All Souls’ Day
ALL SOULS’ DAY (Lat. Commemoratio omnium fidelium defunctorum): The second day of November. The ancient Church distinguishes between
the dead who have died for the Church (martyrs)
and those who, while they have not suffered death
for the Church, yet have died as believers. All
Souls’ Day is dedicated to the memory of the latter.
It is founded on the doctrine of the value of prayers
and the Eucharist for the dead. Odilo of Cluny
(d. 1049) instituted the festival for the Cluniacs
(ASM, sæc. vi., i. 585); and in course of time it
was extended to all who had died in the faith.
The Missale Romanum prescribes a special requiem-mass for the day. Luther demanded that the
festival be given up, and it soon disappeared among
Protestants. It is not observed in the Church
of England. The German rationalists favored a
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commemoration of the dead (cf. G. C. Horst, Mysteriosophie, ii., Frankfort, 1817, 432). The litany of
the Moravians for Easter morning is a Protestant
pendant to All Souls’ Day, and the rapid rise and
popularity of the festival show that it satisfies a
feeling of the Christian mind which the Church
would do well to recognize.
W. Caspari.