Jesus Comes Close . . .(All Saints Year C)
The Feast of All Souls Day is celebrated every year on November 2nd, the day after we celebrate All Saints Day. Whereas All Saints Day is a day to honour particularly holy people in our faith tradition, especially those people who have been canonized saints, All Souls Day is a day to specifically remember and pray for our deceased family and friends. Combined with Halloween (“All Hallow’s Eve”) and the Mexican tradition of El Dia de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead) this time of year is rich in opportunities to remember, grieve, pray for, and celebrate those who have gone before us.
Catholic Churches have the choice of many different readings to choose from for this feast day. We’ll focus today on one of the suggested readings from Luke’s Gospel. The famous story of the disciples encountering the risen Jesus - but not recognizing him - on the road to Emmaus is only found in Luke’s Gospel. It’s a reassuring story that God can and does come close to us even when we don’t recognize him. We don’t always recognize that Jesus is present with us in our grieving; listening to us, consoling us, and offering hope, but perhaps like the two disciples, we can “catch” that it was him when we reflect on it afterwards. Hopefully when this happens, we’ll do what they did - excitedly tell others how Jesus came to them.
As we think about our beloved deceased family and friends today, this story is also a wonderful reminder that God is not limited in his ability to bring life out of death even if we are limited in our ability to understand or believe it. Jesus had told his friends beforehand that he was going to rise from the dead, and still they didn’t get it after he died. He told the parents of the twelve year old girl who had died that she wasn’t dead, she was only sleeping, but they didn’t believe it. He told Martha and Mary that Lazarus would rise again, but they didn’t believe him in the moment. Thankfully, God doesn’t need our belief or our understanding about how resurrection might work in order to bring it about. May this be a consolation today as you remember your loved ones.
Questions of the week
• Who is especially on your heart today as we celebrate All Souls Day? How are they still present to you now? In what memories? Objects? Places? How might you honour them today?
• Imagine you are one of those disciples on the road to Emmaus. What would you want to say or ask of Jesus?









