Commemorated on April 25
Holy Week: A Liturgical Explanation for the Days of Holy Week
3. MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY: THE END
These
three days, which the Church calls Great and Holy have within the
liturgical development of the Holy Week a very definite purpose. They
place all its celebrations in the perspective of End ; they remind us of
the eschatological meaning of Pascha. So often Holy Week is considered
one of the “beautiful traditions” or “customs,” a self-evident “part” of
our calendar. We take it for granted and enjoy it as a cherished annual
event which we have “observed” since childhood, we admire the beauty of
its services, the pageantry of its rites and, last but not least, we
like the fuss about the paschal table. And then, when all this is done
we resume our normal life. But do we understand that when the world
rejected its Savior, when “Jesus began to be sorrowful and very heavy...
and his soul was exceedingly sorrowful even unto death,” when He died
on the Cross, “normal life” came to its end and is no longer possible.
For there were “normal” men who shouted “Crucify Him [” who spat at Him
and nailed Him to the Cross. And they hated and killed Him precisely
because He was troubling their normal life. It was indeed a perfectly
“normal” world which preferred darkness and death to light and life....
By the death of Jesus the “normal” world, and “normal” life were
irrevocably condemned. Or rather they revealed their true and abnormal
inability to receive the Light, the terrible power of evil in them. “Now
is the Judgment of this world” (John 12:31). The Pascha of Jesus
signified its end to “this world” and it has been at its end since then.
This end can last for hundreds of centuries this does not alter the
nature of time in which we live as the “last time.” “The fashion of this
world passeth away...” (I Cor. 7:31).
Pascha means passover,
passage. The feast of Passover was for the Jews the annual commemoration
of their whole history as salvation, and of salvation as passage from
the slavery of Egypt into freedom, from exile into the promised land. It
was also the anticipation of the ultimate passage—into the Kingdom of
God. And Christ was the fulfillment of Pascha. He performed the ultimate
passage: from death into life, from this “old world” into the new world
into the new time of the Kingdom. And he opened the possibility of this
passage to us. Living in “this world” we can already be “not of this
world,” i.e. be free from slavery to death and sin, partakers of the
“world to come.” But for this we must also perform our own passage, we
must condemn the old Adam in us, we must put on Christ in the baptismal
death and have our true life hidden in God with Christ, in the “world to
come....”
And thus Easter is not an annual commemoration, solemn
and beautiful, of a past event. It is this Event itself shown, given to
us, as always efficient, always revealing our world, our time, our life
as being at their end, and announcing the Beginning of the new life....
And the function of the three first days of Holy Week is precisely to
challenge us with this ultimate meaning of Pascha and to prepare us to
the understanding and acceptance of it.
1. This eschatological
(which means ultimate, decisive, final) challenge is revealed, first, in
the common troparion of these days:
Troparion—Tone 8
Behold the Bridegroom comes at midnight,
And blessed is the servant whom He shall find watching,
And again unworthy is the servant whom He shall find heedless.
Beware, therefore, O my soul, do not be weighed down with sleep,
Lest you be given up to death and lest you be shut out of the Kingdom.
But rouse yourself crying: Holy, Holy, Holy, are You, O our God!
Through the Theotokos have mercy on us!
Midnight
is the moment when the old day comes to its end and a new day begins.
It is thus the symbol of the time in which we live as Christians. For,
on the one hand, the Church is still in this world, sharing in its
weaknesses and tragedies. Yet, on the other hand, her true being is not
of this world, for she is the Bride of Christ and her mission is to
announce and to reveal the coming of the Kingdom and of the new day. Her
life is a perpetual watching and expectation, a vigil pointed at the
dawn of this new day. But we know how strong is still our attachment to
the “old day,” to the world with its passions and sins. We know how
deeply we still belong to “this world.” We have seen the light, ‘We know
Christ, we have heard about the peace and joy of the new life in Him,
and yet the world holds us in its slavery. This weakness, this constant
betrayal of Christ, this incapacity to give the totality of our love to
the only true object of love are wonderfully expressed in the
exapostilarion of these three days:
“Thy Bridal Chamber I see adorned, O my Savior
And I have no wedding garment that I may enter,
O Giver of life, enlighten the vesture of my soul
And save me.”
2.
The same theme develops further in the Gospel readings of these days.
First of all, the entire text of the four Gospels (up to John 13: 31) is
read at the Hours (1, 3, 6 and 9). This recapitulation shows that the
Cross is the climax of the whole life and ministry of Jesus, the Key to
their proper understanding. Everything in the Gospel leads to this
ultimate hour of Jesus and everything is to be understood in its light.
Then, each service has its special Gospel lesson :
On Monday:
At
Matins: Matthew 21: 18-43—the story of the fig tree, the symbol of the
world created to bear spiritual fruits and failing in its response to
God.
At the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts: Matthew 24: 3-35:
the great eschatological discourse of Jesus. The signs and announcement
of the End. “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not
pass away....”
“When the Lord was going to His voluntary Passion,
He said to His Apostles on the way:
Behold, we go up to Jerusalem,
And the Son of Man shall be delivered up
As it is written of Him.
Come, therefore, and let us accompany Him,
With minds purified from the pleasures of this life,
And let us be crucified and die with Him,
That we may live with Him,
And that we may hear Him say to us:
I go now, not to the earthly Jerusalem to suffer,
But unto My Father and your Father
And My God and your God,
And I will gather you up into the heavenly Jerusalem,
Into the Kingdom of Heaven....”
(Monday Matins)
by THE VERY REV. ALEXANDER SCHMEMANN
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, and even 2008!):
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