Happy “All Saints Day”
Image Courtesy: Archdiocese of Los Angeles
(Franciscan Media) Today the Church celebrates all of the Saints: Canonized or Beatified and the multitude of those who are in heaven enjoying the beatific vision that are only known to God.
During the early centuries the Saints venerated by the Church were all Martyr’s — Later on the Pope’s set the 01 November, as the day for commemorating all the Saints. We all have this ‘universal call to holiness.’
What must we do in order to join the company of the Saints in heaven?
We must follow in His footsteps and conform ourselves to His image, seeking the will of the Father in all things. — We must devote ourselves with all (of) our being to the glory of God and the service of our neighbor. In this way, the holiness of the people of God will grow into an abundant harvest of good, as is admirably shown by the life of so many Saints in Church history. —Lumen Gentium 40
During the year, the Church celebrates one-by-one the Feasts of the Saints but today, She joins them all in one festival. In addition to those whose names She knows, She recalls in magnificent vision all the others “of all nations and tribes standing before the throne and in the sight of the Lamb (of God) clothed with white robes and palms in their hands, proclaiming Him who redeemed then in His Blood.”
The ‘Feast of All Saints’ should inspire us with tremendous hope. Among the Saints in heaven are some that we have known. All lived on earth, lives like our own. They were baptized, marked with the sign of faith, they were faithful to Christ’s teaching and they have gone before us to the heavenly home, where they call on us to follow them.
The Gospel of the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:1-12) read today, while it shows their happiness shows too, the road that they followed, there is no other that will lead us to which they have gone.
The Commemoration of “All Saints” was first celebrated in the East, how the Western Church came to celebrate today’s Feast now recognized as a Solemnity in November is a puzzle to historians. The Anglo-Saxon theologian Alcuin observed the Feast on the 01 November, 800 as did his friend Arno, the Bishop of Salzburg — Rome finally adopted that date in the 9th century.
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