Holy Week begins on
Sunday. These eight days between Palm Sunday and Easter are the High Holy Days
for Christians. Whereas Jews come together for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, and
Muslims come together for Ramadan, Christians gather for Palm Sunday, Maundy
Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Sunday. Some even gather for the days
in-between too.
The overarching story we tell in our
High Holy Days is the heart of our faith. Even though there are many ways to
interpret it – something you would expect from a story that carries with it such
profound meaning and power – Christians all affirm that through the death,
resurrection, and ultimate ascension of Jesus (forty days after Easter), the
power of sin in our world has been broken, death as the final enemy has been
conquered, and new life, re-born life, is the consequence for us and for the
world.
Throughout this week, we traditionally
tell – and re-live – the many stories that make up the larger one. We remember
how Jesus presented himself as a king on Palm Sunday, and we ponder just what
his kingship means. We remember how Mary of Bethany anointed Jesus, preparing
for his death, and we marvel at her faithfulness. We remember how Judas, one of
his closest disciples and friends, betrayed him, and we wonder how our lives
betray him as well.
On Thursday of Holy Week, we tell the story of how Jesus' Last Supper
became our holy sacrament, because it carries within it the power of
sacrificial life and love. On Friday, we watch as once again the Son of God
gives up his life for our sakes and for the salvation of the world. And then on
Saturday, we watch and wait. Many Christians fast on this day – or even from
Maundy Thursday until Easter dawn. It is a way of saying the story that begins in
earnest on Thursday continues on through Sunday. When the world destroys
goodness, and we are that world, God will give it back – full of power to make us
new.
Our Holy Week concludes eight days after it begins. God created the
world in seven days – and then recreates it in eight. The Eighth Day is the first
day of the new creation. That is what we believe as Christians and it is how we
are to live our lives – even if the world does not appear any different than
before. God will fulfill that new creation in God’s way and in God’s time. In
the meantime, we claim the power of new creation in our lives and seek to live
that life in God’s ever-renewing world.
Prayers and opportunities for worship mark
these days for Christians. I am glad that at Seneca Presbyterian Church, we
have the opportunity to worship every evening throughout this Holy Week. It is
a tradition among Presbyterians in Oconee County, South Carolina that has been
around for decades. We gather in a different church each night, and together
mark the time from one celebration to another. Those opportunities for worship
are posted in this blog under the page marked “Holy Week.”
At Seneca Pres, we are adding a Prayer Vigil that will begin on
Thursday evening and continue through Friday afternoon. Individuals have
committed to be present in our sanctuary for prayer during each of these hours.
If you have prayer concerns you wish to share, you may email them to senecachurch@bellsouth.net. We
will add them to ours and lift them up to God.
Yet not everyone can keep this
discipline of Holy Week worship. So as we gather for worship this Sunday at Seneca
Presbyterian, we will tell two stories. We will start at the beginning with
Palm Sunday, but we won’t leave it there. We will also tell the story of
Passion. That is so we don’t forget what comes between the Sundays. For these
are our High Holy Days and the heart of what we believe. Christ has died.
Christ is risen. Christ will come again. Hallelujah. Amen.
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