November: A sacred season of hope, communion and prayer

A message from Bishop David M. O’Connell, C.M.
October 31, 2025 at 9:37 a.m.
Students from St. Dominic School, Brick, dress as their favorite saint during their school's observance of the Solemnity of All Saints on Nov. 1, 2024. Facebook photo
Students from St. Dominic School, Brick, dress as their favorite saint during their school's observance of the Solemnity of All Saints on Nov. 1, 2024. Facebook photo


As the Church enters the month of November, she invites us to pause, reflect, and lift our hearts toward eternity. This sacred time begins with the Feast of All Saints on November 1 — a radiant celebration of those who have gone before us in faith and now dwell in the light of God’s presence.

These holy men and women, known and unknown, are the Church’s most eloquent witnesses to Christian hope. They lived the Gospel with courage and tenderness, embracing the Beatitudes as the path to holiness, even amid trials and suffering. Their lives proclaim the joyful truth: Christ is risen — and we too shall rise with him.

The following day, November 2nd, we commemorate All Souls' Day—a day of remembrance, rooted in love and crowned with hope. As Pope Francis once reminded us, "It is a moment to return to our spiritual roots and look forward with confidence to the promise of encountering the love of the Father. We remember those who have died, not with sorrow alone, but with the deep assurance that love endures beyond death."

The Feast of All Souls is a time to remember all the faithfully departed and have entered eternal life. Monitor file photo

 Throughout November, the Church offers prayers for the faithful departed—those who have gone before us, marked with the sign of faith, and now rest in the peace of God. This "sign of faith," received in Baptism, is an indelible mark of belonging to Christ. As St. Teresa of Calcutta once said, “During this whole month we give them extra love and care by praying to them and for them.”

Our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, recently commented: "All this begins with our Baptism and will never end. Baptism introduces us into communion with Christ and gives us true life... Death never has the last word! The final word, which opens the doors to eternity and joy that lasts forever, is the Resurrection, which knows no discouragement and frees us from the pain of searching for meaning in our existence."

This tradition of prayer for the dead stretches back to the earliest centuries of the Church and even deeper into the sacred pages of Scripture. The Book of Maccabees affirms: “It is a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from their sins" (2 Maccabees 12:46). In this act of prayer, we participate in a mystery of mercy and communion that transcends time.

The Church teaches that all the baptized are united in a threefold bond:

  • The Church Triumphant -- The saints in heaven, rejoicing in eternal glory.
  • The Church Penitent -- The souls in purgatory, being purified in love.
  • The Church Militant -- We who journey on earth, striving toward holiness.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us that at the moment of death, each soul encounters Christ in a particular judgment. Those who die in his grace, though not yet fully purified, are assured of salvation and undergo a final cleansing -- what we call purgatory.

Our prayers, sacrifices, and acts of love offered for these souls are a profound gift. As Pope St. John Paul II beautifully said, "Praying for the souls in purgatory is the highest act of supernatural charity."

To celebrate the Feast of All Saints is to rejoice in the communion of saints — a living relationship with those who now behold the face of God. To pray on the Feast of All Souls for the holy souls in purgatory is to express our enduring love and solidarity with them, rooted in the grace of Baptism.

Though November is especially dedicated to these prayers, our love for the departed is not confined to a single season. It is, as Scripture says, "a holy and wholesome thought"— a sacred responsibility and a tender act of faith.

Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen once offered a beautiful vision of heaven: “As we enter heaven, we will see them — so many of them — coming toward us and thanking us. We will ask who they are, and they will say, ‘A poor soul you prayed for in purgatory.’”

Let us then pray with hearts full of hope and love:

Saints of God, come to their aid. Come to meet them, angels of the Lord.
Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them.

May they rest in peace. May the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.


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As the Church enters the month of November, she invites us to pause, reflect, and lift our hearts toward eternity. This sacred time begins with the Feast of All Saints on November 1 — a radiant celebration of those who have gone before us in faith and now dwell in the light of God’s presence.

These holy men and women, known and unknown, are the Church’s most eloquent witnesses to Christian hope. They lived the Gospel with courage and tenderness, embracing the Beatitudes as the path to holiness, even amid trials and suffering. Their lives proclaim the joyful truth: Christ is risen — and we too shall rise with him.

The following day, November 2nd, we commemorate All Souls' Day—a day of remembrance, rooted in love and crowned with hope. As Pope Francis once reminded us, "It is a moment to return to our spiritual roots and look forward with confidence to the promise of encountering the love of the Father. We remember those who have died, not with sorrow alone, but with the deep assurance that love endures beyond death."

The Feast of All Souls is a time to remember all the faithfully departed and have entered eternal life. Monitor file photo

 Throughout November, the Church offers prayers for the faithful departed—those who have gone before us, marked with the sign of faith, and now rest in the peace of God. This "sign of faith," received in Baptism, is an indelible mark of belonging to Christ. As St. Teresa of Calcutta once said, “During this whole month we give them extra love and care by praying to them and for them.”

Our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, recently commented: "All this begins with our Baptism and will never end. Baptism introduces us into communion with Christ and gives us true life... Death never has the last word! The final word, which opens the doors to eternity and joy that lasts forever, is the Resurrection, which knows no discouragement and frees us from the pain of searching for meaning in our existence."

This tradition of prayer for the dead stretches back to the earliest centuries of the Church and even deeper into the sacred pages of Scripture. The Book of Maccabees affirms: “It is a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from their sins" (2 Maccabees 12:46). In this act of prayer, we participate in a mystery of mercy and communion that transcends time.

The Church teaches that all the baptized are united in a threefold bond:

  • The Church Triumphant -- The saints in heaven, rejoicing in eternal glory.
  • The Church Penitent -- The souls in purgatory, being purified in love.
  • The Church Militant -- We who journey on earth, striving toward holiness.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us that at the moment of death, each soul encounters Christ in a particular judgment. Those who die in his grace, though not yet fully purified, are assured of salvation and undergo a final cleansing -- what we call purgatory.

Our prayers, sacrifices, and acts of love offered for these souls are a profound gift. As Pope St. John Paul II beautifully said, "Praying for the souls in purgatory is the highest act of supernatural charity."

To celebrate the Feast of All Saints is to rejoice in the communion of saints — a living relationship with those who now behold the face of God. To pray on the Feast of All Souls for the holy souls in purgatory is to express our enduring love and solidarity with them, rooted in the grace of Baptism.

Though November is especially dedicated to these prayers, our love for the departed is not confined to a single season. It is, as Scripture says, "a holy and wholesome thought"— a sacred responsibility and a tender act of faith.

Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen once offered a beautiful vision of heaven: “As we enter heaven, we will see them — so many of them — coming toward us and thanking us. We will ask who they are, and they will say, ‘A poor soul you prayed for in purgatory.’”

Let us then pray with hearts full of hope and love:

Saints of God, come to their aid. Come to meet them, angels of the Lord.
Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them.

May they rest in peace. May the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

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