THE TRIDUUM

We are here the Triduum, the three days! The Holiest days of the year which begins tonight, with the Mass of the Lord's supper. Did you know that the mass tonight, Good Friday liturgy and the Easter vigil is ONE liturgy? When we go to Holy Thursday mass there is no ending, Good Friday liturgy simply starts up and then stops (note this is not a mass). The Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday we resume. The Triduum is the core of the matrix of everything that is Christian. These three great days are grounded in the paschal mystery. The word "paschal" comes from the Jewish word Pesach, the "passing over", or Passover. God is faithful to his covenant and as Christians, we believe he has fulfilled his promises. Christ joined us into himself and brings us with him in his triumph over death into eternal life. Christ, the mystical lamb who was slain, has in his sacrificed body and blood, given his life over to us. He now takes us back to our Father in heaven. Finally, having over these three days entered into Christ's Passover, we were sent forth to bring it's power into the World.

As a Catholic I feel so blessed to have the liturgies! Tomorrow on Good Friday also begins the
novena for THE DIVINE MERCY NOVENA. Sister Faustina was visited by our Lord and she kept a diary which became a book called "Divine Mercy In My Soul". The novena ends on The Feast of Mercy which is the Sunday after Easter Sunday with a special celebration offered at different churches. My mom had such a devotion to the Divine Mercy prayer which is said at 3pm the death of our Lord. We even put the Divine Mercy Image on my mom's tomb stone.

Here is a nice reflection:

Touched By Grace
Patrice Fagnant-MacArthur

March 19, 2008
The biblical portrayal of Jesus suffering in the Garden of Gethsemane shows Jesus in one of his most human moments. He knows the horrors that await Him and He is scared beyond belief. He has just shared the Passover meal with His friends. He has instituted the sacrament of the Eucharist. He has established the priesthood to carry out His work after He is gone. He has sent the one who was to betray Him away to fulfill his task. His earthly work is almost done.
And now He sits alone in prayer. The disciples He asked to accompany Him have fallen asleep, their bellies full and their bodies tired (would we have done any better?). It is just Jesus and His Father in heaven, and Jesus is begging His Father to let him off the hook. He is ready to do His Father's will, but He really wishes that there was some other way.
We all have our own Gethsemanes in life, times when the future looms heavily before us. We all have those times when our friends have deserted us, or at least it feels that way, and we are alone in our suffering. We search for comfort and there is none. We look for some way to avoid the pain and there is no alternative plan. When we are in our hour of need, it is good to remember Jesus in His. Jesus knows what it is to be alone and hurting. He knows what it is like to face a painful future. He knows what it is to be scared. He knows what it is to beg our Heavenly Father and be told, "No, I'm sorry. This is the way it has to be." We have a God Who knows what it is to suffer.
Jesus' suffering had a purpose - the redemption of the world. He died so that we might live. The mental anguish of His night of agony and the physical pain of His torture and crucifixion were necessary to triumph over death. It set the stage for the beauty and power of the Resurrection.
Our suffering has purpose as well. Often, we can't understand the reasons for it, and like Jesus, wish it could be some other way. God doesn't want us to suffer, but sometimes He allows it in order to achieve some greater purpose. We need to go through our own Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday trials in order to experience the glory of our own Resurrection triumphs.
It is interesting to note that when Jesus appeared to His friends after His Resurrection they did not recognize Him at first. He was different somehow. This holds true for us as well. When we have gone through some great trial in our lives and we come out on the other side, we too have been changed and transformed. We are not what we once were.
In life, we all have our own agonies in the garden. Like Jesus, we are scared and feel alone. Will we also follow Jesus' example of trusting in God's will even when the cost is so high? Will we accept the suffering as a means of bringing us to our own Resurrection moment of transformation and glory?

Comments

Jane said…
Lisa - I hadn't been to your blog in a while so I'm catching up today. What inspiring and beautiful posts. I especially loved your tribute to Charlie.
God IS faithful, isn't He? Have a blessed and profound Triduum.
Love, Jane

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