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Easter Triduum – Happy Holy Week

Easter Triduum is upon us for a three-day commemoration of the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.  It is the Lord’s victory over sin and death.  It is however not only a time to look back but also to bring forward that same passion, death, and resurrection into our lives, a cleansing of our own sin, and a renewal of our baptismal promises to live a life of holiness. 

Easter Triduum includes Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday in the Easter Vigil.  Jesus takes the Jewish feast of Passover and transforms it into Holy Thursday with his own body and blood in the bread and wine we celebrate each time we come to Mass.   Jesus makes of this feast his own last Supper before his death and the first Supper of the new kingdom he is bringing into the world.  This night the Church recognizes its call to be servants of its people by the washing of the feet.  The evening is given to time in Adoration till midnight to be with the Lord in anticipation of his death.  This night the church is being born not simply as an institution but within the hearts of God’s people. 

Good Friday recalls the Lord’s Passion in which he hung on the cross from noon till 3:00 when he breathed his last.  It is the only day we do not celebrate Mass as we pause to honor the Lord’s death in which he descends to the dead to set captives free.  We also mourn with him our separation from God by the nails of our sins.  Jesus final words on the cross, “Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit”.  Jesus’ self-surrender, no one takes it from him but he lays it down for us.  We are called to self-surrender to God and hold nothing back.  This act is a daily struggle to overcome the concupiscence of our own passions and carry the cross with love.  This night we receive Holy Communion of previously consecrated hosts as the only time the Church does not celebrate the Mass. 

Holy Saturday is our “quiet time” as the Lord was laid in the tomb before his resurrection.  The silence of the day is transformed into the victory over death as the evening begins with the lighting of the Paschal Candle and the singing of the Exultet in recalling the Lord’s sacrifice and victory.  The darkness of the evening however gives over to the “light of Christ” in his resurrection from the dead bringing that light to all who had died before and to all the living in anticipation of being raised up to the glory of heaven.  This night the stone of the tomb has rolled open to reveal the emptiness of the tomb, the emptiness of a life without Jesus Christ.  It is the night of rejoicing and exultation with a return to the singing of the Alleluia!  

Easter has arrived!  A new day has dawned upon God’s people.  The glory of his name is exulted above every other name.  He is risen!  He is risen and we are called to rise up to be heirs of his kingdom remaining true to our faith by word and deed.  This is the love, mercy and glory of God poured out on his people.  This is also the great joy from God for those who have responded to his sacrifice and his calling.  The work of Lent becomes the fruit of our salvation.  It is not by our merit but by his grace.  Not only is Jesus risen from the dead but by his rising he raises us up with himself.  He is risen to bring salvation to the world.  He is risen to heal, redeem and sanctify our souls.  He is risen to fill us with himself that we may be one with the same sacrificial love that is ready to surrender to God’s will.  He is risen and will fulfill the promise that we will also rise again from sin to holiness, from mortality to immortality, from the limits time and space to being outside of time and space, from death to eternal life. 

Praise be to God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit! Happy Holy Week!  Happy Easter!

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Easter Triduum

The Easter Triduum is three events in the one continuous recognition of the Lord’s passion, death, and resurrection.  This begins with Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday and concludes with vespers (evening prayer) on Easter Sunday. 

It began with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday as the Lord institutes the memorial of the Eucharist in the offering of his body and blood in preparation for the sacrifice to come in his death.  The Eucharist is his true body and blood in a mystery of transubstantiation for the atonement of our sins through all ages.  Lent was an opportunity to join Jesus by sharing of our own sacrifice not to atone for our sins but as an act of worship and thanksgiving.  The celebration of the Mass is a celebration of thanksgiving in remembrance of the one sacrifice.  It also institutes Holy Orders, that is the one Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic church with himself as our High Priest and the disciples as priestly servants of the High Priest.  We recall this institution by the reenactment of the washing of the feet to remember true discipleship is servant leadership.  This invitation to servant leadership is a call to all faithful believers in our own state of life.  The willingness of ourselves to sacrifice for others is the beginning of the Christian life. 

Next is Good Friday, just one day after the institution of the Holy Eucharist we have this one day in which the church does not celebrate the Mass.  The solemnity of this day is the passion and death of Jesus in which Catholic churches around the world conduct reenactments to recall the reality of the sacrifice in all of Jesus true humanity to return to the Father in all his divinity.  His life is not taken from him.  He surrenders it to the Father to be one, consubstantial of the one nature with the Father and the Holy Spirit.  We are invited to spend an hour in adoration before the Blessed Sacrament this night as Jesus asks his disciples to stay awake with him in his agony before his arrest.  We recall his suffering is very personal in our lives for our own redemption, the forgiveness of our sins.  As Peter denied Jesus three times, we recall our own denial of our faith.  When we trust not Jesus will in our lives but our own egocentric desire to be our own god we reject his grace and mercy and deny him once again.  When we choose to disobey the commandments with full knowledge and free will we deny the fear of God and invite judgment upon ourselves.  When we vow to the Lord to live our state of life in chastity to our call as single, married, widow, religious, or priestly and break our vows we deny our Lord.  We may deny our promises but Jesus does not deny himself the promise he has made to us. 

The Tridium concludes with the final day beginning with the Saturday vigil at sunset until Sunday evening vespers.  In the darkness of the fire the Easter candle is lit to bring us “The Light of Christ” to “banish the darkness of sin” and “persevere undimmed” (Exultant) in the life of the church and in our lives as faithful followers of the light.  The night recalls the history of salvation in all the readings and in our voices raised to sing the Gloria, the Litany of the Saints and our Alleluia!  Easter has come with the promise of the empty tomb that is the resurrected Christ.  We join him as children of the light to burn brightly in our souls fulfilling the great commandment, “love God” and “love your neighbor” as he loves us. Our praise to God is fulfilled in our capacity to love.  We come together as family to express that love having already reconciled our self to God and with each other.  We come together as church to share in the fellowship of this love poured out for us giving testimony through our worship together.  We come together in our image of God to be one with him in our soul joining our mind, hearts, and will to be of one mind, one heart, and one will as humble servants ready to wash each other’s feet. 

Saint Peter reminds us of that we do fall and we rise again in hopes that each time our conversion brings us closer to Jesus, closer to the divine life, closer to each other.  HAPPY EASTER!! 

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