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Election Day and Day of the Dead
BY Tom & April Hoopes
October 26-November 1, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/21/08 at 9:22 AM
Sunday, Nov. 2, is All Souls Day,
the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed (Year A, Cycle II). Pope
Benedict XVI will celebrate Mass on Nov. 3 for all the deceased cardinals and
bishops of the year 2008 at 11:30 a.m. at St. Peter’s.
Nation
Nov.
4 is Election Day, and Father Frank Pavone of Priests for Life offers this
advice:
1.
Vote early.
Vote
first thing in the morning. If you wait, you increase the chances that
something might prevent you. The earlier, the better.
2.
Help other pro-lifers vote.
Offer rides. Maybe you know a pro-lifer who is stuck at home
with no car. Or organize trips to the polls on a wider scale with car pools.
Offer babysitting.
Help a busy mom, or even organize a
service for a group of parents.
E-mail and
call. Remind pro-life friends that
it’s voting day.
3.
Avoid overconfidence or dejection.
If
the election goes the way you want, don’t become overconfident or complacent.
Work harder than ever to encourage and assist those whom you helped elect. If
it does not go the way you want, set your energies on challenging those who
were elected to govern in a way that follows the moral law.
In
any case: Pray! “Nothing is impossible for God.” Pray for the family and the
unborn in America.
Family
Our house’s Halloween decorations
are fake gravestones with signs that say “Pray for the Souls in Purgatory.”
That allows Halloween to be the prelude to All Souls Day, when we visit a graveyard
and remember that the entire month of November is devoted to prayer for the
dead.
Readings
(Selected by the U.S. bishops’
website from the options for this day.)
Wisdom 3:1-9; Psalm 23:1-6; Romans
5:5-11; John 6:37-40
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Our Take
Today
is All Souls Day, when the whole Church remembers death.
We
have often had a conversation with our children about the skewed priorities of
high school.
During
those four years of our lives, our problems rise up in an exaggerated way.
Petty disagreements among friends, troubles with teachers who are too strict or
too careless, social cliques that exclude us or demand we change — all of these
seem like all-consuming issues that will make or break us. Then, suddenly, we find
that high school is over, and we wondered why we even cared.
All
Souls Day reminds us that our whole lives are a little like that.
Death
is the great leveler of humanity. To stop and contemplate death is to get a new
perspective on all our problems. All the problems we worry about with our
families, with politics, the office, neighbors and friends — they are all important, but one by
one, in the near future, the drama of each will be reduced to one question: How
do I account to God for my life?
C.S.
Lewis said he would remind himself when speaking to someone that, 60 years
hence, the person would either be so glorious in heaven that he would be
tempted to worship him, or so horrible in hell that he would be tempted to flee
in terror.
That’s
the perspective All Souls Day gives.
Thankfully,
the readings today (there are many options; we chose the ones from the bishops’
website here) give great reason for hope. We leave you with a few quotes from
them:
“The
souls of the just are in the hand of God, and no torment shall touch them.”
“They
seemed, in the view of the foolish, to be dead; and their passing away was
thought an affliction and their going forth from us, utter destruction. But
they are in peace.”
“Brothers
and sisters: Hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured
out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.”
“This is the will of the one who
sent me, that I should not lose anything of what he gave me, but that I should
raise it on the last day.”
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