What do All Souls and high school reunions have to do with each other?
Well, having recently gone to my 50th at Holy Trinity Diocesan High School on Long Island, I found it a wonderful experience. Being a Nun was an oddity among the 150 or so souls who attended the reunion. While we were in school the Dominicans and Mercy teachers, many of whom have gone to heaven, commented among themselves that our class had the most spirit! By the turn out, it appears to be still today.
I spoke with and embraced
people I haven’t seen in 50 years, or had never had the occasion to speak to while
in high school, so large was our class.
We laughed and cried remembering our young lives. My, how we’ve changed. My, how we stayed the same. It was so heartening to meet and meet again so many good people.
Now
about those Souls:
Enraptured, our
foundress Blessed Maria Celeste Crostarosa, once exclaimed: “How lovable and
precious you are, my Jesus. This view
(of You) is so full of love it keeps me in a purgatory at once of love and of
pain, because in the true light of faith the difference separating Your Most
Pure Being from my being becomes clear.”
Someone at the reunion remarked that in Freshman year both the boys and girls were scared of each other. But after 4 years lifelong friendships had developed. Oh, the loves and pains of growing up.
It is the same with Jesus. At first, we are scared of a relationship with God, but during our lifetime we mature and grow in our relationship with the God of unconditional love and mercy and become who we really are meant to be: images of God to one another.
Jesus spoke to the heart of Celeste: “Embrace in my heart all my creatures; and that through my kiss of love to you, you might give to those souls the kiss of love in my heart to them.”
It pleases the Lord when on All Souls Day we offer the Prayers of Petition for the souls of our dearly departed loved ones. Celeste’s words console us: “Death is a dream of peace for just souls because they live in love and it is this love which brings them rest in their dying and they die of this love in a peaceful, sweet and gentle death.” When we die, our union is not quite complete yet. Our loves and pains have still to be purified.
First Corinthians reassures us about this purification: “Behold, I tell you a mystery. We shall not all fall asleep, but we will all be changed: in an instant, in the blink of an eye…and we shall be changed. For that which is corruptible must clothe itself with incorruptibility, and that which is mortal must clothe itself with immortality.”
Then all our SOULS will have quite a REUNION in heaven!
No comments:
Post a Comment