Commemoration of All the Faithful departed (All Souls Day)
Homily All Souls 2025

Commemoration of All the Faithful departed (All Souls Day)
Wis 3;1-9; Rm 6:3-9; Jn 6/37-40
November 2 is All Souls Day! It is not a solemnity but a commemoration of the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed. It is a day of prayer and mourning for the souls of the faithful departed who are being purified in purgatory. Unlike All Saints Day (which is a solemnity and a joyful celebration of heaven), this day has a penitential and somber tone. It is not a feast of triumph, but of intercession. When it falls on a Sunday in Ordinary time where we are expected to sing the Gloria, that song of joy and praise is omitted because the tone of the day is not celebratory but prayerful and reflective. The Creed too is omitted because the focus is not on catechesis but application of faith and our belief in resurrection. As we conclude the prayers of the faithful, we will sing the song of farewell to our departed parishioners who have passed on in the past year.
All Souls Day can easily be a sad or even painful day for many. For those who have lost loved ones in the last year, this day can be a challenging reminder of the absence they likely continue to feel quite intensely. Even those who have not lost someone so immediately, can still experience the sadness of thinking about all those who are no longer with us.
While we should not downplay our mourning nor deny our grief, we are also called to recognize that sadness is not the only emotion encouraged by the Commemoration of the Faithful Departed. Hope is part of what the feast is meant to offer us as well. Hope does not disappoint because the love of God has been poured into our hearts as St Paul has told in the second reading. All Souls is a day of hope, not despair because it proclaims that love is stronger than death, that God’s mercy is greater than our sin.
The gospel reading from St John also contains a clear basis for this hope. Jesus insists that it is the Father’s will that he ‘should not lose anything of what he gave me’ and pledges that those who follow him will have eternal life, for “I shall raise them upon the last day”.
Whether one has an immediate family member or whether you commemorate all souls more generally on this day, there is hardly a more meaningful sentiment than this hope. We take solace in the promise that our departed loved ones are now in God’s hands, where no unbearable torment could ever touch and bring them down as we read from the Book of Wisdom.
The responsorial psalm we sung presents a different type of promise to prompt another type of hopefulness in the midst of sadness and mourning. Instead of pointing toward our future resurrection, Psalm 23 gives us the comfort of knowing that God is here to accompany us just as God has accompanied all those who have gone before us. “Even though I walk in the dark valley” the psalmist maintains, “I fear no evil; for you are at my side”. Or even more poetically, “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want”.
Unquestionably, we can trust all the faithful departed had the rod and staff of this Good Shepherd to give them the courage as they faced the unavoidable reality of death. And we find solace in the guarantee that this Provident God will likewise refresh our own souls as we mourn our losses today.
As we remember and pray for all those who have gone before us marked with a sign of faith, let our lives be a legacy of love, our prayers aid them on their journey to God and our service a sharing in the life of Jesus.
Eternal rest grant unto them O Lord………. and let perpetual light shine upon them. May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen
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