Reflections on the Journey from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday.
Holy
Week begins on Palm Sunday. And yet the long Gospel reading at Mass that day takes
us far beyond that event, describing Jesus’ Passion and death.
Why
does the Church tell the whole story (barring the Resurrection) straight away,
all at once?
Basically, the Church tries to
get us to live within the whole story all the time, to
go beyond a merely linear conception of time. To follow the liturgy is to
develop a capacity for synchronicity, the closest we get, this side of
eternity, to an experience of living beyond time.
Think of the Midnight Mass at
Christmas. One has just heard the Gospel of the Nativity. The priest has given
a jolly little sermon. Then, all of a sudden, the manger is overshadowed by
Calvary: “On the day before he was to suffer, he took bread…” The Babe of
Bethlehem is the Lamb of God.
The mind boggles at this, which
is why the Church in all sorts of ways lets us see that, if we stay imprisoned
in our merely experiential notions, we’ll miss the point, because we’ll reduce
God to our story instead of growing into his. During Holy Week we’re constantly
challenged to understand, and live, each individual part in view of the
whole.
Sometimes
Holy Week seems almost too rich in meaning, too overwhelming to properly
appreciate. What’s the best thing to focus on as we observe it?
Isn’t the best thing to do not
to make too many plans? Simply to walk through Holy Week step by step, as we do
when we pray the Stations of the Cross, being intensely present before each. To
pray while we walk, “Lord, open my eyes, my heart to what I need to see.” Then
to be attentive.
Some
Catholics like to watch a particular film in Holy Week, such as ‘The Passion of the Christ’, or listen to a piece
of music like Bach’s ‘St. Matthew Passion’. Is art helpful at this
point, or should we be devoting all our free time to prayer?
I think art can be a
form of prayer. Not all art. But the examples you list qualify. I always
listen, if I can, to the “St. Matthew Passion” in the evening of Good
Friday.
It is a work of such depth that
anything I’d say about it would sound superficial. But for me, an essential
part is the bass recitative right at the end, “Am
Abend, da es kühle war.”
It puts the unbearable intensity
of all that precedes it into perspective. And gives us here and now, in the
circumstances that are ours, a hermeneutical key to existence. It tells us that
everything, even sin, can be made to serve God’s plan if we let it.
Do you remember that line in
Psalm 76, “The wrath of men shall praise thee”? The Church lets us sing that
Psalm at Vigils during the Triduum. Those words always bowl me over. Even wrath
can become praise.
After
Palm Sunday comes Holy Monday, which is associated variously with
Jesus cursing the fig tree, cleansing the Temple, and responding to questions
about his authority. Is this day significant, or is it just marking time before
the main events of Holy Week?
Everything is significant.
The incomparable St. Ephrem
the Syrian (a Doctor, let’s not forget, of the Latin Church)
has a wonderful perspective on the cursing of the fig tree. By letting it
wither, he submits, the Lord lets us see that it has fulfilled its providential
function.
Adam and Eve, remember, covered
themselves with fig leaves after the fall, to hide the nakedness of which they
were ashamed. In a moment Christ, in his salvific sacrifice, will restore to
humankind the Robe of Glory we forfeited through sin, so we’ll have no more
need to hide, to cover ourselves with matter.
There’s a parable in this which, at the beginning of Holy Week, we can use to examine ourselves. What are the masks and disguises I put on? What are the subterfuges by which I conceal the truth of myself, which in fact stand in the way of my becoming that which, by grace, I have the potential to become? So every detail of the Scriptural and liturgical narrative merits attention. Every detail speaks to us.
What
about Holy Tuesday, which traditionally focuses on
the Parable of the Ten Virgins?
St. Seraphim
of Sarov expounded this parable in the light of the gift of the
Spirit. The goal of Christian existence, he would say, is to acquire the Holy
Spirit. The relative quantity of oil in the Virgins’ lamps wasn’t a measure of
accomplishment or moral virtue, but of their configuration to the Spirit.
We all received the Spirit
at baptism — unknowingly if we were baptized as infants; then we said “yes” to
the Spirit at Confirmation, resolving to be its vessels. In each Mass, in a
second epiclesis, as it were, the Spirit is called
down on the assembly with the prayer that they might become one spirit, one body.
On the threshold of Easter, it
matters to ask: Do I fully live as a member of Christ’s Body? If I’ve separated
myself from it by my decisions or actions, it’s a good time to make reparation,
to seek forgiveness.
Holy
Wednesday is also known as Spy Wednesday, in reference to the
day’s Gospel reading about Judas’ betrayal of
Christ. What do you make of the contemporary tendency to express sympathy for Judas?
The word” sympathy”
fundamentally means “suffering-with.” To suffer with Judas makes sense. I dare
say many of us will be able to think back on betrayals we’ve committed,
betrayals that seemed to us like the end of the world.
Where I’d step back from modern
trends would be in their tendency to explain betrayals away, to rationalize
them. The example of Judas reminds me that there is another way. The prospect
of infidelity, in all its sadness, summons me to be faithful. That’s
what matters.
The
Sacred Triduum was traditionally marked by the service of Tenebrae,
in which a series of candles was gradually extinguished, followed by a strepitus,
or loud noise, in the almost total darkness of the church. What do you think of
efforts to revive this service?
I think they’re excellent, and I
can think of places in which there is no need to revive Tenebrae because
it has never ceased. We shall have Tenebrae in the cathedral
here in Trondheim, though at 8 a.m., not at night, and minus the strepitus —
I am not sure it is possible in our cultural setting to enact this sign, in
itself meaningful, with spontaneous earnestness, without it coming to seem like
a bit of a joke. That may be otherwise elsewhere.
In any case, the liturgy of Holy Week uses a host of sensory means to make us appreciate just how vast is the reality in which we are graced to participate. They’re intended to let the message penetrate under our skin. And still manage to do just that.
Holy
Thursday often has two services: the Chrism Mass and the Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper. The Chrism
Mass has an ancient pedigree and is considered one of the most important
liturgies of the year. Why does it take place just before the Triduum?
In the Chrism Mass, the sacred
oils used for the Church’s anointing are blessed and consecrated. Included is
the chrism used for ordination. So the custom — a beautiful custom — has
developed of gathering the diocesan clergy on this day, to make explicit the
unity of the presbyterate around the bishop and to give thanks for the gift of
priesthood.
There is a topical link between
this celebration and the Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper, one of whose
aspects is the institution of the Eucharist and of ministerial
priesthood.
Then there’s the fact that the
oils convey the soothing, healing, transformative power of grace springing from
the sacrifice of Calvary and from the Lord’s holy Resurrection. To bless and
consecrate the oils during Holy Week reminds us of the Paschal character of all
grace — to which none of us has a claim, but which all of us are invited to
receive by professing, and living out, the Church’s Easter faith.
When I was becoming a Catholic,
I was struck by a friend’s awestruck description of the Triduum. She said that
my first experience of it would be unforgettable. She was right. Why do you
think it’s so powerful?
Partly because it is such an
all-encompassing experience, touching us at many levels. Primarily, though,
because it is real.
The Carthusians have the motto, Stat crux dum volvitur orbis: “While the world turns, the cross stands firm.” During the Triduum, we sense and vaguely understand this. We intuit that yes, this is what it’s all about; this is what makes sense of everything else. We see that it’s our being part of the Church that lends this perception its strength. The whole Body, of which we are members, kneels in adoration. That cannot but be an impressive, life-changing experience.
Pope
Francis has taken a distinctive approach to the Mass of the Lord’s Supper.
Instead of washing the feet of priests in St. Peter’s Basilica, he has gone out
to prisons and migrant centers. He has included women and Muslims in his foot-washing ceremonies. Do
you think this has helped to shed new light on Jesus’ actions at the Last
Supper?
I think it has. But the old
light is also important. I don’t think we need to oppose one to the other. The
rite has gone through a long history of evolution, from being a domestic
service in the households of prelates, with the noises and smells of episcopal
kitchens not far away, to becoming a liturgical rite.
The formalization of a gesture
does not necessarily make it less real; it is a way of expressing the gesture’s
universality. These days we’re focused on inclusion, on not leaving anyone out,
which is not in itself a bad idea, but risks being limiting, in as much as our
focus is on ourselves.
What matters, though, is to
grasp what God is doing. I recently discovered a phrase from
the correspondence of Don Primo
Mazzolari, something written to him by a person far from the Church:
“I am tempted to shout in your ears: But do you understand what
you are doing? Perhaps you’ve never really understood it: this action (God
kneeling down, as a servant, before his creature) turns absolutely everything
upside down, and you turn it into a harmless ritual?”
The real criterion of inclusion is not whether the community of which I feel a part is having its particular feet washed, but this: Do I realize the extent to which Christ has humbled himself for my sake? And do I live according to Christ’s example?
You
have said that on Good Friday, ‘the Cross
commands our full attention.’ What do we learn about the Cross that day?
We contemplate it first as an
instrument of death, a demeaning object of torture; then as the symbol of
victory. The transition is made when, after the reading of the Passion, the
cross is carried onto the sanctuary in solemn procession and we kneel before it
singing the Hagios: “Holy God, holy immortal, holy and strong, have
mercy on us.”
We are part, then, of an enacted
paradigm shift, enabled to glimpse the truth of what St. John speaks of — that
the Cross, whose torment is unbearably present, is nonetheless an epiphany of
glory. Faced with these realities, we cannot say much. But if we enter fully
into the rite, our eyes, outward and inward, are
opened.
The
Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday is an extraordinary sensory experience, from
the Easter fire to the illumination of the
church with the ringing of bells, to the chanting of the Exsultet.
Why does the Church pull out all the stops at this point?
Why shouldn’t it? If ever all the stops are called for, it is during this night, when no human expression is equal to what God accomplishes. It is wonderful. We shouldn’t lose a single aspect of the method the Church, that incomparable pedagogue, has worked out to open us to wonder.
You’ve said that ‘Easter changes everything.’
How does it do this?
There’s a scene in Sigrid
Undset’s conversion novel The
Wild Orchid I think of often. It describes the book’s
protagonist, Paul Selmer, entering St. Olav’s cathedral in Oslo very late one
night, after an evening ill spent. He considers himself an agnostic but is
informed about Catholic beliefs, being the lodger of a Catholic family.
Sitting alone in the dark, he
sees the sanctuary light flicker in the distance. It suddenly occurs to him: if
this tiny flame tells the truth, that is, if God is truly present here, then
life needs to be rethought entirely; then nothing is the way he’d previously
thought it might be.
Easter is what enables this perception. It proclaims that what we think of as defining our lives — transience, death, any number of wounds — is not, in fact, final; that there is a balm in Gilead healing us now and effectively obliterating all that seems to sabotage joy. Well, then reality is transformed, wouldn’t you say? We find ourselves stepping into a wholly new dimension of being, if we’ve the guts for it, and the love.
A reflection for Good Friday --
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