
Scripture Readings: Ephesians 1:15-23 & Luke 6: 20-31
Today, we gather in remembrance and thanksgiving. On All Saints Day, we honour those who walked before us in faith – family, parents, teachers, friends, and saints whose lives reflected Christ’s grace. We give thanks not for their perfection, but for God’s perfect love shining through them. Their faith and courage now live in us. As we remember them, Scripture calls us to open our hearts, embrace the hope of our calling, and live as saints of today – people of light, love, and resurrection hope.
In Ephesians 1: 18-23, Paul gives thanks for the faith and love of the believers. His gratitude becomes a model for us, as we remember those whose faith has inspired and strengthened us. Like Paul, our thanksgiving naturally leads to prayer for deeper understanding and growth in faith.
Paul prays that God would open the eyes of our hearts, so we may grasp the hope to which we are called, the riches of our inheritance, and the greatness of His power. He asks that we receive the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so we can know God more personally and live out His truth each day.
Our hope rests on God’s unshakable promises. Knowing that gives us courage to live faithfully now. Paul reminds us that the same power that raised Christ from the dead is at work in us – power that brings God’s blessings to fulfillment in our lives. May we focus on what God has promised and make spiritual progress in our faith.
The saints are heirs of God’s glorious inheritance in Christ. Through the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, we’ve been given all we need to live a life of faith. So let us live God’s way and seek God’s inheritance in the world.
Christ reigns above all powers and fills the Church with His fullness. The saints of the past and we who follow today share in His life and authority. His reign is alive among us. As the Head of the Church, Christ is a living presence that shapes and sustains His body, the Church, in every generation.
Each life, each act of faith, and each prayer of love becomes part of Christ’s ongoing work in the world. The saints who’ve gone before us still speak through compassion shared, justice pursued, and hope proclaimed. As Christ’s body, we are called to reflect His light, live in His strength, and witness to His victory. In Christ, the Church lives as one communion of love, purpose, and eternal hope. May we joyfully share God’s love under Christ’s lordship.
When Jesus spoke the Beatitudes in Luke 6, He wasn’t just giving a list of ideals. He was revealing His heart, showing us how He lived and how He calls us to live. Each blessing He spoke reflected the life He lived and the love He embodied.
(Slide 1) When Jesus says, “Blessed are the poor” in Luke 6 and “Blessed are the poor in spirit” in Matthew 5, He reveals one truth in two ways: Luke emphasizes God’s care for those facing hardship and HIs concern for the poor and marginalized, while Matthew points to humility and dependence on God and spiritual attitudes. Together they proclaim that God’s kingdom belongs to all who recognize their need for Him and trust in His grace.
(Slide 2) In Luke, “Blessed are you who are poor,” Jesus said, and He Himself was born in poverty, laid in a manger, owning no place to rest His head. “Blessed are you who hunger,” and we see Him feeding the hungry crowds, breaking bread so that others might be filled. “Blessed are you who weep,” and we remember how He wept at Lazarus’s tomb and over Jerusalem’s pain. “Blessed are you when people hate you,” and we recall His rejection, His suffering, and His prayer of forgiveness even from the cross.
Jesus blessed the poor, the hungry, and the sorrowful, promising joy and reward. He lived the Beatitudes, overturning the world’s values – lifting the lowly, healing the broken, and teaching love for all, even enemies. His blessings invite us to follow His way of love: a love that risks, forgives, and gives without expecting return.
To follow Jesus is to live the Beatitudes: to see blessing where the world sees loss, to find joy in compassion, and to trust that in the kingdom of God, mercy and justice will triumph. The Beatitudes are not only the words of Christ, but also the portrait of Christ Himself and the way He calls us to walk.
(Slide 3) In El Greco’s portrait, Christ lifts His gaze heavenward amid suffering, embodying endurance, surrender, and divine love beneath the weight of the cross. If our faith and life were captured in a single picture, what would it reveal? As disciples and members of Christ’s body, may our lives reflect the beauty of the Beatitudes – the blessings of those who live as the Lord desires.
As we come to the close of this sacred remembrance, let us hold close the truth that the saints we honour today are not distant figures of the past. They are part of the living communion of God’s love. Their prayers surround us; their faith strengthens us; their witness encourages us to keep walking, even when the road is steep.
The same Christ who sustained them now stands beside us. His power still raises, His Spirit still comforts, and His light still guides us forward. Let us go forth with thankful hearts, sharing the grace and love we have received. In Christ, the saints’ distinguishing mark is love. May we see blessings not as possessions to keep, but as gifts to share with love. As we give thanks for God’s immeasurable love in Christ, may our lives become living prayers of gratitude and hope for His kingdom.
Thanks be to God! Amen.
(Ref. Bible, commentaries, theological books, UCA materials)