
				The Sacred Triduum
				 
				
				Introduction.   The Church offers us an abundance 
				of liturgical richness as we celebrate the climax of the history 
				of salvation.  If the liturgies are not cluttered and not 
				rushed, the rich symbols of these days will speak.  It is 
				important that these days be kept in proper focus.  So a 
				brief historical background of the Triduum will be helpful.
				 
				Easter 
				was originally an evening vigil of watchfulness, a celebration 
				of the Death and Resurrection of the Lord.  Over a period 
				of time this vigil was extended to include the preparatory days 
				of Holy Thursday and Good Friday.  Eventually the fast of 
				Easter became more and more filled with a sense of Christian 
				initiation which included a greater awareness of the need for 
				the Church to renew itself.  This was emphasized through 
				the admission of new members.  In this development we can 
				find the unifying principle which will provide us with 
				the necessary Focus.
				 
				The 
				origins of the Triduum as a single celebration of the 
				Lord's Death and R3esurrection clearly suggests a unity in these 
				three days.  The days are not meant to be looked at in 
				isolation from each other.  Unfortunately most Christians 
				still see these days in which specific moments in the life of 
				Jesus are historically re-presented.  This most definitely 
				is not the sense of these celebrations.  They focus on 
				one celebration of the Resurrected Christ, alive and present 
				to us today.  We must not think of journeying with Jesus 
				through each of the days of his suffering, dying and rising.  
				We celebrate the one event over a number of days only because of 
				the richness of the event, thus helping us to feast on the 
				various facets of the one mystery.
				 
				Many 
				small communities find it helpful to prepare for the Triduum by 
				celebrating the Jewish Passover (Seder) to better understand our 
				Jewish roots.  It is again important to note that the 
				Jewish Passover does not only look to events of long ago but 
				sees meaning and God's presence no active in the lives of the 
				Jewish community.  You will note, as well, that the 
				observance of this celebration centers around a call and an 
				election, reminding the Jews and reminding us today that we have 
				very specific obligations because of our covenantal relationship 
				with God.
				 
				The 
				recital of the Haggadah which begins with the "Ha Lakhma Anya" 
				(The Bread of Affliction) is a symbol of the poverty and a call 
				to minister to the poor and hungry of the world today.  The 
				Seder Meal not only thinks of the past but stresses God's action 
				and presence within the actuality of oppression today.  The 
				theme of exile and return is strikingly present in the singing 
				of "Let My People Go" - not just from Egypt, not just from 
				Babylonia, but from anything and everything which prevents the 
				living our of our convenantal relationship with God, the 
				Messianic hope expressed in the Cup of Elijah.
				 
				Just 
				as the early Church learned from the Passover experience of 
				their Jewish roots to see that what had happened to Jesus had 
				meaning for them, so we too must understand the same active and 
				present God with us in Jesus during these our holy days.
				 
				
				HOLY THURSDAY:  Opening of the Paschal Feast
				 
				
				Keeping in mind our liturgical principle, i.e. not as an attempt 
				to celebrate an historical event, the liturgy of Holy Thursday 
				is not a re-presentation of the Last Supper, nor does it focus 
				on the institution of the Eucharist.  Rather the Gospel and 
				the liturgical action focus on the washing of the feet.  
				Despite the emphasis in the past, this feast is not a 
				celebration of the unity of the ordained priesthood.  That 
				is the purpose of the Chrism Mass celebrated in all the 
				cathedrals of the world, with the bishop gathered with his 
				priests in consecrating the holy oils and celebrating community 
				to experience our passing over from death to life as a Church.  
				Here we are met by the glorified Christ who feeds us in Word and 
				Eucharist, thus strengthening us and enabling us to live out the 
				further implications of our communion, our covenant with Him.  
				Like Jesus, we are called to put aside our "outer selves", to 
				accept his humility by stooping down to wash the feet of those 
				in our midst.  In other words, our Eucharist is validated 
				only in our loving service to others.  To guard us from a 
				purely ritualistic interpretation of the meaning of the Lord's 
				command to celebrate Eucharist, John narrates the washing of the 
				feet as an event with the same meaning as the breaking of the 
				bread.  After each of these actions Jesus exhorts his 
				followers "Do this in memory of me... I have you an example so 
				that you may do what I have done."
				 
				
				GOOD FRIDAY:  The Paschal Fast
				 
				The 
				history of this day gives us a clue how to approach Good Friday.  
				The origin of this day is traced back to Jerusalem and the 
				veneration of the relic of the true cross.  This act of 
				veneration stressed the cross as a symbol of victory.  
				Note it is not the veneration of a crucifix, which would narrow 
				it down to the historical moment of Jesus' suffering and death.  
				Rather the cross is a sign that we celebrate Easter even on Good 
				Friday.  The suffering of Jesus on Good Friday already 
				speaks of his glorification on Easter.
				 
				It is 
				not accidental that the Passion according to John is always read 
				on this day.  This account shows Jesus always in charge, in 
				total command of his situation.  John's Passion is an 
				extended commentary on an earlier statement of Jesus found in 
				John 10:17-18:  "I lay down my life that I may take it up 
				again.  No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my 
				own accord."  The focus of the liturgy of Good Friday, 
				therefore, is not primarily a meditation on Jesus' pain, nor on 
				our sinfulness, nor on our imitation of Jesus' humility.  
				Rather the focus is to remind us that we are beneficiaries of 
				this event, and so we call the Friday "Good" by praising God for 
				what God has done for us in Jesus.  The final words of 
				Jesus from the cross say it all for us, "Is is accomplished!"  
				Jesus in not overcome.  On the contrary!  He has 
				overcome!
				 
				The 
				Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy of the Second Vatican Council 
				declares:  "Let the Paschal Fast be kept sacred.  It 
				should be observed everywhere on Good Friday and, where 
				possible, on Holy Saturday, so that the joys of the Sunday of 
				the Resurrection may be visited on uplifted and responsive 
				spirits" (n 110).  We have become so accustomed to concern 
				with the juridical aspects of the fast that we have lost the 
				essential meaning of the Paschal Fast.  It must no be 
				understood as penitential discipline but rather as a joyful 
				exercise for the preparation of "uplifted and responsive 
				spirits".  In other words, through fasting things not 
				ordinarily available can be attained.  This becomes 
				evident, for example, in the fasts of Moses, Daniel, Elijah, 
				John the Baptist and Jesus himself.
				 
				In 
				observing the Paschal Fast we look forward to the eschatological 
				fast.  We are not doing penance or engaging in public 
				mourning.  We are clearing space in our lives for what 
				matters most.  Through the experience of physical hunger we 
				are plunged into a greater awareness of ourselves and our world, 
				and we are again confronted with our own feebleness and utter 
				dependence on God.  By the Paschal Fast we are preparing 
				ourselves for the self-revelation of God in his Son, the Risen 
				One.  Without the Paschal Fast it simply will not be the 
				same Paschal Feast.
				 
				
				Unfortunately, for most Christians the Paschal Fast is not 
				extended through to the end of the Vigil.  To break the 
				fast before the Vigil is to lessen the experience of preparation 
				for the day of the Lord.  These is a time in everyone's 
				life when we turn from food because we are so filled with 
				something else.  The Paschal Fast is feeling so filled with 
				God that nothing else counts.  In this sense, fasting is 
				not an act of sorrow but leads to joy.  It is not an act of 
				penance but a waiting for God, a seeking of his presence, a 
				readiness for his revelation, a revelation of the deepest love 
				we can ever know.
				 
				THE 
				EASTER VIGIL:  Signs of Life from Death
				 
				
				Recalling again the unifying principle of the Tr8iduum, the 
				Easter Liturgy is not the re-enactment of an historical event, 
				nor a memorial service recalling something that happened to 
				Jesus after his death and burial.  On the surface, the 
				Vigil appears to be a complex ceremony, filled with all sorts of 
				detail.  Yet the basics become evident when we take time 
				and quiet for reflection.  What we have come to do this 
				night is to share in the Passover of Jesus.  If we can keep 
				this basic unity we will not need to think it necessary to 
				explain all the readings and the ceremonies.
				 
				The 
				basic symbols of life from death are Light, Word.  Bath 
				and Meal.
				 
				LIGHT.   
				The Ester celebration must not begin before nightfall and it 
				must end before daybreak.  Why?  Because each of us 
				must experience for ourselves the gentle power of light and its 
				transforming effect upon our darkness.  Only after we've 
				dwelt in our own darkness can we truly welcome the light.  
				Otherwise the light of the Risen Christ is only a matter of 
				historical interest.  And so in the darkness of night we 
				begin:  "May the light of Christ, rising in glory, dispel 
				the darkness of our minds and hearts."
				 
				WORD.   
				The reading of the BIgil, in a subtle but marvelous unity, 
				reveal a pattern of divine activity and human response which 
				leads to the Easter experience.  Throughout these stories, 
				prophecies and meditations, the same pattern emerges:  God 
				simply desires to give us all good things - life, light, peace, 
				harmony, deliverance, liberation, lengh of days.  This 
				blessed state is our if only we remain obedient to God.  
				Sooner or later this obedience will lead us into death - death 
				to our own selfishness, to our own pursuits of happiness, a 
				death to will leave us utterly forsaken.  But this is not 
				the end.  Paul and Luke show us the Living One who is no 
				longer among the dead.  And this is our destiny too:  
				deliverance into life through obedience in death.
				 
				BATH.  
				Through our own baptism and our experience as Christians we 
				share intimately the Exodus Story of deliverance from slavery to 
				freedom.  With Jesus we have passed through suffering and 
				death, leaving sin and death behind.  When we do no 
				celebrate the ritual act of baptism during the Vigil Liturgy, we 
				are nonetheless reminded of our own baptism in which we have 
				died and been brought to liberation and victory over sin and 
				death.  We do this by recognizing our own nothingness and 
				sinfulness before Him who is the only source of being and of 
				purity.  We renounce our self-sufficiency and sin, thus 
				consenting to be saved and loved by Love, so powerfully 
				manifested in the dying of Jesus.
				 
				MEAL.   
				The central theme of the Paschal Feast is the Lord giving 
				himself for our salvation.  The meal is a sacrifice, a 
				prophetic gesture with which the Lord, in obedience to his 
				Father and for the love of us all, commits himself unto death.  
				Like the other three signs of life from death, the meal is a 
				sacramental act whereby we are united in the death of the Lord 
				until he comes.  The sacrificial aspect of the meal is a 
				clear reflection of the Exodus story of the eating of the 
				paschal lamb whose blood saves the people of Israel from the 
				angel of death.  Here we celebrate the Blood of the New and 
				Everlasting Covenant in perfect communion with Jesus and with 
				the Faster, fulfilling entirely the promise:  "I will be 
				their God and they shall be my people" (Jer. 31:33; Rev. 21:3).
				 
				
				Summary
				 
				The 
				Paschal Triduum is a single three-day Christian Passover Feast, 
				beginning after sunset on Thursday and concluding with the 
				Easter Eucharist at the end of the Great Vigil.  The great 
				feast of the Christian Pasch is no simple commemoration of the 
				Lord's death and resurrection but a great celebration of our own 
				salvation through our engagement in the event of that death and 
				resurrection.  It celebrates the very foundation of our 
				existence before God and in God.  That is why the liturgy 
				of the Triduum claims our full lives for these three days.  
				All else should be set aside so that we might come to terms 
				again with the basics of life, with first and last things, with 
				what alone really counts in the end:  our relationship with 
				God and with one another in Christ.