|
Purgatory and Prayer for the DeadFR. LEONARD M. PUECH, O.F.M.After the feast of All Saints comes All Souls, when the Church invites us to pray for the faithful departed, that, released from Purgatory and fully purified, they may be admitted to the eternal bliss of heaven. Because the existence of Purgatory and the prayers for the dead are rejected by Protestants, it may be useful to explain why we hold both as Catholics.
The Protestant doctrine of justification leaves no room for Purgatory.
Man is justified by faith alone; he is not changed in any way and remains as corrupted
as before. Because of his faith in Christ his sins are forgiven; they are not
held against him; they are, so to say, covered with a mantle, the merits of Christ.
Therefore justification is the same for all and it admits no degree or increase.
There can be no question of a purification either in this life or in the next
one. If a man is "saved," as they say, when he dies, he remains the same. Some
Protestants believe that a man or woman who has accepted Christ dies totally and
has to wait until the final resurrection to live again. Others believe that he
remains in a kind of sleep. While still others believe that the resurrection takes
place at the very moment of death. Nevertheless, almost all Protestants believe
that there is no possibility of any change, and therefore no room for any purification,
after physical death. It is, then, useless to pray for the dead. But the practice
of praying for the dead is very ancient. It goes back to Judaism and is mentioned
in the second book of Maccabees (2 Mac. 12,43-46). The author tells how
a number of Jews, who had fallen in battle, were found with idolatrous amulets,
forbidden by the law, and how Judas Maccabeus took up a collection and sent the
money to Jerusalem to have a sacrifice offered for their sin. The writer praises
his faith in the resurrection and his action; "If he had not expected the fallen
to rise again it would have been superfluous and foolish to pray for the dead,
whereas if he had in view the splendid recompense reserved for those who make
a pious end, the thought was holy and devout. This was why he had this atonement
sacrifice offered for the dead, so that they might be released from their sin."
Protestants do not accept the books of Maccabees as Scripture, but even so
it bears witness to the faith of pious Jews. No doubt the Apostles, pious Jews
most of them, shared this faith especially Saint Paul, who posed as a Pharisee
and a champion of the resurrection (Acts 23,6). In the New Testament
itself, there is only one allusion to some kind of purification after death
(1 Cor. 3,11-15), and another reference to some of pious practice in favor
of the dead (1 Cor. 15,29). But we have abundant evidence of faith in
a state of purification after death in the earliest ages of the Church. There
are sepulchral inscriptions in the Catacombs, some of which are themselves prayers
for the dead while others ask for prayers for them. There are also prayers for
the faithful departed in the most ancient liturgies and there are many texts in
the Fathers on the value of these prayers and on the necessity of a perfect purification
in order to enter into heaven. There is in the acts of the martyrdom of Saint
Perpetua the account of a vision she had, and this has historical value. She saw
her brother Dinocrates, who had died a pagan and was suffering terrible torments,
released through her prayers. Calvin himself recognized that this had been
the faith of the ancient Church, but called it an error; "For over thirteen hundred
years it was the approved practice to pray for the deceased. All ancient fell
into error; it was something human and therefore they did must not be imitated."
(Instit. 3,5,10). The doctrine of Purgatory and of a purification after death
appears at first sight most reasonable. Once I was explaining it to a good Protestant,
who much later became a Catholic and who is an old friend of mine, and he remarked:
"To me it sounds quite reasonable. Of all the people I know, I don't see many
who are good enough to go to heaven, and yet they are not bad enough to go to
hell." Years later I came across a quotation from a Protestant theologian,
a Dr. Hase, who wrote almost the same thing: "Most people when they die are probably
too good for hell, yet surely too bad for heaven." Catholic theology is not
content with just this common sense judgement. It explains that, even when sin
has been regretted and forgiven some of its consequences remain the so-called
temporal punishments due to sin, which must be expiated either in this world or
in the next. So if someone dies without having made satisfaction for his sins,
he has to make that satisfaction after his death before entering heaven. This
post-mortem expiation is what we call purgatory. However, these "temporal
punishments" must be explained, lest God appear as vindictive and unforgiving,
and also to show why they are a necessary consequence of sin. We must remember
that man has been created to love God first and second to love everyone for the
love of God. This is not confined to our earthly life. This love must continue
forever in heaven and is in fact the condition and measure of happiness in the
world above. Heaven is nothing else but an ecstasy of love given and received.
Not all the saints, however, will love with the same intensity. Each will love
with the capacity for love that he received and developed during his life on earth,
each will receive love in return and be happy in proportion to his degree of love.
But while all the saints in heaven do not love with the same intensity, they
all love with the same purity. Nothing impure can enter into heaven (Apo.
21,22) or share in divine wisdom (Wis. 2,25); therefore, the love
of the saints must be perfectly pure. Since the love of created things, even
when it is not sinful, defiles the soul, as Saint John of the Cross explains at
length (Ascent, Bk.1, Ch.6-12,) perfect purity means perfect detachment
from self and from all created things. It means that one never seeks one's
own satisfaction; never acts for a purely natural motive, but seeks only, always,
and in all things to do God's will and to please him. All sins, mortal or venial,
proceed from an excessive attachment. Even when they are regretted and forgiven,
this increased attachment remains, and the soul must be purified from it. God
uses suffering to purify the soul and to detach it from created things. Scripture
more than once repeats the comparison: as gold or silver is purified by fire,
so also the soul of the just is purified by tribulation (Ps. 66,10; Prov.
12,3; Wis. 3,6, EccL 2,5; Pet. 1,2). It is easy enough to understand
how suffering purifies the soul. It is impossible to love suffering, humanly speaking.
It can be accepted only out of love for God. If, therefore, we have not reached
that pure love of God before death, our love for God must be purified by suffering
after death.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Fr.
Leonard M. Puech, O.F.M. "Purgatory and Prayer for the Dead." In Spiritual Guidance (Vancouver, B.C.: Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty, 1983), 330-333.
Republished
with permission of the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty. THE
AUTHOR The late Fr. Leonard M. Puech wrote a popular column for
the B.C. Catholic from 1976 to 1982. Those columns were compiled and published
by the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, and Liberty as the book Spiritual
Guidance in 1983. The VFAJL is interested in reprinting Spiritual Guidance.
Anyone who would like to contribute to this worthy cause please write: Dr. Margherita
Oberti, 1170 Eyremount Drive, West Vancouver, B.C. V7S 2C5. Copyright © 1983
Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, & Liberty
|