![]() |
|
| |
|
Use the print feature on your browser to print this page out |
|
|
All Saints/All Souls Remembering Our Heritage
Materials Needed
Bible
Preparation for the Family Leader The feasts of All Saints
and All Souls are a time for us to remember and reflect on our heritage
as followers of Jesus and as members of the Church. As Christians, we
hope in the resurrection and celebrate our belief that Jesus shows us
the way to eternal life. As Catholics we celebrate and take comfort
in the communion of saints—a community of faithful people who have gone
before us in life and death. We have an awesome heritage of people who
have shown us the way to Jesus by the way they have lived. Some of these
people are our own family members.
1. Introduction to the Theme
Ask family members to reflect back on everything
they know about All Saints and All Souls Day. Talk for a few minutes
about what your experience of All Saints and All Souls Day has been
both in your home and in your parish community.
Share in your own words:
Our celebration of All
Saints and All Souls Day has helped us remember some very important
things about what we believe. These beliefs are a part of heritage as
God’s people.
We believe in a communion
of saints. We believe that the saints are a part of the people of God.
They lived faithfully, they are still a part of our community today.
We believe that the
saints who have gone before us continue to help and guide us. They are
our friends in Jesus.
We remember the heritage
they have left us—that of loving God faithfully and serving God and
each other.
We believe and have
hope that the members of our family who have died are part of this communion
of saints. They are a part of God’s story of life conquering death.
We believe that God
assures eternal life to all who die in God’s friendship. Some of these
people might need a spiritual cleansing to get fully ready to greet
God in the fullness of heaven. We pray for them and we remember how
they desired to see God face to face.
Many of the people who
have gone before us, who are now with God, were very ordinary people
who believed, who loved, and who lived faithfully and touched the lives
of their families, their loved ones and the communities they lived in
and served. Such people are a part of this family’s history. We remember
them—those who are now with God and those waiting to be in God’s presence
in heaven. 2. Time for Storytelling
Family members share stories about the people in
the family who have died. (If you have pictures of family members displayed,
gather around the photos as you remember your loved ones.
v
What do we remember about them?
v
How did they show us God?
3.
Stories from Our Faith Tradition
Read Hebrews 11:1-42, 12:1-2.
4. What Our Family Can Do
¨
Paul’s letter to the Hebrews is filled with stories about the faithfulness
of God’s people in the Hebrew Scriptures. These
stories are a part of our
heritage. The Gospels, the lives of the saints, etc. are also a part
of our heritage. If our family was going to write a letter expressing
the faith of our family—history to the present—what and who would we
tell about in that letter? What is our family heritage of faith?
Set an extra place at the dinner table every night
during the month of November for a family member who has died. Remember
that person’s presence, share stories about the life, the love, the
faith that person shared with the family. (Note, include deceased family
members who some family members may have never met. This is a wonderful
way to keep their memories and stories alive as part of the family’s
history, and as part of the family’s own faith story.)
|
|