









The call for Christians to live up to their baptismal call ought to be a constant reminder that not only are we called to be saints, but, as St Paul says, we are saints, however imperfectly we are running the race to the heavenly goal. It is not just that we do not share in the eternal joy of heaven now, but that we know how often we fall short of the goal of holiness that Jesus called us to in this life, whether in purity of heart, mercy, righteousness, or peacefulness.
But we have exemplars, for we live in communion with the saints, who share in the fullness of God’s life presently. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church says, “Some of his disciples are pilgrims on earth. Others have died and are being purified, while still others are in glory, contemplating ‘in full light, God himself triune and one, exactly as he is’” (n. 954). The feast of All Saints is a necessary reminder for us whenever we doubt that God could make a saint of us. Sainthood is both our purpose and our destiny.
Those saints in heaven share the life for which we are being prepared, but they are not simply models for us; they intercede on our behalf. The Apocalypse of St John promises us that the saints are “a great multitude” who worship God, calling us home. In 1 John, we are told that as saints, “we are God’s children now; what we shall be has not yet been revealed. We do that when it is revealed we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he really is.” This is the glorious future, in which some of the family, children of God like us, already share and in which they mediate for us. But if we are encouraged to recognise that we are saints even now, how do we make certain we will be saints also then, seeing God as God is, like God, for eternity? As with so much of the Christian life, sainthood is a study in the mundane and the ordinary, done with great love of God and neighbour. Jesus, the one and only teacher, instructs us in the Beatitudes. Offering us “the paradoxical promises that sustain hope in the midst of tribulations” (Catechism n. 1717). The paradox, as with so much of the kingdom, is that sainthood confounds and confuses the ways of the world, counselling behaviour that others see as foolishness.
Jesus offers that his followers are “blessed” when they walk Christ’s path of discipleship. In spite of persecution, being reviled, or even mourning, the follower of Jesus is “happy” when showing mercy, making peace, thirsting for righteousness. “Rejoice and be glad, for your reward will be great in heaven.” The “happy” are the saints who are destined for the divine reward, whose lives show that they yearn to share in communion with the saints in heaven.
But to be a saint, as Jesus encourages us, is to live the happy life now, in which virtue allows us to participate in the life of God with joy. Life in the kingdom of God is the goal, but the Beatitudes allow us to participate in that life now with God and all the saints