Held in God’s Love.

Held in God’s Love.

November is a time when Catholics traditionally pray for their dead.  This is not an invitation into doom, gloom and ghoulishness but rather a celebration of love that truly is stronger than death. With death we are separated from our loved ones for a time.  We know little of what happens to them except that they enter more deeply into the love of God.  We believe that they continue to grow into the fullness of God’s love and that by our love and prayer we can help their transformation.  We also know that they continue to care for us.  While their loving here on earth was hampered by limitations, now that they are freed from the difficulties of this earth they can love us more passionately than ever.  I believe that the love of my father and grandparents is now more true and strong that ever and that they have a real influence in my life.  Our loved ones pray for us and hold us before the face of God. 

This dance of love that we have with our loved ones is part of what it means to be Church.  As we hold each other in love, those we know on earth and those who have died, and as we are held in love by them, we enter into our destiny.  Made in the image of God, we are made to be Love.

Loving God, your Spirit calls us to the fullness of life which is love.  May our departed loved ones know Jesus as the one leading them to life and may we know the assurance of their deepening love for us.  We ask this in his name, confident that you will hear us.

Sr Kym Harris

And what happens when someone dies?

“And what happens when someone dies?”

Coming from a child, that is a question parents and teachers dread.  Death is a mystery that we all struggle with and when a child asks it, we struggle even more.  How can we answer honestly something for which there are no easy answers or pat evasions?  Added to that, we are often ambushed by this question when we are dealing with the death of someone that we love.

For a Christian, the mystery of death is closely entwined with that other great mystery of life: God.  Death and God! No wonder we get tongue-tied when a child blurts out the above question.  And to make it even tougher, ultimately the answer to this question can only be answered in very personal terms…so I’ll share my answer with you.

Created in God’s own image, we are made for the fullness of love but while we are alive, here in this world, we experience limitations in our loving: time, space, our physical bodies, weakness in personality, our sinfulness.  When we die we are released from these and given the opportunity to choose God, love and life in its fullness.  Those we leave behind on earth suffer the loss of us…for a time.  But the ones who have died are actually free to love us more than they could while on earth.  Because of that, I often turn and pray to the people who loved me on earth: my parents, grandparents, and friends.  Whatever might have limited their love on earth is now cut away and they love me with God’s own love. 

In the Catholic Church, November is a time when we remember the dead.  We remember them in prayer, knowing that they continue to love and care for us, with us all waiting for the day when we will be reunited in God’s glory.

Loving God, we grieve over those we love who have died.  Hold us all together in your love that we may look forward to the day we will be reunited in the fullness of life.  We ask this in Jesus’ name confident that you will hear us.

Sr Kym Harris osb

Held in Love

Held in Love

November is a time when Catholics traditionally pray for their dead.  This is not an invitation into doom, gloom and ghoulishness but rather a celebration of love that truly is stronger than death. With death we are separated from our loved ones for a time.  We know little of what happens to them except that they enter more deeply into the love of God.  We believe that they continue to grow into the fullness of God’s love and that by our love and prayer we can help their transformation.  We also know that they continue to care for us.  While their loving here on earth was hampered by limitations, now that they are freed from the difficulties of this earth, they can love us more passionately than ever.  I believe that the love of my parents and grandparents is now more true and stronger that ever and that they have a real influence in my life.  Our loved ones pray for us and hold us before the face of God. 

This dance of love that we have with our loved ones is part of what it means to be Church.  As we hold each other in love, those we know on earth and those who have died, and as we are held in love by them, we enter into our destiny.  Made in the image of God, we are made to be Love.

Loving God, your Spirit calls us to the fullness of life which is love.  May our departed loved ones know Jesus as the one leading them to life and may we know the assurance of their deepening love for us.  We ask this in his name, confident that you will hear us.

Sr Kym Harris osb