“Plenary Indulgences” - Homily for
the 32nd Sunday of Ordinary Time
In this
month of November, Catholics are especially mindful of our deceased who have
gone before us. Much like the brother in
our first reading today from the book of Maccabees who, while being tortured,
says "It is my choice to die at the hands of men with the hope God gives
of being raised up by him.”
Did you know
that you can assist the dead in a very concrete way through plenary
indulgences? Clearly plenary indulgences
got a bad name during Martin Luther’s revolution, but the Catholic Church has
ALWAYS strictly forbidden the selling of any indulgences.
So what is a
plenary indulgence? It is the complete
removal of all punishment due to sin.
Sometimes, even though we confess a sin, we still have earthly
consequences for that sin, and likewise the souls in purgatory are being
purified in the fire of love so that they can one day enter Heaven.
So how do
you go about earning a plenary indulgence?
The first thing to consider is that a plenary indulgence can only be
applied to yourself or someone who has died.
You can also only gain one plenary indulgence per day.
The first
thing you need to do for a plenary indulgence is go to confession once a month.
The next
step to earning a plenary indulgence on a day is that you have to go to Mass on
that day.
The next
step to earning a plenary indulgence on a day is you have to pray 1 Our Father
and 1 Hail Mary for the Pope’s intentions.
You also have to pray for a complete detachment from mortal and venial
sin.
And then you
have to do, each day, something that merits a plenary indulgence, and there are
pamphlets in the narthex about the easiest ways to earn a daily plenary
indulgence, those 4 things being either praying in the Presence of the Blessed
Sacrament for 30 minutes, reading the Bible for 30 minutes, praying a rosary
silently in Church or out loud in a family setting, and the fourth is walking
the stations of the Cross in our Church and praying them.
We all know
people who have died that we are worried about.
We have the opportunity, every day, to earn a plenary indulgence either
for ourselves or someone who has died.
This November, and all throughout the year, let us pray for the dead,
and assist them with our prayers.
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