It is believed by many scholars that the commemoration of all the
saints on November first originated in Ireland, spread from there to
England, and then to the continent of Europe. That it had reached
Rome and had been adopted there early in the ninth century is
attested by a letter of Pope Gregory the Fourth, who reigned from 828
to 844, to Emperor Louis “the Pious,” urging that such a festival be
observed throughout the Holy Roman Empire.
However, the desire of Christian people to express the
intercommunion of the living and the dead in the Body of Christ by
a commemoration of those who, having professed faith in the living
Christ in days past, had entered into the nearer presence of their
Lord, and especially of those who had crowned their profession with
heroic deaths, was far older than the early Middle Ages. Gregory
Thaumaturgus (the “Wonder Worker”), writing before the year 270,
refers to the observance of a festival of all martyrs, though he does
not date it. A hundred years later, Ephrem the Deacon mentions
such an observance in Edessa on May 13; and the patriarch John
Chrysostom, who died in 407, says that a festival of All Saints was
observed on the first Sunday after Pentecost in Constantinople at
the time of his episcopate. The contemporary lectionary of the East
Syrians set a commemoration of all the saints on Friday in Easter
week. On May 13, in the year 610, the Pantheon in Rome—originally
a pagan temple dedicated to “all the gods”—was dedicated as the
Church of St. Mary and All Martyrs.
All Saints’ Day is classed, in the Prayer Book of 1979, as a Principal
Feast, taking precedence of any other day or observance. Among
the seven so classified, All Saints’ Day alone may be observed on the
following Sunday, in addition to its observance on its fixed date. It is
one of the four days recommended in the Prayer Book (page 312) for
the administration of Holy Baptism
No comments:
Post a Comment