Tridu-what? Holy Week and the #Triduum at St Nicholas 2014

Holy Week actually begins with Palm Sunday, at 10:00AM April 13th. The service starts with a joyful royal procession with palms, but the mood changes suddenly from triumph to tragedy as the dramatic Gospel reading progresses to its stark conclusion. This mood change will be reflected in the musical anthem “A Brief Processional,” which will be sung by the St Nicholas Choir. There will be no 4:30pm Saturday service on April 12.

All are welcome to walk with us from joy to sorrow and back again during Holy Week, and especially for the great 3 days (evening services, actually) leading up to the glory of Easter. Each night the services does not end in the usual way, but is suspended in silence and darkness until taken up again the next night. It can be a profoundly moving experience.

We encourage you to experience the entire Triduum (Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and the Great Vigil of Easter) again this year.

If you’ve never taken the journey of Holy Week, here’s a good explanation of what goes on as we at St Nicholas experience it – this post has been updated from last year’s version.

Three Days *

The Three Days (or Triduum) slow down time as we move through the climax of the story of faith, Jesus’ betrayal, death, and resurrection. Worship throughout the rest of the year skims the surface in some ways, whisking us through the story of Jesus’ life. But in these three days we linger. There is so much centered here. We have to take our time to be able to receive it.

Worship on these days will cover it all: creation and redemption, death and life, fire and water, desolation and celebration. These days enact the great Christian drama, and the liturgies are, in many ways, dramas that embody the story, the tensions, and the teachings at the core of our faith.

The Triduum liturgies are, in effect, one continuous rite spread over three consecutive days. Thus, there is no blessing or dismissal until the conclusion of the First Mass of the Resurrection on Easter Eve.

Maundy Thursday -April 17, 7 PM

Elements

Thursday evening marks the beginning of the Triduum. We reach back to the beginning of Lent to recall the confession we made on Ash Wednesday. This service is clearly different from the regular flow of the Eucharist as we celebrate it weekly, because what we commemorate this evening is different. Tonight we begin a celebration that will not end until the exultant conclusion of the Great Paschal Vigil. Tonight, we hear the words of forgiveness in a new way. It is only with the knowledge of being forgiven that we can engage the rest of the story. We watch and we eat a last supper with Jesus. We hear him offer all of himself to us, even his body and blood. We end the service with the stripping of the chancel. Adornment after adornment leaves the sanctuary as the words of the psalm drift through the air, and we are reminded of what this love will cost Jesus. We leave the service lingering. It is holy time.

Good Friday – April 18, 7 PM

CrownofThorns and Nails

When we return to the sanctuary on Good Friday, hours have passed. We hear about Jesus’ betrayal, capture and trial. We hear of his humiliation, his interrogation. We know the night was long for him, and lonely. Our visual center is the cross. There is nothing else to distract us. The pace is slow, as those final hours must have been for him. We move relentlessly toward the end. We pray, interceding for the world around us, for our church, and ourselves. We are reminded that Jesus’ death was paradoxically, the moment of his triumph. Through his death, he defeated death.

The Great Vigil of Easter – Saturday April 19, 8 PM

REMINDER: There is no 4:30PM Saturday liturgy on April 19

EasterAltar2012

Now we are almost there, almost at the hour when Jesus’ death itself was overcome, the death become life — the victory we so need. Now time stands still for us to remember all that has gone before. No other service is so full of the heritage of faith; no other time in the year do we gather together all of the richest metaphors and symbols of faith. We gather around new fire, itself a sign of creation renewed. From it we light the paschal candle to illumine our way. As the pillar of fire led the people of Israel in the wilderness, so the paschal candle will lead us to Easter — the light of Christ our beacon. In the silence from Good Friday, the light is rekindled. Gathered around the light, we wrap the great stories of faith like a blanket around ourselves.

We recall our ancestors and God’s saving work among us throughout the ages — creation from a word, the earth washed clean in the flood, the deliverance at the Red Sea, dry bones given life again. The baptismal font beckons to affirm our baptisms, to remember our welcome into the community of faith, and to welcome others newborn into the faith. The Gospel reading draws us out of our holy recollections and into the events of the story again. Now we are prepared. We know where we have come from before we peek into the tomb with the women and Peter. When we hear the angel say, He is not here, but has risen, we know again that life is always God’s way with us. Death is defeated. We dance through the holy meal, now each one confessing the truth of the story.

Light the church! Shout Alleluia! Celebrate with high praise! He is risen!

*Adapted from Sundays and Seasons 2004 (Augsburg/Fortress, 2003), pp. 158-159.

Here Comes Peter Cottontail

Easterbasket

Easter is many things, though as Christians most certainly it is the highest and greatest of all feasts as we rejoice in Jesus’ glorious resurrection.

Yet, for our younger members, Easter is also about sweets and treats. What better way to share in their joy and happiness than by providing goodies for them to find at our Easter Egg Hunt?

Please consider donating a bag or two of jelly beans, wrapped chocolates and such. Donations may be placed in the parish office or brought in during the weekend Liturgies.

On behalf of the Easter Bunny and all our youngsters and those who are “young at heart,” thank you.