ALL SAINTS: Rev
7:2-4, 9-14; 1 Jn 3:1-3; Mt 5:1-12a
A story is
told of a traveling portrait painter who stopped in a small village hoping to
get some business. The town drunk — ragged, dirty and unshaved — came along. He
wanted his portrait done and the artist complied. He worked painstakingly for a
long time, painting not what he saw but what he envisioned beneath that
disheveled exterior. Finally, he presented the painting to his customer.
“That’s not me,” he shouted. The artist gently laid his hand on the man’s
shoulder and replied, “But that’s the man you could be.” Today’s feast reminds
us that we all can become saints.
All baptized
Christians who have died and are now with God in glory are considered saints.
All Saints Day is a day on which we thank God for giving ordinary men and women
a share in His holiness and Heavenly glory as a reward for their Faith. In fact,
we celebrate the feast of each canonized saint on a particular day of the year.
But there are countless other saints and martyrs, men, women and children
united with God in Heavenly glory, whose feasts we do not celebrate. Among
these would be our own parents and grandparents, brothers and sisters who were
heroic women and men of Faith. All Saints Day is intended to honor
their memory. Hence, today’s feast can be called the feast of the Unknown
Saint, in line with the tradition of the “Unknown Soldier.”
Today, the
Church reminds us that God’s call for holiness is universal and that all of us
are called to live in His love and to make His love real in the lives of those around
us. Holiness is related to the word wholesomeness. We show holiness when
we live lives of integrity and truth, that is, wholesome and integrated lives
in which we are close to others while being close to God.
This feast
offers a challenge to each one of us: anybody can, with the grace of God,
become a saint, regardless of his or her age, lifestyle or living conditions.
St. Augustine accepted this challenge when he asked the question: “If he and
she can become saints, why can’t I?”
St.
Catherine of Siena was right: “Be who God meant you to be and you will set the
world on fire.”
In today’s
Gospel (Mt 5: 1-12), the Church reminds us that all the saints whose
feasts we celebrate today walked the hard and narrow path of the Beatitudes to
arrive at their Heavenly bliss. As Pope benedict remarks, “ the blessed par
excellence is only Jesus. He is, in fact, the true poor in spirit, the one
afflicted, the meek one, the one hungering and thirsting for justice, the
merciful, the pure of heart, the peacemaker. He is the one persecuted for the
sake of justice.” The Beatitudes are God’s commandments expressed in positive
terms.
Thomas
Merton was one of the most influential American Catholic authors of the
twentieth century. Shortly after he was converted to Catholicism in the late
1930s, Thomas Merton was walking down the streets of New York with a friend,
Robert Lax. Lax was Jewish, and he asked Thomas what he wanted to be, now that
he was Catholic. “I don’t know.” Merton replied, adding simply that he wanted
to be a good Catholic. Lax stopped him in his tracks. “What you should say,” he
told him, “is that you want to be a saint!” Merton was dumbfounded. “How do you
expect me to be a saint?” Merton asked him. Lax said: “All that is necessary to
be a saint is to want to be one. Don’t you believe that God will make you what
He created you to be, if you consent to let him do it? All you have is to
desire it.” Thomas Merton knew his friend was right.
The feast
gives us an occasion to thank God for having invited so many of our ancestors
to join the company of the saints. May our reflection on the heroic lives of
the saints and the imitation of their lifestyle enable us to hear from our Lord
the words of grand welcome to eternal bliss: “Well done, good and faithful
servant! Enter into the joys of your master” (Mt 25:21).
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