healing
      • Perpetual
      • Pet Enrollment
      • Sacraments – Holidays – Holy Days
  • Gift Shop
    • The Friar’s Nook Gift Shop – Online Store
    • The Friar’s Nook Gift Shop – Hollidaysburg, PA
  • Prayer Request
    • Prayer Requests
    • Book of Remembrance
  • Login
    • My Account

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