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Why Pray for the poor Souls?

    Our Lord’s great law is that we must love one another, genuinely and sincerely.  The first great commandment is to love God with all our heart and soul.  The second, or rather a part of the first, is to love our neighbor as ourselves.  This is not a counsel or a mere wish of the Almighty. It is His great commandment, the very base and essence of His law.  So true is it that He takes as done to Himself what we do for our neighbor, and refused to Him what we refuse to our neighbor. 

    We read in the Gospel of St. Matthew 25:34-46 the words that Christ will address the just on Judgment day.      

         34   Come, ye blessed of my Father, possess you the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation

                of the world.

35   For I was hungry, and you gave Me to eat; I was thirsty and you gave Me to drink; I was a stranger,

36   Naked and you covered Me; sick, and you visited Me; I was in prison, and you came to Me.

37   Then shall the just answer him, saying: Lord, when did we see Thee hungry, and fed Thee; thirsty, and gave Thee drink?

38   And when did we see Thee a stranger, and took Thee in; or naked, and covered Thee?

39   Or when did we see Thee sick or in prison, and came to Thee?

40.  And the king (God) answering, shall say to them: Amen I say to you, as long as you did it to one of these my  least brethren, you did it to Me.

41. Then He shall say to them also those that shall be on His Left hand:  Depart from Me, you cursed, into everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels.

42   For I was hungry, and you gave Me not to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me not to drink.

43   I was a stranger, and you took Me not in; naked and you covered Me not; sick and in prison, and you did not visit Me.

44   Then they also shall answer Him saying: Lord when did we see Thee hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to Thee?

45   Then He shall answer them, saying: Amen I say to you as long as you did it not to one of these, neither did you do it to Me.

46   And these shall go into everlasting punishment: but the just, into life everlasting.

 

    Some Catholics seem to think that this law has fallen into abeyance in these days of self assertion and selfishness, when every one thinks only of himself and his personal aggrandizement.  “It is useless to urge the law of love nowadays” they say “every one has to fend for himself, or go under.”

    No such thing.  God’s great law is still and will ever be in full force.  It is more than ever necessary, more than ever our duty and more than ever for our own best interest.  

 

We are bound to pray for the Holy Souls

    We are always bound to love and help each other but the greater the need of our neighbor, the more stringent and the more urgent this obligation is.  It is not a favour that we may do or leave undone. It is our duty, we must help each other.

    It would be a monstrous crime for instance to refuse the poor and destitute the food necessary to keep them alive.  It would be appalling to refuse and, to one in dire need,  to pass by and not extend a hand to save a drowning man.  Not only must we help others when it is easy and convenient but we must make every sacrifice,  when need be, to help our brother in distress.

    Now who can be in more urgent need of our charity than the souls in Purgatory?  What hunger, or thirst, or dire sufferings on this Earth can compare to their dreadful torments?  Neither the poor, nor the sick, nor the suffering, we see around us,  have any such urgent need of our help.  Yet we find many good hearted people who interest themselves in every other type of suffering,  but alas!  scarcely one who works for the Holy Souls.

    Who can have more claim on us?  Among them too, there may be our mothers and fathers, our friends and nearest of kin.

 

God wishes us to help them 

    In any event, they are God’s dearest friends.  He longs to help them.  He desires most earnestly to have them in Heaven.  They can never again offend Him and they are destined to be with Him for all Eternity.  True, God’s justice demands expiation of their sins, but by an amazing dispensation of His Providence He places in our hands the means of assisting them.  He gives us the power to relieve and even release them.  Nothing pleases Him more than when we help them.  He is as grateful to us, as if we helped Himself.

 

Our Lady wants us to help them

    Never did a Mother of this Earth love so tenderly a dying child, never did she strive so earnestly to soothe its pains, as Mary seeks to console her suffering children in Purgatory, to have them with her in Heaven.  We give her unbounded joy each time we take a soul out of Purgatory.  

 

The Holy Souls will repay us a thousand times over

    But what shall we say of the feelings of the Holy Souls themselves?  It would be utterly impossible to describe their unbounded gratitude to those who help them!  Filled with an immense desire to repay the favours done them, they pray for their benefactors with a fervour so great, so intense, so constant that God can refuse them nothing. St. Catherine of Bologna says: “I received many and very great favours from the Saints but still greater favours from the Holy Souls.”

    Then they are finally released from their pains and enjoy the beatitude of Heaven, far from forgetting their friends on earth, their gratitude knows no bounds.  Prostrate before the Throne of God they never cease to pray for those who helped them.  By their prayers they shield their friends from the dangers and protect them from the evils that threaten them.

    They will never cease these prayers until they see their benefactors safely in Heaven and will be forever their dearest, sincerest and best friends.

    If Catholics only know what powerful protectors they secure by helping the Holy Souls they would not be so remiss in praying for them.

 

The Holy Souls will lessen our Purgatory

    Another great grace that they obtain for their helpers is a short and easy Purgatory, or possibly its complete remission. 

    Blessed John of Messias, the Dominican lay brother, had a wonderful devotion to the souls in Purgatory.  He obtained by his prayers,  (chiefly by the recitation of the Rosary), the liberation of one million four hundred thousand souls!

    In return they obtained for him the most abundant and extraordinary graces and came at the hour of his death to help and console him and accompany him to Heaven.

    This fact is so certain that it is inserted by the Church in the Bull of his Beatification.

    The learned Cardinal Baronius, recounts a similar incident.

    He was himself called to assist a dying gentleman.  Suddenly a host of blessed spirits appeared in the chamber of death, consoled the dying man and chased away the devils who sought by a last desperate effort to cause his ruin.

    When asked who they were, they answered that they were eight thousand souls whom he had released from Purgatory by his prayers and good works.  They were sent by God, so they said, to take him to Heaven without his passing one moment n Purgatory.

    St. Gertrude was fiercely tempted by the devil when she came to die.  The evil spirit reserves a dangerous and subtle temptation for our last moments.  As he could find no other ruse sufficiently clever with which to assail the Saint,  he thought to disturb her beautiful peace of soul by suggesting that she would surely remain long years in the awful fires of Purgatory since, he reminded her, she had made over long ago all her suffrages to other souls.  Our Blessed Lord, not content with sending His angels and the thousand of souls she had released, to assist her, came Himself in person to drive Satan away and comfort His dear Saint.  He told her that in exchange for all she had done for the Holy Souls He would take her straight to Heaven and would multiply a hundred fold all her merits.

    Blessed Henry Suso, of the Dominican Order, made a compact with a fellow religious to the effect that when one of the two died the survivor would offer two Masses each week for his soul and other prayers as well.

    It so happened that his companion died first and Blessed Henry commence immediately to offer the promised masses.  These he continued to say for a long time.  At last quite sure that the soul of his saintly friend had reached Heaven, he ceased offering the masses.

    Great was his sorrow and consternation when the soul of the dead Brother appeared to him suffering intensely and chiding him for not celebrating the promised masses.

    He replied with deep regret that he had not continued the mass believing that his friend must be enjoying the Beatific Vision and added that he had never remembered him in prayer.

    “O dear Brother Henry please give me  the masses, for it is the Precious Blood of Jesus that I most need”, cried out the suffering soul.

    Blessed Henry began anew and, with redoubled fervour, offered masses and prayers for his friend until he received absolute certitude of his delivery.

    Then it was his turn to receive graces and blessings of all kinds from the dear brother he had relieved, and very many times more than he could have expected.

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