All Saints’ Day
ALL SAINTS’ DAY (Lat. Festum omnium
sanctorum): The first day of November. The
Greek Church as early as the time of Chrysostom
consecrated the Sunday after Whitsunday to the
memory of all martyrs. The underlying idea of
this festival is the same as that of All Saints’ Day,
although no connection between the two can be
shown. The origin of All Saints’ Day is obscure.
It is said that Boniface IV. (608-615) made the
Pantheon at Rome a church of Mary and all martyrs
and that the commemoration of this dedication was
transferred from May 13 to Nov. 1 (Durand, Rationale,
vii., chap. 34). More probable is the view
that the festival is connected with the oratory
which Gregory III. (731-741) erected in St. Peter’s, “in which he laid the bones of the holy apostles
and of all the holy martyrs and confessors, just
men made perfect in all the world” (Liber pontificalis, Vita Greg. III.,
ed. Duchesne, i. 417). Traces of the festival are found in the Frankish kingdom
at the time of the Carolingians, it was commended
by Alcuin (Epist., lxxv.), and in the ninth century
it became general. Luther did not approve of the
festival, and Lutheran and Reformed churches do
not observe it. The Church of England, however,
and its branches retain it.
W. Caspari.