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Bohm_Bawerk
Guest
Thank you,
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
Technically I think you are correct. If a person is in Hell, there’s no way out. But we don’t know who is in Heaven, Purgatory or Hell, because we are not the judge of other people. God is the judge. Somehow I think he is more merciful than the Catholic church’s dogma on the afterlife. I know he always hears the prayers of the humble hearted. So yes, pray for your dead and for the whole world. God loves to hear our prayers.Unless I’ve misunderstood the question I don’t think you can pray for a person’s salvation after they’ve died. Their lot has been cast and they’re either in purgatory awaiting their entrance to heaven or not. Now, if this person is in purgatory then continually praying for them is indeed efficacious and helpful, it will shorten their time in purgatory. If the person is already out of purgatory then the prayers won’t go to waste and will help other souls in purgatory. If they died and aren’t in either purgatory or heaven then prayers for them won’t be of any effect - they had their chance and missed it. I don’t believe there are any second chances after one has died so if they weren’t saved when they died praying for their salvation won’t be of any effect after their death.
ChadS
Prayer of St. Gertrude The Great (Died 1334)
"Eternal Father, I offer Thee the Most Precious Blood
of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the Masses
said throughout the world today, for all the Holy Souls
in Purgaroty, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the
Universal Church, for those in my own home and within
my family. Amen"
Ok. Thanks. So I take it I should pray for people’s salvation whilst they are alive?Unless I’ve misunderstood the question I don’t think you can pray for a person’s salvation after they’ve died. Their lot has been cast and they’re either in purgatory awaiting their entrance to heaven or not. Now, if this person is in purgatory then continually praying for them is indeed efficacious and helpful, it will shorten their time in purgatory. If the person is already out of purgatory then the prayers won’t go to waste and will help other souls in purgatory. If they died and aren’t in either purgatory or heaven then prayers for them won’t be of any effect - they had their chance and missed it. I don’t believe there are any second chances after one has died so if they weren’t saved when they died praying for their salvation won’t be of any effect after their death.
ChadS
Thank you for sharing this wonderful prayer. Is it really true about what is said regarding 1000 souls being released from Purgatory each time this prayer is said? If the Lord gave this prayer in what would be deemed as a “private revelation”, then is it not possible that the natural trait to err in interpretation may have been on the part of St. Gertrude? The devotions’ promise sounds too good to be true, but forgive my skepticism.Even if the deceased for whom you were to pray is already in heaven, your prayers would not be in vain. Here is a beautiful prayer to be said for the Holy Souls in Purgatory. It is especially efficacious because it includes not only those close to us, but those who may have no one left on earth to pray for them.
Our Lord told St. Gertrude that the following prayer would release 1,000 souls from Purgatory each time it is prayed.
Code:Prayer of St. Gertrude The Great (Died 1334) "Eternal Father, I offer Thee the Most Precious Blood of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the Masses said throughout the world today, for all the Holy Souls in Purgaroty, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the Universal Church, for those in my own home and within my family. Amen"
This is interesting, since he is praying for a result that one would think already past, and therefore immutable. It suggests (and I have seen this suggested elsewhere) that praying for the salvation of someone who might otherwise be in hell could save him from hell retrospectively, inasmuch as there is no “time” for God, and prayers said today might alter past circumstances, leading to a different result from what we might perceive in time.God and the prayers you offer to Him for someone’s salvation are outside of time. I know of a priest who still prays for his parents’ happy death, and they died many years ago.

I don’t see anything wrong with this. You are praying for your parents and then saying if they don’t need it anymore let the prayer be for another of my deceased relatives. I think that is a wonderful thing.My :twocents:
I pray for my parents often and also meet conditions and do the work for plenary indulgences. I was praying that if they didn’t need my prayers anymore, perhaps other members of my departed family could have the benefit.
Then I was told by our RCIA person that, if they don’t need it anymore, Our Lord directs our prayers to others who need them; and that it is a mystery as to who and why.
I have to be reminded from time to time that we can’t know it all and there are mysteries.
Yes definitely pray for their salvation while they are alive and pray that they come to know the true peace and love that only Christ can give. If they are lapsed Catholics pray they come back into the Church. When they die, don’t stop praying for them, but maybe you could pray that God has mercy on them or that your prayers help them get out of purgatory quicker.Ok. Thanks. So I take it I should pray for people’s salvation whilst they are alive?
Thank you,
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
Our destination is sealed at the moment of our death.Thank you,
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
Of course. Not from God’s point of view, but from yours and the other person’s. It may obtain for them the grace of a sudden and miraculous last-millisecond deathbed conversion (unbeknownst and not perceptible to any observer, but nonetheless real) that saves them.Okay. Thank you to everyone. But suppose that someone is living a life of sin whilst they are alive. I pray constantly for their salvation (e.g. for God to have mercy on their souls). Will this change anything?
Thank you,
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
HahaI don’t think there is a time limit. Like one poster said, God is out side the limits of time.
And by the way. Am i the only one here who had to google the word efficacious?
I was a Methodist (born and brought up) when I married my Catholic wife. She prayed daily for 10 years for my conversion in order that I had the opportunity for salvation. Her prayers worked. I became a Catholic.Okay. Thank you to everyone. But suppose that someone is living a life of sin whilst they are alive. I pray constantly for their salvation (e.g. for God to have mercy on their souls). Will this change anything?
Thank you,
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk