Do You pray for the dead?

Gramps49 wrote: »
This is very tragic news. Four family members of Darren Bailey, a Republican candidate for governor of Illinois in the 2026 election, have died in a helicopter crash in Montana. Bailey’s son, Zachary, his wife, Kelsey, and their two young children, Vada Rose, 12, and Samuel, 7, died in the crash. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/23/darren-bailey-illinois-crash-helicopter-00619907

We do need to keep the family in our thoughts and prayers.

@ChastMastr replied:

🕯 and for the deceased as well.

This exchange brings up something that has been on my mind for a while; namely, should Christians pray for the dead, specifically do you pray for the dead? Would love to hear the theological reasoning behind it.

Don't know about the Orthodox traditions, so I will let @Gamma Gamaliel or others explain that.

The Roman Church appears to have prayers for the dead tied to the doctrine of purgatory.

Lutherans will commend the dead to God's care, but I do not think it goes beyond that.

More evangelical denominations pan the idea it seems.

Note to @ChastMastr when I mentioned praying for the family, I left the door open for prayers for the deceased since they are a part of the larger family, in my mind.
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Comments

  • I do pray for the dead, as I believe we continue to grow in Christ, just as I believe my loved ones continue to pray for me.
  • Yes, absolutely. Praying for the dead isn’t completely related to Purgatory (not that only RCs believe in Purgatory, of course)—one can pray for the dead to continue growing in grace, whether in a purgatorial state or not. Prayers for the dead within Christianity go back to the early Church, which is honestly good enough reason for me, but it makes basic sense to me as well.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_for_the_dead

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    I tend to pray for those who have died when I hear about it, but I don't tend to keep doing it, if you see what I mean.
  • No. I pray for the living, and that is enough for me.

    The dead are in Gods hands.
  • I have been to a funeral today.
    I see funerals as being for the living.
    I find Rohr's view that the function of prayer is to change yourself makes sense.
    So praying for the dead allows one to reflect on how your memory and understanding of that person's life can help you grow in your and your community's life.
  • I had the book 'For All The Saints?' on my desk, so just quoting from that:

    "True prayer is an outflowing of love; if I love someone, I will want to pray for them, not necessarily because they are in difficulties, not necessarily because there is a particular need of which I'm aware, but simply because holding them up in God's presence is the most natural and appropriate thing to do, and because I believe that God chooses to work through our prayers for other people's benefit, whatever sort of benefit that may be. Now love doesn't stop at death – or, if does, it's a pretty poor sort of love!"

    And more specifically on why Protestant theologians have traditionally frowned on the practice:

    "Once you get rid of the abuses which have pulled prayer out of shape, there is no reason why prayer should stop just because the person you are praying for happens now to be 'with Christ, which is far better'. Why not simply celebrate the fact?"
  • Gramps49 wrote: »
    Lutherans will commend the dead to God's care, but I do not think it goes beyond that.
    No. I pray for the living, and that is enough for me.

    The dead are in Gods hands.
    These comments reflect the Reformed view.

    And I will admit I bristle a bit at the suggestion that not continuing to pray for loved ones who have died shows a “pretty poor sort of love.”

    And more specifically on why Protestant theologians have traditionally frowned on the practice:

    "Once you get rid of the abuses which have pulled prayer out of shape, there is no reason why prayer should stop just because the person you are praying for happens now to be 'with Christ, which is far better'. Why not simply celebrate the fact?"
    This raises the question, though, whether praying for the dead, as such, actually does celebrate the fact. Can that fact not be celebrated by giving thanks to God that those loved ones have been made perfect in the divine presence, and by rejoicing that we are still joined with them in the communion of saints?


  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    No. I do not pray for the dead. As a lapsed Anglican, tending to agnosticism, I do not pray at all at this time.
  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    "Once you get rid of the abuses which have pulled prayer out of shape, there is no reason why prayer should stop just because the person you are praying for happens now to be 'with Christ, which is far better'. Why not simply celebrate the fact?"
    This raises the question, though, whether praying for the dead, as such, actually does celebrate the fact. Can that fact not be celebrated by giving thanks to God that those loved ones have been made perfect in the divine presence, and by rejoicing that we are still joined with them in the communion of saints?

    Isn't giving thanks for them also praying for them?
  • If there is no sense in praying for the dead, there is equally no sense in praying for the living.
    All of us ,living and dead, are indeed in God's hands.
  • Caissa wrote: »
    No. I do not pray for the dead. As a lapsed Anglican, tending to agnosticism, I do not pray at all at this time.

    Me too.

    Our Place's FatherInCharge is always exhorting his little flock to pray for the soul of someone or other, but I'm never quite sure what he thinks God will do, or what, indeed, we should be asking him to do.

    Holding someone in remembrance, and commending them into God's hands, is surely enough - but I'm afraid I have no real belief in the efficacy of intercessory prayer, anyway.
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    "Once you get rid of the abuses which have pulled prayer out of shape, there is no reason why prayer should stop just because the person you are praying for happens now to be 'with Christ, which is far better'. Why not simply celebrate the fact?"
    This raises the question, though, whether praying for the dead, as such, actually does celebrate the fact. Can that fact not be celebrated by giving thanks to God that those loved ones have been made perfect in the divine presence, and by rejoicing that we are still joined with them in the communion of saints?

    Isn't giving thanks for them also praying for them?

    I don't see how giving thanks equates to intercessory prayer - could you unpack the idea a bit, please?

    Maybe I'm getting confused here...
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    When I pray, among other things, I ask for God's blessing on the many good people I find around me, and I ask God to watch over the souls of those who have passed on (a growing list, no doubt soon to include me).
  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    "Once you get rid of the abuses which have pulled prayer out of shape, there is no reason why prayer should stop just because the person you are praying for happens now to be 'with Christ, which is far better'. Why not simply celebrate the fact?"
    This raises the question, though, whether praying for the dead, as such, actually does celebrate the fact. Can that fact not be celebrated by giving thanks to God that those loved ones have been made perfect in the divine presence, and by rejoicing that we are still joined with them in the communion of saints?

    Isn't giving thanks for them also praying for them?
    I wouldn’t say so, no. Praying “for” them suggests to me you are asking God to do something for them or to them—heal them, protect them, help them grow, etc. it’s intercessory prayer, as @Bishops Finger says.

    Asking you to help my friend with something he needs is not the same thing as thanking you for helping my friend with what, because of what you’ve done, he no longer needs. The focus has shifted from what my friend needs (what I asked of you “for” him) to gratitude for what you have done. Both prayers may be grounded in my love for my friend, but only the first one is a prayer “for” him and his wellbeing. In the second one, the prayer of thanks, I’d say more that I’m praying “with” him.

    Forthview wrote: »
    If there is no sense in praying for the dead, there is equally no sense in praying for the living.
    All of us ,living and dead, are indeed in God's hands.
    I’d agree with the second sentence. But I don’t think the first sentence—“If there is no sense in praying for the dead, there is equally no sense in praying for the living”—necessarily follows, because it turns on whether we believe the dead need or prayers or not. If there’s not a belief in purgatory—and in my tradition there is not—then at best, prayers for the living and prayers for the dead would seem to have very different purposes.

    Speaking personally, my style of praying for others is typically to “hold them in the light of God,” to speak metaphorically. That is to say, rather than praying for specific outcomes, I tend to pray that God will be present, will comfort and bring peace, will heal (though that healing may take different and unexpected forms, and may not include physical healing), and will, well, hold them. And that they will know they’re being held.

    My belief is that my loved ones who have died are eternally bathed in the light of God. My prayers of holding them in the light of God while they were living have been fulfilled. They no longer need my prayers.



  • Isn't giving thanks for them also praying for them?

    I don't see how giving thanks equates to intercessory prayer - could you unpack the idea a bit, please?

    Well, they are still the subject and topic of the prayer whether it is intercessory or not.

    I also wonder whether it's closest to praying for someone you are close to who you are no longer in contact with - which is something that's ever rarer in the modern world, but does still occur in times of war and so on.
  • NicoleMRNicoleMR Shipmate
    I don't exactly pray for the dead, but I talk to the dead all the time, particularly my brother.
  • I pray ABOUT the dead--saying thanks for them, etc. or talking with the Lord about some issue that grew out of our relationship. And sometimes I'll ask the Lord if he'd do me the favor of passing along a message for me to my sister, or what-not. (Kind of cheeky of me to ask him to be messenger boy, I know, but who else is guaranteed to be able?)

    As for praying for them, as if they were in need--I don't know enough about their situation to do this, really, but I don't think God would take offense, even if I were wrong. If he thought it necessary, he might let me know I didn't need to worry. But I wouldn't expect it to be a problem in his eyes unless I was really distressing myself over it in a major way, or spending huge amounts of time and effort, etc. on something unnecessary. Then he might intervene.

  • Isn't giving thanks for them also praying for them?

    I don't see how giving thanks equates to intercessory prayer - could you unpack the idea a bit, please?

    Well, they are still the subject and topic of the prayer whether it is intercessory or not.

    I also wonder whether it's closest to praying for someone you are close to who you are no longer in contact with - which is something that's ever rarer in the modern world, but does still occur in times of war and so on.

    Thanks. ISWYM.
  • The dead do not need our prayers and in a sense neither do the living.
    We are the ones who need to pray. It is good for us to remember before God our neighbours, be they, to our eyes' 'living' or 'dead'.
  • As for praying for them, as if they were in need--I don't know enough about their situation to do this, really, but I don't think God would take offense, even if I were wrong. If he thought it necessary, he might let me know I didn't need to worry. But I wouldn't expect it to be a problem in his eyes unless I was really distressing myself over it in a major way, or spending huge amounts of time and effort, etc. on something unnecessary. Then he might intervene.

    Yes, and it was somewhat remiss of me to omit the central quote of the passage above (which for avoidance of doubt was taken from the NT Wright book, and would have been written at a time when he was much more traditionally Reformed than perhaps he was later) which, it seems to me, express something of the sentiments you express above:
    Many years ago, the General Synod of the Church of England was debating the question of prayers for the dead. Professor Sir Norman Anderson, one of the most senior and respected laymen in the church of his day, and known as a leading evangelical and Protestant, rose to speak. You might have supposed that he would take the traditional line and denounce prayers for the dead as irrelevant nonsense, indicating a lack of assurance or a belief in purgatory. But Sir Norman and his wife had had three lovely children, a boy (of exceptional brilliance) and two girls; and all three had died in early adult life. And he had come, in his own experience, to realize that it was perfectly in order to continue to hold those beloved children before God in prayer, not to get them out of purgatory, nor because he was unsure about their final salvation, but because he wanted to talk to God about them, to share as it were his love for them with the God who had given them and had inexplicably allowed them to be taken away again.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited October 24
    @chrisstiles, I don’t have a problem at all with what N. T. Wright describes there; I just wouldn’t call it praying “for” those dead children. As Wright says, the prayers were not to get those he loved out of purgatory, and they assumed they knew salvation. To put it the way @Lamb Chopped did earlier, they were prayers “about” the children, and maybe in a sense prayers for the grieving parents themselves. But I’m afraid I just don’t see a sense in which the prayers op are “for” the children.

    But maybe I’m the one being too narrow in what I think of as being prayers for as opposed to about someone else.

    Either way, perhaps it would need to make sure we’re all on the same page about exactly what kinds of prayers we’re talking about, or we risk talking about different things.


  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    @chrisstiles, I don’t have a problem at all with what N. T. Wright describes there; I just wouldn’t call it praying “for” those dead children. As Wright says, the prayers were not to get those he loved out of purgatory, and they assumed they knew salvation.

    But I'm not sure 'praying for' is limited to purely intercessory prayer, so much as whenever someone is the subject of the prayer which is surely the case whenever you are 'holding' someone 'before God'.

  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    @chrisstiles, I don’t have a problem at all with what N. T. Wright describes there; I just wouldn’t call it praying “for” those dead children. As Wright says, the prayers were not to get those he loved out of purgatory, and they assumed they knew salvation.

    But I'm not sure 'praying for' is limited to purely intercessory prayer, so much as whenever someone is the subject of the prayer which is surely the case whenever you are 'holding' someone 'before God'.
    To my mind, it depends on why you are holding them before God. If you are doing it for their benefit, to gain something for them (e.g., salvation, release from purgatory, continued growth in grace), you are praying for them. But if you’re holding them before God to, in Wright’s words, “talk to God about them, to share as it were [your] love for them with the God who had given them and had inexplicably allowed them to be taken away again,” then I just don’t see that as praying for them.

    Or to put it a little differently, to my mind “praying for” is pretty much limited to intercessory prayer because in my experience people only use “praying for” when they mean “interceding on behalf of.” Calling what Wright describes “praying for the dead” is requiring “praying for” mean something different from what I, in my experience, hear people use it to mean.


  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    edited October 24
    On certain saint days--yes, Lutherans have them, especially those following high church traditions--the saint's name is mentioned in thanksgiving for the faith and life s/he/they have exemplified, but I do not think this is an intercessory prayer for the saint or to the saint.

    Of course, the Apocalypse does indicate the saints are praying for the church on earth. I am hard pressed to see how our prayers influence their prayers.
  • This topic came up recently I think.

    I will respond as I did on the previous thread. I pray for the dead because I love them.

    That doesn't mean that @Nick Tamen's love for his dear departed is any less than mine, of course.

    It makes sense to pray for the dead or to invoke the prayers of the Saints within the Orthodox paradigm. So I do so.

    If I was Reformed or some other kind of Protestant, I wouldn't.

    But I'm not, so I do.

    That's all I have to say on the matter. Nothing to do with Purgatory. Everything to do with love.
  • It is understandable that Christians of all sorts look back to important moments in the history of their community. For Protestant Christians it often means looking back to the controversies of the 16th century. For many Christians today our understandings of what is meant by Heaven,Hell and indeed also by Purgatory may not be exactly the same as they were in the popular imaginations of the 16th century.
    The idea of Purgatory as a place of transition on the passage between human life on earth and the possible bliss of an afterlife in Heaven is an attempt to explain what we really don't know too much about.
    It is,however, to my mind,a mistake to think that when we pray for our 'beloved dead' we are only thinking about liberation from Purgatory.
    Like all of our prayers ,be they of petition,of intercession ,of thanksgiving or of praise,they are acts of love towards God and our neighbours.

    Here is the opening collect of the first Mass for All Souls Day
    Merciful Father,
    hear our prayers and console us.
    As we renew our faith in your son whom you raised from the dead,
    Strengthen our hope that all our brothers and sisters will share in his resurrection.
  • MaryLouiseMaryLouise Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    For all my Catholic background, I'm with @Nick Tamen here and feel loved dead ones are now with God and no longer need my intercession in the same way as I believe the living do.

    But as those I care about are dying or have just died, I do pray for them journeying into the afterlife, wanting them to be at peace in Christ, a kind of last farewell prayer that is probably more about me letting go than anything else...
  • Intercession in general is something of a paradox. We are told that God knows what we need before we ask, yet we are encouraged to ask.

    I tend to include the Orthodox prayers for the dead as part of my morning 'office' and particularly on a Saturday which is traditionally when we remember the departed.

    Our parish uses a redundant Anglican church building and every 11th November the priest and a number of people will gather to say memorial prayers for those commemorated on the WW1 memorial plaque on the outside of the building.

    Do they 'need' our prayers?
    I think it's a good thing to do whatever the case.

    I'm not trying to stipulate what other people should or should not do, of course.

    I will say prayers over the graves of my wife and other relatives but not regularly. I visited the natural burial ground where my mother lies recently when I was back down in South Wales and prayed there. I don't do that during every visit to my home town.

    I will almost always say a short prayer for those who lie in graveyards or whose names and lives are commemorated inside old churches. It feels natural to me to do so and I don't get too hung up on the whys and wherefores.

    Equally, I may find myself praying for the local authority, health service and other bodies when I visit a town for whatever reason. Again, that feels like a natural thing to do.

    It's one of these both/and things again. I pray for the living. I pray for the departed.
  • A Feminine ForceA Feminine Force Shipmate
    edited October 26
    No. But I talk to them. And no, I don't get an answer. It's a one sided communication. If I was supposed to be having a conversation with someone who is passed, then I would be there with them, not here.

    It's the living who get my prayers though the best that I can pray for is that everyone lives into their best possible outcomes. It's not for me to say what's best for anyone, so this seems to cover all eventualities.

    AFF
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    You might want to pray for the dead for your own sake and not only for theirs.
  • HarryCH wrote: »
    You might want to pray for the dead for your own sake and not only for theirs.
    Can you expand on that some?


  • I presume @HarryCH is saying that it can give comfort and consolation by doing so.
  • I did when I was a Christian, because that is Orthodox custom and I saw no reason to counter it.
  • MaryLouiseMaryLouise Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    No. But I talk to them. And no, I don't get an answer. It's a one sided communication. If I was supposed to be having a conversation with someone who is passed, then I would be there with them, not here.

    It's the living who get my prayers though the best that I can pray for is that everyone lives into their best possible outcomes. It's not for me to say what's best for anyone, so this seems to cover all eventualities.

    AFF

    So much I can identify with here, especially for someone very loved who may be still very present in memory and longing: the conversation goes on but, yes, one-sided. With the hope of reunion at some point beyond this life.

    I do wonder though and this may touch on the flip side of a coin, if the dead pray for us? Growing up in Zimbabwe I was very conscious of being surrounded by Shona and Ndebele people holding their ancestral houses and lineages in deep reverence and feeling themselves to be guided by those who had gone on before.
  • For many Christians the dead are indeed 'alive',but in a different way. The Community of the Faithful (the Church) includes those here on earth and those more directly in the presence of God.Some Christians believe that those in the presence of God can pray for us just as we have prayed for them.It is part of what the Church calls the Communion of the Saints.
  • Yes. I'd hold with @Forthview on that and it is the custom within the Orthodox Church to consider that the departed may continue to pray for us as we pray for them.

    Orthodox hagiography has stories of glorified Saints appearing to people for one reason or another. 'My relics are in that field over there ...'

    These stories may be pious legend but they are part of the Tradition and people appear to hold to them in whatever way they wish, as pious stories or literal historical fact, according to how they jive.

    I certainly don't 'expect' a two-way conversation and we tend be quite circumspect about apparent apparitions and what-not.

    My late mother told my brother that she felt she'd seen my late wife after her death, 'shining like a Saint.' She didn't tell me that herself. I was sceptical and felt it was most likely one of those wishful thinking half-awake, half asleep moments. I mentioned it to an Orthodox priest and they felt the same.

    So no, I'm not expecting the dead to communicate with me in any way. I've had very vivid dreams where my mother or late wife have appeared very vividly but they didn't 'say' anything to me that differed from what they said when they were alive. The over-riding sense was one of benign love followed by a searing sense of loss when I awoke and realised I'd been dreaming.

    I don't see anything supernatural or supranatural in this, it's simply my subconscious dealing with my grief.
  • A Feminine ForceA Feminine Force Shipmate
    edited October 27
    MaryLouise wrote: »

    So much I can identify with here, especially for someone very loved who may be still very present in memory and longing: the conversation goes on but, yes, one-sided. With the hope of reunion at some point beyond this life.

    I do wonder though and this may touch on the flip side of a coin, if the dead pray for us? Growing up in Zimbabwe I was very conscious of being surrounded by Shona and Ndebele people holding their ancestral houses and lineages in deep reverence and feeling themselves to be guided by those who had gone on before.

    I have for a long time been super-aware of my DNA as a kind of "information transit station". In a very solid sense, I am my ancestors. All my DNA are theirs, and so therefore all the information contained in it necessarily transmits all its information to my corporeal awareness through cellular communication.

    I am greatly comforted by the thought that I can never be separated from my dear parents because all their DNA is mine. Less certain of how that works when one's child precedes one ... though I feel like the part of me that was passed to my daughter still reverberates on some level with the consciousness that so briefly joined itself to mine through this genetic daisy chain.

    AFF

  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    MaryLouise wrote: »
    No. But I talk to them. And no, I don't get an answer. It's a one sided communication. If I was supposed to be having a conversation with someone who is passed, then I would be there with them, not here.

    It's the living who get my prayers though the best that I can pray for is that everyone lives into their best possible outcomes. It's not for me to say what's best for anyone, so this seems to cover all eventualities.

    AFF

    So much I can identify with here, especially for someone very loved who may be still very present in memory and longing: the conversation goes on but, yes, one-sided. With the hope of reunion at some point beyond this life.

    I do wonder though and this may touch on the flip side of a coin, if the dead pray for us? Growing up in Zimbabwe I was very conscious of being surrounded by Shona and Ndebele people holding their ancestral houses and lineages in deep reverence and feeling themselves to be guided by those who had gone on before.

    I would agree with this and with your previous post. It's quite common for a lot of Black people in the US and UK for eg to invoke their ancestors (often simply referred to as "the Ancestors") regardless of religion, and a lot of people in marginalised groups view historical people from their group(s) as spiritual ancestors even if they are not blood related. The wonderful scene in the movie Sinners featuring different musicians and dancers is a great exploration of this imo.

    I agree that despite being on the higher end of things church-wise, I do not actually feel the need to pray for the dead - not because they couldn't hear, and not because I think it's bad, I just don't think they need it. I don't think that there is a place like the traditional interpretation of Purgatory where people need my prayers in order to make it out of there. I don't believe I am able to affect the post-death experience like that, and I personally would not like that responsibility!
  • Certainly, on the Catholic end of the spectrum, we believe that the dead pray for us, and we request their prayers as well.

    I try to remember that it’s like having a huge extended family of older, much older, brothers and sisters from across time and space.
  • And of course coming up we have the Eve of All Hallows (those who are hallowed, holy), All Saints’ Day, and All Souls’ Day. ❤️💀🕯
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Certainly, on the Catholic end of the spectrum, we believe that the dead pray for us, and we request their prayers as well.

    I try to remember that it’s like having a huge extended family of older, much older, brothers and sisters from across time and space.

    I don't think this is a universal belief, in practice, even if you are either an RC or on the Catholic end of Anglicanism - canonised saints, sure; regular dead people, not so much. In my experience the average Roman Catholic is a lot more "low church" in this area than most Anglo-Catholics (tbh in most things, honestly). Also I think there is a pond difference here at least between TEC and the C of E, with what "counts" as being on the Catholic end having a much lower threshold in the C of E.

    Certainly my Silent Generation cradle Catholic grandma would never think to ask a dead person who wasn't a canonised saint for their prayers, because from her perspective why would she bother Auntie Jean when she could go direct to Padre Pio or St Anthony? Or to the Holy Family if she had a big ask (interestingly she would be much more likely to pray to the Holy Family than Our Lady individually, which I think may be an Irish thing?). If she wants to pray for a specific thing she's going to hit up a patron saint of that thing, or Padre Pio because Irish Catholic grandmas LOVE Padre Pio (although yer man JPII may have eclipsed him now as a saint - Irish Catholic grandmas also LOVE JPII).
  • While I agree with Pomona about general practice it is still the teaching of the RC Church that all who reach Heaven may be regarded as 'Saints' The Church puts on to a list only a tiny proportion of those,giving them formally the title of 'Saint' and proposing them as models of christian living to others.
    It is for all those 'non canonised 'Saints' that the Western Church celebrates the Feast of All Saints on 1st November.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    I don't pray for the dead. I can't make any sense of the idea at all. What would I be praying for? What effect would I hope my prayers would have on the dead or on God's dealings with them?
    But then I struggle with the whole notion of petitions in prayer.
  • Alan29 wrote: »
    I don't pray for the dead. I can't make any sense of the idea at all. What would I be praying for? What effect would I hope my prayers would have on the dead or on God's dealings with them?
    But then I struggle with the whole notion of petitions in prayer.

    So do I. Because of how I perceive our life-story agency (refer to LC's "self insertion" analogy) it's hard for me to ask for what-is to be other than it is. So the best I can do is to pray that everyone experiences their best outcomes, in whatever form that takes.

    I regard those on "the other side" to be in the audience now. It's hard for me to imagine them needing anything from me right now.

    AFF
  • I'm not making onerous, or odorous comparisons, but generally speaking we Orthodox don't tend to see prayers for the dead in Purgatorial terms.

    Yes, there are some popular Eastern European beliefs such as the 'Heavenly Tollbooths' thing which many of us would regardvas superstitious and which certainly don't have serious theological sanction.

    I s'pose the way I see it is that I'm asking God to do what he's already doing as it were, 'settle them in places of light, of green pasture ...'

    I would also feel uncomfortable invoking the prayers of a non-canonised saint who has departed this life, but I have done so occasionally.

    If I were somewhere connected with them I wouldn't have an issue saying, 'holy John Wesley ...' or 'holy John Henry Newman ...' or 'holy Florence Nightingale...' or 'holy Evelyn Underhill...' 'pray for us.'

    To be honest, I don't 'over-think' these things, although I do over-think much else. I'll pray over my wife's grave and those of other relatives and friends. I sometimes stop as I cross a cemetery or graveyard and pray for those whose names attract my attention on the headstones. I'll do tye ame for those commemorated on memorials inside old churches.

    It feels natural for me to do so, in a similar way that, when I'm out walking I may thank God for an interesting view or intriguing building or tree or rock or whatever else. I also sometimes find myself praying for towns and villages when I drive through them.

    It's all part of the same thing.

    On the ancestors thing ... I visited Madagascar last year and the whole place is suffused with respect and veneration of ancestors, not only among Animists but also across most Christian groups other than very strict evangelicals.

    I found some of this disconcerting, but by no means all if it. I sort of 'got' it. Through a combination of that and the strong antimalarial tablets I was taking I had very vivid dreams in which my late wife, mother and others I had known in life appeared in a very benign and reassuring way.

    An old 'enemy' from the workplace 20-odd years back even featured to assure me that all that was water under the bridge and of no account now.

    I don't see anything spooky in that, it was my subconscious trying to work these things through.

    Yesterday, October 27th was the Feast of the newly canonised St Olga of Alaska. She is believed to have appeared to people in 'visionary prayer', sometimes in the company of the Holy Theotokos. Apparently she has a particular concern in healing survivors of sexual abuse.

    Whatever we make of that there is a strong belief in Orthodoxy that the Saints continue to intercede for us and can 'intervene' in some way.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Alan29 wrote: »
    I don't pray for the dead. I can't make any sense of the idea at all. What would I be praying for? What effect would I hope my prayers would have on the dead or on God's dealings with them?
    But then I struggle with the whole notion of petitions in prayer.

    So do I. Because of how I perceive our life-story agency (refer to LC's "self insertion" analogy) it's hard for me to ask for what-is to be other than it is. So the best I can do is to pray that everyone experiences their best outcomes, in whatever form that takes.

    I regard those on "the other side" to be in the audience now. It's hard for me to imagine them needing anything from me right now.

    AFF

    But are you praying for those outcomes or just hoping for them? I think there is a difference.
  • Alan29 wrote: »
    Alan29 wrote: »
    I don't pray for the dead. I can't make any sense of the idea at all. What would I be praying for? What effect would I hope my prayers would have on the dead or on God's dealings with them?
    But then I struggle with the whole notion of petitions in prayer.

    So do I. Because of how I perceive our life-story agency (refer to LC's "self insertion" analogy) it's hard for me to ask for what-is to be other than it is. So the best I can do is to pray that everyone experiences their best outcomes, in whatever form that takes.

    I regard those on "the other side" to be in the audience now. It's hard for me to imagine them needing anything from me right now.

    AFF

    But are you praying for those outcomes or just hoping for them? I think there is a difference.

    Well since I don't know exactly what constitutes someone's "best outcome" I have no idea of what to hope for.

    I simply ask Christ to guide them in the decisions and experiences that result in their best possible outcomes. Only He and they know what that might look like.

    AFF

  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Forthview wrote: »
    While I agree with Pomona about general practice it is still the teaching of the RC Church that all who reach Heaven may be regarded as 'Saints' The Church puts on to a list only a tiny proportion of those,giving them formally the title of 'Saint' and proposing them as models of christian living to others.
    It is for all those 'non canonised 'Saints' that the Western Church celebrates the Feast of All Saints on 1st November.

    Oh, of course - and a lot of lay RC traditions regarding canonised saints come from more of a folk religion tradition rather than anything with actual doctrinal backing, eg the Irish tradition of brides-to-be putting a small figure of the Infant of Prague on the front doorstep the night before their wedding.
  • Alan29 wrote: »
    Alan29 wrote: »
    I don't pray for the dead. I can't make any sense of the idea at all. What would I be praying for? What effect would I hope my prayers would have on the dead or on God's dealings with them?
    But then I struggle with the whole notion of petitions in prayer.

    So do I. Because of how I perceive our life-story agency (refer to LC's "self insertion" analogy) it's hard for me to ask for what-is to be other than it is. So the best I can do is to pray that everyone experiences their best outcomes, in whatever form that takes.

    I regard those on "the other side" to be in the audience now. It's hard for me to imagine them needing anything from me right now.

    AFF

    But are you praying for those outcomes or just hoping for them? I think there is a difference.

    Well since I don't know exactly what constitutes someone's "best outcome" I have no idea of what to hope for.

    I simply ask Christ to guide them in the decisions and experiences that result in their best possible outcomes. Only He and they know what that might look like.

    AFF

    As an aside, whilst we may, and do, pray for specific outcomes in personal prayer, when it comes to the Liturgy and corporate worship the Orthodox practice is to present a list or litany of things before the Almighty and leave it up to him how he might answer.

    We don't know what the best outcome might be.

    So there is some congruence of course in the way I might approach this and how @A Feminine Force and others might do so, whatever differences we may have otherwise in terms of theology and practice.
  • I am a member of the Guild of All Souls, and Anglo-Catholic Guild dedicated to praying for the dead, the dying, and the bereaved. So yes, I pray for the dead every day of my life, both those I can name, and those I can't. As a believer in Puegatory, I think that the love of our prayers can be a light on the path to those whose darkness is, hopefully, progressively dispelling. I also pray constantly for the intercession of the saints.

    I agree with @Gamma Gamaliel it's about love. The late Bishop Kallistos Ware wrote that we should never cease praying for the dead. This is in some ways tied up with hopeful universalism. In this world, love can sometimes bring about a change of heart, a metanoia. I believe it is still possible to reach the deceased with our love and that light can aid in lightening their darkness.
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