Pope John Paul
II did indeed stress the need to pray for the souls in purgatory. He
said, "The first and highest form of charity for brothers is the ardent
desire for their eternal salvation .... Christian love knows no
boundaries and goes beyond the limits of space and time, enabling us to
love those who have already left this earth." Therefore, not only the
belief in purgatory but also the spiritual duty to pray for the souls
there remains part of our Catholic Faith.
Contrary to what some may erroneously believe, Vatican II's Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church asserted, "This sacred council accepts
loyally the venerable faith of our ancestors in the living communion
which exists between us and our brothers who are in the glory of Heaven
or who are yet being purified after their death; and it proposes again
the decrees of the Second Council of Nicea, of the Council of Florence,
and of the Council of Trent" (no. 51).
Moreover, the Catechism clearly affirms the Church's belief in
purgatory and the purification of the soul after death: "All who die in
God’s grace and friendship, but still imperfectly purified, are indeed
assured of their eternal salvation; but, after death they undergo
purification, so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy
of Heaven. The Church gives the name purgatory to this final
purification of the elect, which is entirely different from the
punishment of the damned." (Cf. no. 1030-32).
As Vatican II stated, the Church has consistently believed in a
purification of the soul after death. This belief is rooted in the Old
Testament. In the Second Book of Maccabees, we read of how Judas
Maccabee offered sacrifices and prayers for soldiers who had died
wearing amulets, which were forbidden by the Law; Scripture reads,
"Turning to supplication, they prayed that the sinful deed might be
fully blotted out" (12:42) and "Thus, [Judas Maccabee] made atonement
for the dead that they might be freed from the sin" (12:46). This
passage gives evidence of the Jewish practice of offering prayers and
sacrifices to cleanse the soul of the departed.
Rabbinic interpretation of Scripture also attests to the belief. In the
Book of the Prophet Zechariah, the Lord spoke, "I will bring the one
third through fire, and I will refine them as silver is refined, and I
will test them as gold is tested" (13:9); the School of Rabbi Shammai
interpreted this passage as a purification of the soul through God's
mercy and goodness, preparing it for eternal life. In Sirach 7:33,
"Withhold not your kindness from the dead" was interpreted as imploring
God to cleanse the soul. In sum, the Old Testament clearly attests to
some kind of purification process of the soul of the faithful after
death.
The New Testament has few references about a purging of the soul or even
about heaven for that matter. Rather the focus is on preaching the
gospel and awaiting the second coming of Christ, which only later did
the writers of sacred Scripture realize could be after their own deaths.
However, in Matthew 12:32, Jesus' statement that certain sins "will not
be forgiven either in this world or in the world to come," at least
suggests a purging of the soul after death. Pope St. Gregory (d. 604)
stated, "As for certain lesser faults, we must believe that, before the
Final Judgment, there is a purifying fire. He who is truth says that
whoever utters blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will be pardoned
neither in this age nor in the age to come. From this sentence we
understand that certain offenses can be forgiven in this age, but
certain others in the age to come." The Council of Lyons (1274) likewise
affirmed this interpretation of our Lord's teaching.
The early Church preserved the belief in offering
prayers for the purification of the soul. Pope St. Gregory said, "Let us
not hesitate to help those who have died and to offer our prayers for
them." St. Ambrose (d. 397) preached, "We have loved them during life;
let us not abandon them in death, until we have conducted them by our
prayers into the house of the Lord." Moreover, the Church has affirmed
this belief many times, as Vatican II stated.
The key to this answer, however, is to see the beauty behind the
doctrine of purgatory. We believe that God gave us a free will so that
we could choose between right and wrong, good and evil. Our free will
allows us to make the one fundamental choice — to love God. An act of
the free will also entails responsibility. When we choose not to love
God and thereby sin, we are responsible for that sin. God in His justice
holds us accountable for such sins, but in His love and mercy desires us
to be reconciled to Himself and our neighbor. During our life on this
earth, if we really love God, we examine our consciences, admit our
sins, express contrition for them, confess them, and receive absolution
for them in the Sacrament of Penance. We perform penances and other
sacrifices to heal the hurt caused by sin. In so doing, we are
continually saying "yes" to the Lord. In a sense our soul is like a lens
— when we sin, we cloud the lens; it gets dirty, and we lose the focus
of God in our lives. Through confession and penance, God cleanses the
"lens" of our soul. When we die, if we leave this life fundamentally
loving God, dying in His grace and friendship, and free of mortal sin,
we will have eternal salvation and attain the beatific vision — we will
see God for who He is. If we die with venial sins or without having done
sufficient penance for our sins, God in His love, mercy, and justice
will purify our souls, "cleanse the lens" so to speak. After such
purification, the soul will then be united with God in Heaven and enjoy
the beatific vision.
Protestants have difficulty with the doctrine of Purgatory for basically
two reasons: First, when Martin Luther translated the Bible into German
in 1532, he removed seven books of the Old Testament, including the two
Books of Maccabees, where at least implicitly the purification of the
soul is found. Second, John Calvin preached that we had lost our free
will due to Original Sin and that God had predetermined whether a soul
was saved or damned; therefore, if we cannot choose to sin and if our
eternal destiny is predetermined, who needs a Purgatory? In all, the
Protestant leaders cast aside centuries of Christian Church teaching
when they denied the doctrine of Purgatory.
In Crossing the Threshold of Hope, Pope John Paul II related
God's "living flame of Love" spoken of by St. John of the Cross with the
doctrine of Purgatory: "The 'living flame of love,' of which St. John
speaks, is above all a purifying fire. The mystical nights described by
this great Doctor of the Church on the basis of his own experience
corresponds, in a certain sense, to Purgatory. God makes man pass
through such an interior purgatory of his sensual and spiritual nature
in order to bring him into union with Himself. Here we do not find
ourselves before a mere tribunal. We present ourselves before the power
of love itself. Before all else, it is Love that judges. God, who is
Love, judges through love. It is love that demands purification, before
man can be made ready for that union with God which is his ultimate
vocation and destiny."
by Fr. William Saunders
Other Articles by Fr. William Saunders
If you enjoy reading Fr. Saunders' work, his new book entitled
Straight Answers (400 pages) is available at the Pauline Book and
Media Center of Arlington, Virginia (703/549-3806). This article
courtesy of the
Arlington Catholic Herald.