Monday, November 1, 2021

 

THE SOLEMNITY OF ALL SAINTS

(Revelation 7: 2-4.9-14; I John 3: 1-3; Matthew 5: 1-12)

We can understand the Solemnity of All Saints in different ways.  Some will see it as a catch-all.  There have been approximately ten thousand people recognized by the Church as saints.  Only a couple hundred of these are celebrated during the liturgical year.  All Saints Day provides an opportunity to remember the rest of them in a general way.

Others understand today’s feast as a way to think of the saintly persons that they have known who will never have a cause for sainthood.  They think of their grandparents who prayed everyday, thought well of everyone, and never failed to help another person in need.  It seems more appropriate to remember this kind of person on All Saints Day than on All Souls Day.

Finally, we can think of All Saints Day to celebrate the great diversity of saints of the Church.  There are saints from every continent, race, socio-economic status, and most every nation.  The Church has completed the mandate of Christ at the end of Matthew’s gospel to “make disciples of all nations.”  Today we celebrate those Asians and Africans, Irish and Ethiopians, doctors and streetsweepers who have given testimony to the same Christ by their exemplary virtue.

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