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Pope Benedict XVI said on today’s feast of All Saints that everyone is
called by Jesus to holiness in their own path toward sainthood.
“The
liturgy reminds us today that the original vocation of every baptized
person is holiness,” the Pope said in his Nov. 1 Angelus address from
the window of his apartment that overlooks St. Peter’s Square.
Jesus
Christ, “with the Father and the Holy Spirit, has loved the Church as
his bride and gave himself for it in order to make her holy,” he
emphasized.
He also reminded Catholics to see the Church as more than just a human institution.
Today,
he said, “we are thus invited to look at the Church, not in its
temporal aspects marked by human weakness, but as Christ willed it, as
‘the communion of saints.’”
He told them that today’s feast day
was “a favorable opportunity” to raise our eyes “from the realities of
this world marked by time” up to “the dimensions of God, the dimensions
of eternity and holiness.”
The Pope also reflected on how today’s
emphasis on the “communion of saints” continues into tomorrow’s
commemoration of All Souls, which occurs every Nov. 2. This is the day
when the Church prays for the souls in Purgatory.
All Souls Day,
the Pope said, “helps us to remember our loved ones who have left us,
and all the souls on their way to the fullness of life, just on the
horizon of the heavenly Church.”
He noted how the custom of
praying for the dead has existed since “the early days of the Christian
faith,” and that these prayers are “not only useful but necessary,”
since they “not not only can help them” but also make their prayers for
those on earth effective.
In many Catholic parts of the world, All
Souls Day is marked by visiting the graves of loved ones. In several
Spanish speaking countries – particularly Mexico – this custom is
referred to as the “Day of the Dead.”
“Although a visit to the
cemeteries, maintains the bonds of affection with those who loved us in
this life,” said the Pope, it also “reminds us that we are all tending
towards another life beyond death.”
This means that our “crying
due to earthly detachment does not prevail,” he said. Rather, it is
overcome by our “certainty of the resurrection” and our “hope of
reaching the bliss of eternity”—that “supreme moment of satisfaction, in
which all embraces us and we embrace all.”
Pope Benedict
concluded by entrusting both “our pilgrimage to the homeland of Heaven,”
as well as that of our “dead brothers and sisters,” to the maternal
intercession of the Virgin Mary, Queen of All Saints.
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