Dear Parishioners:
Twice a year, we all have to go through the inconvenience of resetting our clocks or having our clocks read the wrong time. Every year, we have to remember whether we gain or lose an hour, and then readjust our body clocks. Of course, we all dislike “springing forward,” but “falling back” provides an extra hour of sleep on a Sunday.
So be sure to set your clocks and watches back one hour, and perhaps even enjoy the extra hour of sleep. Without a doubt, a few people will arrive for Sunday Mass an hour early this weekend! Enjoy what has often been called National “How Do I Change the Clock on my Microwave” Day!
Sunday, we celebrate the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed, also known as All Souls’ Day. On this day, we honor our beloved dead for their fidelity in life, as well as pray for them since they are being purified before entering the All-Holy Presence of God. Those who die in the state of grace, yet without having been purified of all of their attachment to sin, go to Purgatory. Christ admonished us to “be perfect as the heavenly Father is perfect.” So the purification of all imperfections, which even the good often still have at death, is necessary before entering the Father’s Presence.
Purgatory by Ludovico Carracci. (21 April 1555 – 13 November 1619)
Top: Christ directing, with Mary and interceding saints. Middle: Angel showing a soul the intercessors. Bottom: souls being purged with various attitudes.
Pope St. John Paul II, in three addresses on Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory, explained that the essence of these realities is not a “place” in space and time, but the relationship of the soul to God, who is Love. On God’s part, He is always offering His Love. On our part, we choose to accept His Love perfectly, or imperfectly. We can also choose to reject God’s offer of Love.
Our choice, whichever it is, becomes fixed at death when the possibility of moral choice ends. This choice determines our eternal relationship with God. The Love of God in the blessed soul is experienced as joy, and in the longing of the soul is purified as fire, mitigated by the knowledge that it will one day be with God, and by the comfort of the angels, saints, and souls on earth praying for it.
Thus, all our Masses this weekend will be offered for All Souls, especially your own beloved dead whose names are inscribed on the All Souls envelopes. Also, we should spend some time in prayer for the souls of our loved ones, as well as for those who have no one to pray for them.
It is an honored custom, as well, to visit the graves of our deceased on this day, both to pray at the place where their bodies, hallowed in life by the Sacraments, await the General Resurrection. We offer prayers and leave some mark of Love and respect, such as flowers, to adorn their graves. Also, we might perhaps pray for a soul who rests in a grave that has no one to pray for them.
We especially remember those forty-two members of our parish family who were laid to rest since last All Souls Day. Their names are listed in the bulletin, and I ask you to please pray for them and their families. We will offer the 10:30 am Mass for the gentle repose of their souls as we gather together with their grieving families. Eternal Rest grant unto them, O Lord, and may perpetual light shine upon them.
On All Souls’ Day, 1839 by Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
As we remember All Souls this month, we are asked to pray fervently for the poor souls in Purgatory. It is a Corporal Work of Mercy to pray for the dead. The practice of praying for the dead is supported by scripture, such as the Book of Maccabees, which describes a holy and pious act of praying for the dead so that they might be delivered from their sin.
As we pray for the poor souls in Purgatory, let us remember the wise words of the Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen. He said, “As we enter Heaven, we will see them, so many of them, coming towards us and thanking us. We will ask who they are, and they will say ‘a poor soul you prayed for in Purgatory.’”
Fr. Brodeur is away on vacation this weekend and will return late Sunday night. On Monday afternoon, he leaves for the Priests’ Convocation, a three-day gathering of the Priests of Providence in Newport. Please pray for him and the priests in attendance. Father returns on Wednesday. On Monday, I depart for Arnold Hall in Pembroke, Massachusetts, for my Annual Retreat. I return on Friday evening. Please pray for me and the priests making the Retreat. We thank Bishop Evans for covering Masses this week.
Be well. Do Good. God Bless. Go Pats!





