|
The
Communion of Saints
"When you perceive that God is
chastening you, fly not to his enemies…but to his friends, the martyrs, the
saints and those who were pleasing to him, and who have great power in
God."
John Chrysostom: Orations 396 AD
St. Agnes Cathedral contains the images in statues, or stained
glass windows, of some three dozen saints of the church.
It is Catholic belief that there is an interrelationship of
church members, The Church Triumphant or those saints in heaven, The Church
Militant or Pilgrim Church, those members struggling to live faithful lives in
an earthly existence, and The Church Suffering or souls in Purgatory. All three
of these groups comprise The Communion of Saints.
The interrelationship is the saints in heaven helping the
members on earth and in purgatory, those on earth praying to the saints in
heaven and for one another on earth and the souls in purgatory being helped by
those members on earth and the saints in heaven.
A pilgrim church member spending time in St. Agnes Cathedral
and looking around is reminded of the Church Triumphant. Whether in carved oak
or stained glass, one sees images of those "holy ones" who excelled in
life and over came great obstacles.
This Church Triumphant represented around us came from such
varied backgrounds as royalty, slavery, middle class, pagan, Jew, Protestant,
misspent youth, a hermit, immigrants and the politically powerful.
They come from around the globe, Rose of
Lima, Peru, Therese
of Lisieux, France, Boniface from
Devonshire, England, Brendan of County
Kerry,
Ireland, Bridget of Country Louth, Ireland,
Agnes of Rome, Italy, Frances Cabrini
of Lombardy, Italy and Elizabeth Ann Seton of New York
City.
Their family relationships and occupations are not totally
dissimilar then our life today,
Elizabeth Ann Seton and Elizabeth of Hungary were wives and
mothers, John Chrysostom was raised by his widowed mother,
Mary Margaret
Alacoque was physically handicapped, Frances Cabrini was one of 13 children,
Luke was a physician, Francis de Sales a lawyer,
Francis of Assisi a merchant’s
son, John Neumann wrote for newspapers, Gregory of Nazianzen was a government
official, and Mark a school teacher.
For greater detail and information, including devotional
prayer, for these and other saints of the church, we suggest you click on any of
the following on-line directory of saints.



|