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Devotional Customs
Enrich the Holy Week Experience
Palm Sunday introduces the most solemn
week of Church year while the Triduum itself comprises the holiest days
of the year for Christians. Uniquely, it is only one liturgy, and not
three, that is celebrated during the Triduum. At the conclusion of the
Mass on Holy Thursday, there is no dismissal, no final blessing and no
announcement that the Mass has ended, for indeed, it has not ended.
After Holy Communion on Holy Thursday, the priest solemnly processes
toward the Altar of Repose where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved for
night Adoration. After a short period of Adoration, the priest simply
withdraws; the faithful subsequently depart one by one when each feels
ready to do so. The next day, the Good Friday Liturgy has neither an
introduction nor a conclusion since it is part of the same liturgy that
was begun the previous evening. And the Easter Vigil itself features no
formal opening, for it, too, is a continuation (and ultimately a
conclusion) of the liturgy that began on Holy Thursday evening. Only at
the conclusion of the Easter Vigil are the dismissal announced and the
final blessing bestowed. With that blessing and conclusion the Church
has once again fulfilled its liturgical observance of the highest holy
days of her year.
Because these days are so significant to
the Church and the spiritual wellbeing of her children, it behooves the
Christian to participate as much as possible in the sacred mysteries
commemorated through the liturgy of these days. Over the centuries and
throughout the world, various extra-liturgical customs and devotions
have also emerged. These observances, performed outside of the Triduum
liturgy, can strengthen and extend the spirit of the liturgy throughout
the three holy days. Anyone can supplement their participation in the
liturgies of the Triduum by participating in one or several of the
extant devotions that have formed around these holy days or by creating
new rituals for the home. The faithful of many nations hold different
ancient customs of the Triduum close to their hearts. From time to time
in the Church's history, some unhelpful customs may have appeared, and
in most of those cases, pastoral intervention has served to correct
whatever misunderstandings may have been present. But when such
devotions are sound and enhance our relationship to the Church's
worship, they should be enthusiastically encouraged. No article could
provide an exhaustive compendium of the array of devotional customs that
accompany the Triduum in different cultures, but a few words about a
small number of them may inspire some readers to supplement their
practices this year with previously unfamiliar aids to a deeper sense of
participation in the Lord's Passion, death and Resurrection.
The Church's liturgy consists of the
Mass, the celebration of the seven sacraments and the Liturgy of the
Hours (the Divine Office). Other forms of prayer are regarded as private
devotions. Because it is observed with great variety today, Tenebrae
can be regarded as a good bridge between the liturgy and one of the
many private observances in which individuals can participate during
Holy Week. Tenebrae (which takes its name from the Latin word for
darkness or shadows) is actually part of the liturgy since it is a
unique arrangement of the daily offices of Matins (Office of Readings)
and Lauds (Morning Prayer) on the last three days of Holy Week. It
features numerous readings followed by the gradual extinguishing of an
entire candelabra of lights until it is nearly totally dark in the
Church (to signify the darkness that pervades without Christ), followed
by a dramatic making of noise (made by each participant hitting one's
book against the pew or some other way of producing a loud noise in the
dark Church), reminiscent of the earthquake following the death of
Christ. It is not celebrated uniformly today throughout the world, and
therefore, Tenebrae might be regarded as an extra observance
available to the faithful during these days. For that matter, for those
members of the Church who do not celebrate the Liturgy of the Hours
regularly, attendance at those Hours can be the most worthwhile way of
surrendering more thoroughly to the spiritual drama that unfolds during
these three days. In that respect, Vespers (Evening Prayer) is not
prayed by those who participate in the Mass of the Lord's Supper on Holy
Thursday, the Celebration of the Lord's Passion on Good Friday or the
Easter Vigil on Saturday night. Neither is Compline (Night Prayer)
celebrated on Saturday night by those who attend the Easter Vigil, and
the Office of Readings for Easter Sunday is included in the Easter
Vigil, so is not repeated. Otherwise, the Liturgy of the Hours is the
most perfect companion to the main liturgy of each day of the Triduum.
The Mass of the Lord's Supper concludes
with Adoration at the Altar of Repose that extends until Midnight, thus
beginning one of the most beautiful moments of private prayer in the
Church year. In response to the Lord's invitation, "Could you not, then,
watch one hour with me?" (Mt 26:40), people place themselves in the
Lord's presence at the specially appointed and decorated Altar of Repose
in their churches. This silent time of prayer on this special night
prepares one to accompany Christ intimately into the three-day journey
that has begun. Because the Holy Eucharist was instituted on this day,
Eucharistic Adoration is particularly appropriate. Also, the devotion of
providing a consoling presence to Christ in the garden by remaining with
Him at prayer that night, a feature included in so many spiritual
traditions in the Church, touches many hearts. Indeed, the weekly Holy
Hour kept by devotees of the Sacred Heart on the Thursday evenings of
the entire year takes its inspiration from this moment.
To Adoration at the Altar of Repose, in
many parts of the world, the faithful add the custom of going on
pilgrimage that evening to as many churches as possible, to pray at the
various Altars of Repose. This is possibly a reflection of the movement
in Christ's own life that evening, from table to garden, and then to the
various places that figure into the narrative of Our Lord's Passion that
night. Those for whom travel would be distracting might do better to
spend all the time they are able to devote to Adoration that evening in
the same place. But for those whose prayer is enhanced by the spirit of
the pilgrimage, the annual journey on Holy Thursday night from one
church to another is a much-anticipated and beloved tradition that would
not easily be surrendered. Good Friday can represent another set of
devotions in addition to the liturgical Celebration of the Lord's
Passion. To begin with, it is poignant to enter any Catholic chapel or
church to take note of the terrible sense of absence caused by the empty
tabernacle. Sometimes one only realizes how deeply one's life is rooted
in the Eucharistic Lord by stopping into a church during the day on Good
Friday to note how disturbingly 'real' the 'unpresence' is without Him.
In its own way, the deliberate visit for a few moments to an 'empty'
church on Good Friday reinforces one's sense of Eucharistic devotion. It
can be particularly instructive for youngsters if the family visits its
parish church on this day and the parents can be heard to describe their
own sense of bereavement over the empty tabernacle. Since the liturgy
for the day includes the Word service, the Adoration of the Cross and
the reception of Holy Communion, appropriate and frequently chosen
devotions for that day can include a private meditation or a family
observance of the Stations of the Cross. Keep in mind that there is no
single correct way to pray the Stations, nor is a printed text necessary
to guide one's prayer or meditation. Maintaining a spirit of silent
prayerfulness from Noon until 3:00 p.m., the hours during which
tradition holds Our Lord hung on the Cross, is also a significant and
meaningful practice for many people. Some of the Eastern Rite Churches
have different liturgical practices, and the Triduum is an excellent
time to remember our shared Catholic vocation and take advantage of it.
The Melkite Rite, to name one, has a dramatic night Office for the
Burial of Christ on Good Friday evening. During this service, the
Lamentations are sung to a tune that transports the listener back to the
ancient Holy Land itself, and a procession of the Lord's burial shroud,
during which many acts of piety and veneration are visible, proceeds to
the Lord's Tomb. Participation in this touching liturgy, or in any
liturgy of the various Rites with which one is typically unfamiliar, can
add great meaning to one's experience of Holy Week since it introduces
consideration of aspects of the Lord's journey that one's own Rite might
nuance differently.
On Holy Saturday, many of the Slavic
people have the custom of bringing food in beautifully decorated Easter
baskets to the church to be blessed. While the particulars of the custom
can vary from one national group to the next, many would agree that the
food presented for blessing constitutes, or at least represents, the
ingredients of the family's Easter dinner or other special foods
particularly associated with the Easter season. Some ensure that a good
number of beautifully decorated Easter eggs are included in the basket
to be taken to church. If one is not near a parish featuring this
custom, any priest would gladly bless a basket of food destined for the
family dinner table on Easter Sunday. The presence of food at the Easter
dinner that has been blessed by a priest helps to emphasize the strong
connection between the family dinner table and the Eucharistic altar in
the parish church. In addition to the food that has been blessed in some
homes for Easter dinner, many groups of people find that the choice of
lamb for the entree enhances the entire Easter representation of the
Lord as the Lamb of God who has victoriously taken away the sins of the
world. In homes where the cost of lamb is prohibitive, even for such a
festive day as Easter (or in a part of the world where lamb is not
typically eaten), one often finds that a cake or even a stick of butter
has been molded in the form of a lamb. The Easter egg itself is a symbol
of the new life we all enjoy because of Christ's salvific victory on our
behalf.
In some places, care is taken at the
Easter Vigil to provide each family with the opportunity to light a
candle from the blessed Easter fire and to take that living flame home
where it burns throughout the year as a perpetual light of devotion.
Again, if the Easter Vigil is the holiest night of the year for the
Christian, any effort to extend the memory of that night throughout the
year is laudable. One wants to remember that the weekly observance of
Sunday is just that, a remembering of the Lord's Resurrection that
extends throughout the entire year.
Finally, in very many cultures, Easter
is a time of visiting, renewing acquaintances and hosting family
gatherings. The social nature of this season should not be lost on
people of faith. Christ's saving deeds restored us to relationship with
God and made us His adopted children. Taking its signal from the
restoration of that most significant of all relationships, Easter then,
is a highly appropriate time for social gatherings, and social
gatherings can themselves become more valuable to us when we remember
they are reflections of the great Easter gift of redemption.
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