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All Saints/All Souls
The readings for Sunday, November 2, 2003, the Fourteenth Sunday
of the Year, are Wisdom 3:1-9; Romans 6:3-9 and John 11:17-27.
In the aftermath of Cardinal Joseph Bernardin’s 1996 death, several
conservative Catholic commentators made the same observation. “The
cardinal’s funeral liturgy,” they remarked, “was constructed
to give people the impression that when he died he went straight to heaven.
No one said anything about the possibility of his soul being in purgatory.”
The commentators probably were correct. But if they listen carefully to
today’s readings commemorating the feast of All Souls, they’ll
notice that all three sacred authors also presume “the just”
are instantly “in the hand of God” when they die. They mention
nothing about a purification process after death.
Our Wisdom author says exactly that. His goal is not only to contrast
the glory the just are experiencing in Yahweh’s presence with the
nonsense they had to endure while they were on earth, but also to confront
the attitude some people have about them after they died. “They
seemed, in the view of the foolish,” he writes, “to be dead;
their passing away was thought an affliction and their going forth from
us utter destruction. But they are in peace.” Though the unjust
presumed they were being punished by God, actually “... he took
them to himself.”
Paul, defining the just as those “who were baptized in Christ Jesus,”
believes our “new life” begins the instant we die with Jesus
in baptism. In his letter to the Romans, he presumes there’s nothing
in us to be purified after we physically die. “For if we have grown
into union with him through a death like his, we shall also be united
with him in the resurrection ... If we have died with Christ, we believe
we shall also live with him.” The Apostle believes the only suffering
a Christian must endure is the suffering he or she experiences right here
and now in imitating Jesus’ love of others.
John takes this concept one step further. Scholars tell us to note carefully
the dialogue between Martha and Jesus in today’s gospel pericope.
They contend that Martha presents the ‘old” theology about
death; Jesus, the “new and improved.”
Martha agrees with Jesus’ comforting statement, “Your brother
will rise.” But she limits Lazarus’ resurrection to “the
last day.” In spite of Paul’s comments above, many early Christians
believed their eternal life with the Lord would start only after he gloriously
returned in the Parousia on “the last day.” The faithful departed
had to bide their time in some sort of suspended animation until that
day when they’d finally be ushered into heaven.
John’s Jesus tells us there’s no delay in the process. “I
am the resurrection and the life,” he proclaims. “Whoever
believes in me, even if they die, will live, and everyone who lives and
believes in me will never die.” The only question we have to answer
is, “Do you believe this?”
Scholars call this kind of theology “realized eschatology.”
The Greek word eschaton refers to the last things we humans will experience.
John teaches that those last things are already here, realized through
faith in our everyday lives. What we’re looking forward to achieving
in the future, we already possess in the present. It’s difficult
to fit our later belief in purgatory into such a theology.
The Vatican II-inspired return to our scriptural roots, has reshaped our
celebration of this feast. It’s removed much of our old emphasis
on getting souls out of purgatory. (Remember when all priests were expected
to “say” three Masses today for the Poor Souls?) It’s
helped us create liturgies in which we fondly remember those who have
gone before us in the faith. If this process continues in the same direction,
we’ll eventually have to ask, “When will today’s celebration
of All Souls be merged with yesterday’s celebration of All Saints?”
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