Straight Answers:
Why Do We Offer Mass for the Dead?
By Fr. William Saunders
HERALD Columnist
My elderly mother always has Masses offered for
deceased relatives on the anniversary of their deaths.
Where did this practice come from and is it important?
A reader in Annandale.
The offering of Mass" for the repose of the soul
of the faithful departed is linked with our belief in
Purgatory. We believe that if a person has died
fundamentally believing in God but with venial sins and
the hurt caused by sin, then God in His divine love and
mercy will first purify the soul After this purification
has been completed, the soul will have the holiness and
purity needed to share in the beatific vision in heaven.
While each individual stands judgment before the Lord
and must render an account of his life, the communion of
the Church shared on this earth continues, except for
those souls dammed to hell. The Vatican Council II
affirmed, "This sacred council accepts loyally the
venerable faith of our ancestors in the living communion
which exists between us and our brothers who are in the
glory of heaven or who are yet being purified after their
death..." (Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, No.
51). Therefore, just as we pray for each other and share
each other's burdens now, the faithful on earth can offer
prayers and sacrifices to help the departed souls
undergoing purification, and no better prayer could be
offered than that of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
Pope Leo XIII in his encyclical Mirae Caritatis
(1902) beautifully elaborated "This point and
emphasized the connection between the communion of saints
with the Mass: "The grace of mutual love among
"The living, strengthened and increased by the
Sacrament of the Eucharist, flows' especially by virtue
of the Sacrifice [of the Mass]' to all who belong to the
communion of saints For the communion of saints is
simply... the mutual sharing of help, atonement, prayers,
and benefits among the faithful, those already In the
heavenly fatherland, those consigned to the purifying
fire, and those still making their pilgrim way here on
earth. These all form one city, whose head is Christ, and
whose vital principle is love. Faith teaches that
although the august Sacrifice can be offered to God
alone, it can nevertheless be celebrated in honor of the
saints now reigning in heaven with God, who has crowned
them, to obtain their intercession for us, and also,
according to apostolic tradition, to wash away the stains
of those brethren who died in the Lord but without yet
being wholly purified. " Think of this point: The
Holy Mass transcends time and space, uniting the faithful
in heaven, on earth and in purgatory into a Holy
Communion, and the Holy Eucharist Itself augments our
union with Christ, wipes away venial sins, and presences
us from future mortal sins (cf. Catechism, No.
1391-1396). Therefore, the offering of Mass and other
prayers or sacrifices for the intentions of the faithful
departed are good and holy acts.
This practice is not new. The Catechism asserts,
"From the beginning the Church has honored the
memory of the dead and offered prayers in suffrage for
them, above all the Eucharistic Sacrifice, so that, thus
purified, they may attain the beatific vision of
God" (No. 1032). Actually! "This
"beginning" has toots even in the Old
Testament. Judas Maccabees offered prayers and sacrifices
for the Jewish soldiers who had died wearing pagan
amulets, which were forbidden by the Law; II Maccabees
reads, "Turning to supplication, they prayed that
the sinful deed might be fully blotted out" (12:43)
and "Thus, [Judas Maccabees] made atonement for the
deed mat they might be freed from sin" (12:46).
In the early history of the Church, we also see
evidence of prayers for the dead. Inscriptions uncovered
on tombs in the Roman catacombs of the second century
evidence this practice. For example. the epitaph on the
tomb of Abercius (d. 180) Bishop of Hieropolis in Phrygia
begs for prayers for the repose of his soul' Tertullian
in 211 attested to observing the anniversary of death
with prayers. Moreover, the Canons of Hippolytus (c. 235)
explicitly mention the offering of prayers for the dead
during the Mass.
the testimony of the Church Fathers beautifully
support this belief: St. Cyril of Jerusalem (d. 386), in
one of his many catechetical discourses, explained how at
Mass both the living and dead are remembered, and how the
Eucharistic Sacrifice of our Lord is of benefit to
sinners, living and dead. St. Ambrose (d. 397) preached,
"We have loved them during life; let us not abandon
them in death, until we have conducted them by our
prayers into the house of the Lord." St. John
Chrysostom (d. 407) stated, "Let us help end
commemorate them. If Job's sons were purified by their
{ether's sacrifice, why would we doubt that our offerings
for the dead bring them some consolation? Let us not
hesitate to help those who have disc and to offer our
prayers for them." Finally, Pope St. Gregory (d.
604) said, "Let us not hesitate to help those who
have died and to offer our prayers. for them. "
One may wonder, " What if the person's soul has
already been purified and gone to heaven?"' We on
earth know neither the judgment of God nor the divine
time frame; so, there is always goodness in remembering
our departed and commending them to God through prayer
and sacrifice. However, if indeed the departed soul has
been purified and now rests in God's presence in heaven/
then those prayers and sacrifices offered benefit the
other souls in purgatory through the love and mercy of
God.
Therefore, we find not only the origins of this
practice dating to the early Church but we also clearly
recognize its importance. When we face the death of
someone, even " person who is not Catholic. to have
a Mass offered for the repose of his soul and to offer
our prayers are more beneficial and comforting than any
other sympathy card or bouquet of flowers. Most
importantly, we should always remember our own dearly
departed loved ones in the Holy Mass and through our own
prayers and sacrifices to help in their gaining eternal
rest.
Fr. Saunders is dean of the Notre Dame Graduate
School of Christendom College and pastor of Queen of
Apostles Parish, both in Alexandria.
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Arlington Catholic Herald, Inc. All rights reserved.
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