Good Friday\nGood Friday is a special day celebrated by Christians on the Friday before Easter or Pascha. It commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Special prayer services are often held on this day with readings from the Gospel accounts of the events leading up to the crucifixion. Mainstream Christian churches view Christ's crucifixion as a voluntary and vicarious act, and one by which, along with his resurrection on the third day, death itself was conquered. In Early Modern English, good had a meaning of "holy". A "good tide" is, for example, Christmas or Shrove Tuesday. Catholic and Orthodox Christians treat this day as a fast day.\nOrthodox Christians spend all this day in fasting from all food, to the extent that their health permits. Catholics also refrain from more than one\nnormal meal, though they may add up to two small meals as required for\ngood health. This day is also the one day that the Divine Liturgy or\nMass is not\ncelebrated in those churches. Catholics, however, can still receive\nthe Eucharist consecrated the previous day at the Holy Thursday Mass. Instead of the Divine Liturgy, the Orthodox\nmeet up to three times during the day for prayer: in the forenoon, to pray the Royal Hours appointed for that day; in the afternoon, the Vespers of Holy Friday; and in the evening, the Matins of Holy Saturday. The people relive the events of the day through public reading of the Psalms, Gospels, and singing the hymns about Christ's death. Visual imagery and symbolism is also often used: in the morning, a large cross is moved to the front or center of the nave (where the congregation gathers), and a two dimensional painted body of Christ or corpus is placed on it. During the afternoon prayers, it is removed from the cross and taken to the altar in the sanctuary, and an epitaphion is brought down to a low table in the nave representing the tomb; it is often decorated with an abundance of flowers. The epitaphion itself represents the body of Jesus wrapped in a burial shroud, and is a roughly full-size cloth icon of the body of Christ. During the evening prayers, the shroud is part of a procession outside the church, and is then returned to the tomb. During this reliving of Christ's death, the hymns do not forget the coming resurrection. Holding both events in tension, the following troparion (type of hymn) is sung during the afternoon prayers while the shroud is being carried to the tomb:
When Is Good Friday?Days of Good Friday for the decade (Catholic/Protestant reckoning):\n*2000 - April 21\n*2001 - April 13\n*2002 - March 24\n*2003 - April 18\n*2004 - April 9 \n*2005 - March 25\n*2006 - April 14\n*2007 - April 6\n*2008 - March 21\n*2009 - April 10\n*2010 - April 2\nSee also\n*Friday before Palm Sunday\n*Saturday before Palm Sunday\n*Palm Sunday.\n*Holy Monday.\n*Holy Tuesday.\n*Holy Wednesday.\n*Maundy Thursday\n*Holy Saturday\n*Easter. Category:Christianity |
||
"People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid." - Soren Aabye Kierkegaard (1813-1855) |
