|
 |
Jenny
Brown
wrote:
|
Hello, Mike —
Hope all is well.
I have a question regarding the dead.
I understand that we are not to evoke the
dead. We are never to initiate communication.
That's necromancy — forbidden by the
Bible.
- Is this correct?
- If it is, should I pray to my dead
family and friends?
- If we should pray to the dead, why do we pray to the
saints when they are all dead?
I'm a little confused on all this.
Jenny
|
{
Why
pray for saints and family members when they are dead and can the Holy Souls pray for us? }
|
Mike
replied:
Hi, Jenny —
Thanks
for the question.
Nice to hear from you again.
This is a very common misperception.
A good deal of the confusion can be found
in how we refer to those who have
passed from this life on to the next.
- Our Lord
- Our Blessed Mother
- the Saints
- the Holy Souls in Purgatory
- your family members, and
- my family members
are not dead! They are more alive
then you or me!
Jesus said,
25 I am the Resurrection and The Life, he who believes in me
will never die.
(John 11:25)
Many times in the past, especially
before Vatican II, it was common
for a priest to celebrate a Mass
for the Dead, or to have a set of
novenas said, for the Dead.
What the celebrant and participating parishioners
understood by this, is when he was saying prayers
for the dead, they are expressing
the Mass or prayer intention from their earthly view, not from a realistic view. Those that have passed from this Earthly life to Eternal Life are very much alive!
In order to overcome this confusion, it would have been better say that a Mass or novena was being offered for our Departed Loved ones or for the Faithful Departed.
Though none of us can pass judgment on anyone who has passed from this Earthly life to the next, we can have a moral assurance that if a person was a very good person, that (he|she) is one with Christ, after a 100% purification to holiness, in Heaven.
Though my father, Stephen Humphrey
Jr. died two years ago, I could still
go up to Fr. David and ask to have
a Mass said for my father.
That fact that my request is expressed
from a Church Militant [or Earthly]
view, (that my
father died), does not deny the realistic
view, that my father is alive in
Christ Jesus, Our Lord or being totally purified in the Holy Hospital of Heaven, Purgatory, even as I'm
typing this reply more than two years
after his (death|passing|departure).
This is why the term faithfully
departed is a much
better expression
that does not deny they are really
alive in Christ Jesus Our Lord, praying
for us, while waiting for the Second
Coming.
You may
be asking later:
- Then can the Holy Souls pray
for us? <Yes!>
My colleague, Brian, has discovered
new saintly sources that affirm the
Holy Souls can and do pray for us
in Purgatory.
Although the saint's merit is fixed
at their death, the saints in Heaven can
pray for the consolation
of the Holy Souls but can't
pray that
their temporal suffrages
are mitigated.
This is why
it is so important for
us to take
the initiative in
helping them. We can help.
If you hopefully feel more comfortable
about praying for the faithful departed,
check out my relatively new web site: Helpers
of the Holy Souls.
We are trying to start Purgatory
Prayer Programs across America. So
far we have received confirmation
that Holy Souls Devotees have received
our program in 22 out of 50 states.
Many:
- start it as a personal devotion
- change it according to their
needs and desires and
- after a few months, take it to
the pastor of their parish to
see if the program
can be implemented in the parish
on a regular basis.
Get
your FREE Purgatory Prayer
Program today!
Hope this helps,
Mike
|
Eric
replied:
Hi, Jenny —
Necromancy is one form of divination.
There are many other forms of divination,
such as:
- geomancy
- (divination by tossing
earth on the ground or relying
on other random generations)
- cleromancy
(casting lots)
- rhabdomancy
(like dowsing)
tasseomancy
(reading tea leaves)
- and others
These all seek to divine the future,
to hear from the Other Side,
so to speak.
This differs essentially from asking
saints to pray for us — which
is why we pray to them — in
that when we ask saints to pray for
us, we are not seeking communication
from them, as in necromancy and
the other forms of divination.
The
point is not to divine the future.
The point is to ask them for their
prayers just like we ask our brothers
and sisters on earth for their prayers.
We don't expect a reply, message,
or any sort of communication from
them, thus it is not necromancy.
Eric
|
Jenny
replied:
Hi, guys —
I guess I get some of what your saying.
In other words, I can speak to those
who have passed on but I should never
ask for or expect a direct reply
from them. I should never ask them
to give me a sign of some sort to
indicate they can hear me, but I
can ask them to intercede with The
Lord on my behalf.
- Do you think it's possible for
those who have passed on to
talk to us or contact us in our
dreams?
- Do you think they can help us
here in this world?
Jenn Brown
|
John
replied:
Jenny,
We know from Hebrews Chapter 12 verse
1 that those who have gone on before
us surround us in a cloud of witnesses.
We know from the Book of Second
Maccabees that we can pray for them,
we can ask their prayers, and they
can and do pray for us, (2 Maccabees 12:39-45), so, of course, they can help us.
It is possible for them to come to
us in dreams but only
if God allowed it for a particular
purpose. It's not an every day occurrence.
Again, we read about such an occurrence
in Second Maccabees, where Judas
Maccabeus has a vision of Onias the
Priest and Jeremiah the Prophet (who
were both dead). In this vision,
he is consoled because he sees both
of them praying for Israel.
Also re-read the last
part of Mike's answer to you.
John
|
Eric
replied:
Jenny,
While asking for a sign is still
not quite the same as asking them
to foretell the future (as in
necromancy), I agree this should
be avoided. The point is to ask them
to pray for us, not establish a dialogue.
It is certainly possible for those
who have passed on to talk to us
in our dreams, and it has happened
before with saints, but it is exceedingly
rare and I would never seek this
out or expect it, and it is all by
the grace of God.
Eric
|
Mary
Ann replied:
Hi, Jenny —
The Holy Souls can pray for us. Our
prayer requests to them, and whatever
light we may receive about the souls,
and the answers to our requests,
all go through and come from God,
by His power and permission.
Mary Ann
|
|
|
|