The “Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed” is founded upon the
Catholic Church’s doctrine that those faithful who have not been
cleansed from the temporal punishment due to sin and from their
attachment to sin cannot enjoy the Beatific Vision in heaven immediately
upon their death and that they may be assisted by the prayers,
almsgiving, and sacrifices of the living.
This duty of charity
observed by the people of God in the Old Testament was continued by the
Church in the New Testament. Over time, it found expression not only in
the public and private prayers of the faithful and in their cultural and
religious traditions, but particularly in the singing of the Office for
the Dead and in the offering of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass for the
“Poor Souls in Purgatory”.
In the eleventh century, the tradition
established by St. Odilo of Cluny for the monasteries of his order,
spread to other religious congregations and thence to the universal
Church. Thus, the many different regional dates for commemorating the
dead that had arisen throughout the Church gave way to the universal
observance of “All Souls’ Day” on November 2.
The
Church grants many indulgences to the prayers and devout practices of
the faithful on this feast day and during the entire month of November
when they are offered for the relief and the release of the Holy Souls.
Saint Mary in Hafnerberg, Lower Austria.
Altar of the Holy Cross (detail): Holy Souls in Purgatory.
Photo by: Wolfgang Sauber
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