Holy days before Easter, explained

LAKEVILLE — For the Rev. Joseph Kurnath, also known as Father Joe, of Lakeville’s Church of Saint Mary, the lesson of Easter can be summed up in one line: “This is not all there is.”

Basically, there’s more. Life’s sorrows are just a part of the big picture — and Easter Sunday, the day that Christ was resurrected, is its full illumination. 

“He redeemed the human race for us,” Kurnath said.

To explain how, and to explain the meaning of Holy Week — the six days prior to Easter during which followers remember Christ’s last moments — Kurnath sat down with The Lakeville Journal.

This year, Holy Week takes place from Sunday, April 9, to Saturday, April 15.

Kurnath explained how the week begins in triumphant fervor on Palm Sunday as Christians reflect on Jesus’ entrance into the city of Jerusalem.

On Monday through Wednesday, Masses at St. Mary’s feature readings from the Gospels that pertain to Jesus’ final week.

On Thursday evening, parishioners commemorate Jesus breaking of the bread at the Last Supper, establishing Communion, or the Eucharist.

The song of praise, Gloria, can be heard on Thursday night, but after the service, churches generally lack instrumentation until Saturday evening.

At this point, the Passion — the story of Jesus’ final hours — has begun and the Church is in mourning.

On Good Friday, parishioners connect their own experiences with those of Christ.

In life, “You’ve got to go through suffering,” Father Joe said. And the Tenebrae service held on Friday night, the night of Jesus’ crucifixion, is supposed to welcome and embrace those sorrows. 

The liturgy of Tenebrae, meaning “shadows” in Latin, features a dimly lit, quiet church sanctuary at St. Mary’s. As readers proclaim sections of Jesus’ Passion, candles are extinguished and soft music is performed, evoking the emotions of the suffering of Jesus.

This year, St. Mary’s Church will welcome Church of Trinity Lime Rock Episcopal’s Rev. Heidi Truax and the church’s music director, Christine Gevert, in an ecumenical Tenebrae service.

Friday night’s stark, mournful atmosphere remains in the church on Holy Saturday, the only day of the year without a liturgy.

An evening service, however, celebrates God’s resurrection of Christ, and, in essence, the rejuvenation of the individual.  

“Easter is here at that point.”

No matter the congregation, Father Joe stressed that devotion to Christ and being able to feel his story are what make Holy Week and Easter truly special.

For when those qualities are present — “when you know what God is capable of doing in and through you” — the Easter holiday might genuinely feel, well, holy. 

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