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The placing of the pall is a most tender moment in the
funeral Mass. When the coffin enters the church, the priest sprinkles it
with holy water. Then a large white cloth, the pall, may be placed upon
it in silence. The rubrics permit this gesture “if it is the custom.”
Most parishes reuse the same pall for each funeral. Some of them match
the decor of the church or the vestment of the presider.
The pall has two meanings, both deriving from the New Testament. First,
the pall recalls the baptismal garment. At baptism Catholics each receive
a white garment as a sign of their Christian dignity. They are instructed
to bring that dignity unstained into the everlasting life of heaven. The
garment recalls Revelation 3:4–5, which announces that those who have not
fallen to sin, who have not “soiled their garments,” will walk in white
in glory. The names of those clothed in white, the passage continues, will
never be erased from the book of the living. The funeral pall, then, reclothes
the body in baptismal white to stir up our hopes in the resurrection.
Second, the pall signifies equality. The letter of James (2:1–9) discourages
favoritism. It challenges people who form judgments based on how someone
is dressed. The funeral pall clothes every deceased Christian in the same
garment. Christians do not approach heaven trying to pass ourselves off
as better than others by the garment we wear. We all wear the same uniform
before our all-knowing maker and judge.
The pall may be placed on the coffin by family, friends, or the priest.
In many places the employees of the funeral home place the pall. Their
assistance may simplify the proceedings, but it robs the family of a final
tender gesture — clothing their loved ones in the garments they will wear
before the throne of God.
When the deceased has been cremated, the pall is not used. During a
funeral, a national flag should not be placed on the coffin in place of
the pall.
What do YOU Think?
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Copyright
© 1999, Resource Publications, Inc. 160 E. Virginia St. #290, San
Jose, CA 95112, (408) 286-8505. This article may not be reproduced in any
form without permission from the publisher. For permission e-mail
info@rpinet.com.
Paul
Turner, pastor of St. Munchin Parish in Cameron, MO, holds a doctorate
in sacramental theology from Sant' Anselmo University in Rome. |
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