You will find homilettes for all weekdays since October 29 below.
The Commemoration of the Faithful Departed (All Souls Day)
(John 6:3-9)
Today we pray for those whom we traditionally call “the souls in purgatory.” With scientific terms such as DNA becoming part of household conversations, the word “soul” sounds passé. “Purgatory” also may seem out-of-date in these ecumenical times. It is not found in the Bible, and many Protestants may not appreciate its significance.
Yet are there any better terms to convey our hope for eternal life? The human being is certainly more than a complex of atoms. Our experiences, attitudes, and desires must register somehow to make us the persons we are. It may be ridiculous to say the soul weighs so many grams as some self-styled theologians claim. But it is as good a term as any to describe what makes us who we are beyond the raw components (which, it has been said, are worth only a little change money).
The more we know about ourselves and others, the more we realize that our hearts are not pure enough to look at God at death. For some the fault lines are long and deep. They may not have been fully responsible, but they made some poor choices. For others there may be no more than slight fissures on their souls, i.e., oversights or mistakes that need reckoning. We know ourselves as not ready for heaven yet believe ourselves too close to Christ to be damned to hell. “Purgatory” expresses our predicament as well as any term. It is not so much a place of punishment as of purgation. There we have the possibility to reconsider the ways in which we lived so that we might become loving like Christ. Our prayers for those already in this intermittent realm catalyzes the process of their perfection.
No comments:
Post a Comment