Shortly before her death at the old
Roman port city of Ostia in 387, St. Monica said to her son, St. Augustine:
“Lay this body anywhere, and take no trouble over it. One thing only do I ask
of you, that you remember me at the altar of the Lord wherever you may be”
(Augustine, Confessions, IX, 11).
At
least here in the northern hemisphere, thoughts about the end come quite naturally
at this time of the year - as the sun rises a little later every morning and
sets a little earlier every afternoon. Amid withered leaves and barren branches, there is a melancholy sense
of time passing by - as yet another year draws to a close. In our Catholic tradition, the month
of November is dedicated in a special way to remembering those who have died,
and to praying for the departed who may still be in the process of being purified
from the effects of their sins. Just as remembering
the dead is an important human duty, so too praying for the dead
is an important Christian one. When we remember those who have died, we
acknowledge our common humanity with them. For, like us, they lived and loved and worked, succeeded and failed, hoped and dreamed – both for themselves and for
their families. And, like them, we too must eventually die. Our Christian
faith, however, redefines for us the universal experience of dying and unites
us with those who have gone before us not just in our common humanity but in
what the Apostles’ Creed calls “the communion of saints.”
Recalling his early years and the
period preceding his conversion, the founder of the Paulist Fathers, Servant of
God Isaac Hecker wrote: “When, in 1843, I first read in the catechism of the
Council of Trent the doctrine of the communion of saints, it went right home.
It alone was to me a heavier weight on the Catholic side of the scales than the
best historical argument which could be presented.” [“Dr. Brownson and
Catholicity,” Catholic World, 1887]. Hecker wrote that in 1887, almost at the end of his life. Would that we all had such a strong, life-long appreciaiton of the communion of saints!
Conscious of the powerful bond that
links us all together through space and time, a bond unbroken even by death, the
Church continually invites the living to remember the dead and to intercede on their behalf,
even as the saints in heaven intercede for us who are still on earth. Today, we
Paulists remember in a special way those who lived together in our religious
community – those we were privileged to know personally and the many more who preceded
us and whose legacy we have been privileged to continue. We pray that, with the wise ones of whom the Prophet Daniel
spoke, having devoted themselves in life to leading many to justice, they too
may be like the stars forever [Daniel 12:3]. We pray that they - and all the
faithful departed - may be purified from the effects of their sins and live forever with
the Blessed Virgin Mary and all the angels and saints in the kingdom whose
cause they sought to serve on earth.
Homily
for the Annual Mass for Deceased Paulists, Immaculate Conception Church,
Knoxville, TN, November 3, 2012.
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