Introduction – Prayers Of The Faithful

Praying for the living and the dead is one of the Spiritual Acts of Mercy. November, cherished as the Month of the Souls, is a time when we remember all the deceased. We remember the saints, most of whom have no feast day or even a record of their names, on All Saints’ Day, Nov. 1st. On All Souls’ Day, Nov. 2nd, we pray for those who have entered a purification as they encounter God in eternity. Our prayer for them is one of the most hopeful acts we can perform as Catholics.

It is a proclamation that bonds of love and faith are stronger than death and they can never be broken. Our prayer for the dead is also our witness before God that these people belonged to Christ and that they lived in the hope of Heaven.

Many will remember going to the cemetery on All Souls’ Day to visit the graves of family members and friends, and maybe to stop at the graves of people who had no living relatives. We would pray for the repose of their souls. We would offer a prayer of thanksgiving to them, and for them, and maybe offer forgiveness (or ask for it) for past wrongs. We can still do this during a pandemic. No social distancing required from graves and you won’t need a mask!

Introduction – Prayers Of The Faithful

The recent Pastoral Letter of our Bishop, Christian Riesbeck, has been received very positively and with gratitude in every region of our Diocese. His call to encounter Jesus through prayer, and to witness to our faith through evangelizing, gives us reason to be hopeful! We need not feel imprisoned by the pandemic!

Soon after, Pope Francis issued his encyclical letter “Fratelli Tutti”. He pointed out that the pandemic has hurt poor people and working families the hardest and the stages of recovery will be hardest for them as well. He reminds the world that recovery from the pandemic can’t be just a return to “business as usual”.  It must also address the situations and inequities that have caused such hardship in the first place!

But the frustrations of many groups and individuals, their fear of how the pandemic will end and a growing mistrust of people and groups who are different seems to be the only “stuff” that makes the news. “There ought to be a law!” seems to be the common chants and cries of the crowds BUT THERE IS A LAW!!!! It is the law of love. And Jesus reminds us today to love God with everything we have and are and to love our neighbour and others as we would be loved ourselves!