Blossoms that never fade
by VP
Posted on Friday October 31, 2025 at 03:00AM in Tradition
A Burial at Ornans, Gustave Courbet
"Of
 late years Catholics in some places have begun to copy the pagan custom
 of decorating the dead. Flower wagons seem to form a necessary part of 
most funerals. The non-Catholic has no Mass, and Purgatory is a place 
unknown to him. He may mean to express his sympathy and sorrow in the 
flower he places on the coffin of the dead. It may speak for him the 
last farewell of a loving heart to a cherished friend.
But 
flowers are not for the dead, they take away the thought of death. The 
sacredness of that solemn moment is lost amid the fragrance of flowers. 
The casket hides an awful mystery. "Thou shalt die the death." The 
deceased friend has paid his share of Adam's debt, the living must be 
reminded of the debt that is still unpaid - their own. Gay flowers and 
handsome wreaths disturb the majesty of the thought.
The burial 
of our dead is a religious ceremony; not a vain and worldly pageant. The
 rubrics of the Church forbid flowers on the altar at funeral Masses; 
the altar is draped in mourning; the priest wears black vestments; all 
in keeping with the great and solemn mystery of death. Many dioceses 
have strict rulings forbidding flowers in Church at funerals.
What
 comfort will it be to you, kind reader, to have flowers lavished on 
your remains? Your poor soul will be craving in the cleansing fires of 
Purgatory, not for flowers, but for prayers, for the Precious Blood in 
the Holy Sacrifice of the mass! Source: Annals of St. Joseph Nov. 1917, Vol XXIX No. 9 Norbertine Fathers page 141
- Annual Poor Souls Enrollment (Fssp)
- Purgatorian Archconfraternity (Fssr)
- Rorate Caeli Purgatorial Society
 
						       
						       
						      