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On All Souls’ Day, the Catholic Church remembers all those who have died and prays for them in a particular way.
Our prayer can end the suffering of those who have died but are not fully purified to enter heaven. They cannot pray for themselves, but they can pray for us. We are the only ones who can pray for them and we will have a grateful friend if someone comes out of purgatory to heaven for our prayers.
The root of all suffering is sin, whether original or actual. God created the soul pure, simple, Free from every stain of sin, with a certain instinct that leads her to seek happiness in God.
But original sin takes it away from this probability, and even more so when
actual sins taken into account. So, the further away he gets from God, the more evil he becomes and the less God communicates with him.
A Requiem or Requiem Mass, also known as Mass for the dead (Latin: Missa pro defunctis) or Mass of the dead (Latin: Missa defunctorum), is a Mass of the Catholic Church offered for the repose of the soul or souls of one or more deceased persons, using a particular form of the Roman Missal. It is usually celebrated in the context of a funeral (where in some countries it is often called a Funeral Mass).
Musical settings of the propers of the Requiem Mass are also called Requiems, and the term has subsequently been applied to other musical compositions associated with death, dying, and mourning, even when they lack religious or liturgical relevance.
The term is also used for similar ceremonies outside the Roman Catholic Church, especially in Western Rite Orthodox Christianity, the Anglo-Catholic tradition of Anglicanism, and in certain Lutheran churches. A comparable service, with a wholly different ritual form and texts, exists in the Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic churches as well as some Methodist churches.
The Mass and its settings draw their name from the introit of the liturgy, which begins with the words Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine (Latin for "Eternal rest grant them, O Lord"), which is cited from 2 Esdras-requiem is the accusative singular form of the Latin noun requies, "rest, repose".