I don’t need to tell you that we commemorate the faithful departed on the second day of November. But perhaps it needs to be emphasized that Holy Mother Church dedicates the entire month of November to the memory of the departed, urging us to pray for the liberation of their souls from Purgatory. Like much that Holy Mother Church does, there is a logic to the placing of this month dedicated to the dead at the end of the year. To understand this logic, we need to pay attention to the words of the Gospel this morning. Speaking of the end times, when the Son of Man will come in glory, Our Lord says:
Learn a lesson from the fig tree.
When its branch becomes tender and sprouts leaves,
you know that summer is near.
In the same way, when you see these things happening,
know that he is near, at the gates.
Our Lord is asking us to pay attention to the natural world, in this case the fig tree, and signalling that just as we can read the signs of the natural world, we must be able to read the signs of the supernatural world. In today’s Gospel, the signs of the natural world clearly point to the supernatural:
the sun will be darkened,
and the moon will not give its light,
and the stars will be falling from the sky
And so it is, that when the days grow shorter, the nights longer, and when darkness seems to rule the natural world, Holy Mother Church turns our attention toward our own mortal lives and invites us to think of those souls who must be passing their time in the realms of darkness, in purgatory, and waiting for release into Heaven, the Kingdom of Light Divine. And look at the incredible mind of the church, where it is the penitential season of Advent that comes soon after this month of recollection, where we prepare for commemoration of the coming of Our Lord, in Christmas.
In the first reading we are made aware of the fullness of the teaching of the Church:
Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake;
some shall live forever,
others shall be an everlasting horror and disgrace.
For the Christian, mortal death is not the real death, rather the real death is that of the soul. The mortal death that we experience, along with illness, is the result of sin. As a result of original sin, our bodies are separated from our soul at the time of mortal death. And yet, as the first reading promises us, this is not the end, for mortal death is merely sleep. There will come a time, at the Final Judgement, when we will be resurrected, and be reunited with our bodies, and it is in these bodies that we shall either experience the glory of heaven, or the damnation of hell. As the first reading informed us: “some shall live forever, others shall be an everlasting horror and disgrace.” This damnation is the real death; to be separated from God for all time.
This is also what the psalm today teaches:
Therefore my heart is glad and my soul rejoices,
my body, too, abides in confidence;
because you will not abandon my soul to the netherworld,
nor will you suffer your faithful one to undergo corruption.
Pay attention, however, to the word “faithful”. It is only the faithful who will not be abandoned to the netherworld.
The first reading also contains a similar message:
the wise shall shine brightly
like the splendour of the firmament,
and those who lead the many to justice
shall be like the stars forever.
The words of the scripture are clear, therefore, it is only the faithful, the wise, and the just who shall enjoy the delights of heaven, or as the psalms say:
fullness of joys in your presence,
the delights at your right hand forever.
And who are these faithful, the wise and the just? Entry into heaven, into the presence of God is not simply open to those who are virtuous, or who are good people. The second reading, from the letter to the Hebrews, makes this quite clear,
For by one offering
he has made perfect forever those who are being consecrated.
The offering being referred to here, dear brothers and sisters, is the offering Our Lord made of His own life, so that the effects of original sin which barred our communion with God may be erased and our relationship with God restored. Remember that it was only after the death and resurrection of Our Lord that the righteous who died before Him were able to enter Heaven. And so it is, that baptism alone, the consecration that is referred to in the reading from the letter to the Hebrews, that permits us to be made faithful, the wise and the just enough to enter heaven.
It is baptism, dear brothers and sisters that allows us to enter into the Church. In turn the Church, which through the sacraments and its teachings, allows us to reach purgatory, and not hell. And it is the Church, that through its provision to us of the Eucharist - “the one offering” that gives us, as the Gospel acclamation says, “the strength to stand before the Son of Man” our Righteous Judge, and then enter heaven, where we will be reunited with our glorious bodies in the presence of God, His Mother, and all His Saints.
May Our Lord give us the grace to prepare for a blessed death, even as we continue to pray for the faithful departed.
Eternal Rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let the perpetual light shine upon them.
(A version of this homily was first preached in Concanim to the faithful at the parish of Our Lady of the Rosary, Fatorda on 17 Nov 2024.)