Sunday, November 04, 2007

For All the Saints

Today is All Saints Sunday, an important day in the Christian calendar that, unfortunately, often goes unnoticed. It is the day that we celebrate the lives of all the saints who have passed on from this life and have joined the Church triumphant. No more are these saints fighting the fight on earth; rather, they have joined that great cloud of witnesses where they participate in the true worship of our heavenly Father of which our worship here is only a shadow. In many churches, candles are lit and the names are solemnly read aloud of all those who have died in the past year. I was able to call out the name 'John Barber,' my grandfather who passed away in late September.

I suspect that the reason that this day is not so much celebrated in our culture is because death is not a regular thing in our churches. Sure we experience it when our older members pass on, and that is certainly sad. But death is not shocking to us. It is a normal occurrence in our lives. It was not so in the early church. In those first few centuries, a person could be tried and put to death simply for having the name Christian. All someone needed to do was accuse a person as a Christian, and his or her death ticket was all but signed. In that situation, death was a regular occurrence. One can imagine regular reports of members of local churches being read in those early church services. One can imagine the shock that would have rung out in the congregation. When those early communities celebrated the names and lives of those who had passed in the last year, they were not just celebrating the grandmothers and grandfathers, they were celebrating the husbands and the wives and the children.

But today is not a sad day, it is a triumphant day. As we read off the names of the saints who have passed on, we are reminded that death is no longer the final act of a person's life. It is merely a comma. Because Christ rose, these saints too will rise, and one day soon, the Church will all together again in the heavenly worship of our Triune God.

"For all the saints, who from their labors rest,
who thee by faith before the world confessed,
thy name, O Jesus, be forever blest.

"O blest communion, fellowship divine!
We feebly struggle, they in glory shine;
Yet all are one in thee, for all are thine."

-William W. How

5 comments:

Julie said...

Beautiful. Thank you for this...

Anonymous said...

Dear Jackson, I too quietly named my father this morning, as the members' names were being read.
In your service, did they actually have the congregation call out others' names, not from that church? How nice, I would have loved to have done that. And did you sing that wonderful hymn? Thanks for reminding me of that one....... Love, Mom

Jackson said...

Our church did have people call out names. It was very meaningful - and yes, we did sing that great old hymn.

Anonymous said...

Jackson,

Yesterday was a first for our congregation as we did a full-bore "All Saints" service, closing with communion. It was a great day of worship complete with "For All the Saints" as the opening hymn. To top it off, I had the opportunity to baptize a very inquisitive one year old. Who says that Disney does the "cycle of life" better than the Church! ;-))

later man...

rds
<><

Oh...and what the heck was up with Iowa State and KSU???

Jackson said...

Neat story Randy, thanks for sharing. I think baptism is one of the greatest priviliges of a pastor.

Regarding ISU - what can I say man? We get lucky and pull one out every year. Next year we might even pull two out. I hear we are recruiting John Elway's son.