All Saints

All Saints

Holyday of Obligation

Masses: 10am St Gregory, 10am Sacred Heart (Tisbury), 12 Noon St Osmund and 7pm St Osmund 

The Story of the Solemnity of All Saints

The earliest certain observance of a feast in honor of all the saints is an early fourth-century commemoration of “all the martyrs.” In the early seventh century, after successive waves of invaders plundered the catacombs, Pope Boniface IV gathered up some 28 wagon-loads of bones and reinterred them beneath the Pantheon, a Roman temple dedicated to all the gods. The pope rededicated the shrine as a Christian church. According to Venerable Bede, the pope intended “that the memory of all the saints might in the future be honored in the place which had formerly been dedicated to the worship not of gods but of demons” (On the Calculation of Time).

But the rededication of the Pantheon, like the earlier commemoration of all the martyrs, occurred in May. Many Eastern Churches still honor all the saints in the spring, either during the Easter season or immediately after Pentecost.

How the Western Church came to celebrate this feast, now recognized as a solemnity, in November is a puzzle to historians. The Anglo-Saxon theologian Alcuin observed the feast on November 1 in 800, as did his friend Arno, Bishop of Salzburg. Rome finally adopted that date in the ninth century.

 All Saints' Day is a Catholic Holy Day of Obligation, meaning all Catholics are required to attend Mass on that day, unless they have an excellent excuse, such as serious illness.

Categories: 

More News

National Rosary Rally

October 22, 2020

National Rosary Relay Rally

The Rosary Whirlwind Mission culminates in the ‘National Rosary Relay Rally’ across our dioceses and those of...Read more

Simon & Jude Apostles

October 21, 2020

Feast 28 October

Both Simon and Jude were ordinary men who were chosen by Jesus himself to teach others about God’s love and...Read more

Society of Our Lady of Lourdes

October 17, 2020

Salisbury Catenians raise £1,350 to enable people who are sick or disabled to make pilgrimages to Lourdes.

Attached photo of Frances Rolleston, representing...Read more