The last three days of this week -- Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday -- are known as the Sacred Triduum and comprise the core of Holy Week, the most solemn week of the liturgical year, following the last days of Christ, from Judas' machinations prior to the Last Supper, on through the Passion, death, and finally, the great feast of the Resurrection on Sunday.
So called because today marks the day in the life of Christ that Judas bargained to become the spy of the Sanhedrin, the Church celebrates the Tenebrae service, the remote beginning, actually, of the Sacred Triduum.Remove all the extraneous decorations around our statues, take down any winter decorations, including the Palm Sunday picture we hung on Sunday. Take our winter blankets off the backs of our couches; clean out the wood stove and store the wood basket until next fall. Sweep, mop, clean the windows, etc.
Friday is a quiet day. As much as we are able, we speak in quiet voices and as little as possible, in memory of the solemn events in Christ's life on this most solemn of days. We used to take turns each year, Dan and I, one of us getting to go to the Tres Ore (three hours of prayer conducted by our pastor between noon and 3 pm) at church, while the other stayed home with the Littles -- with their own little version of a holy hour. When everyone is home, we'll have the remainder of the Hot Cross buns with a simple clear broth vegetable soup that the staying-home parent will have prepared. Then we'll watch The Passion.
Our Lady's niches -- indoor and out -- with flowers and ribbons. If we have Littles around, we make sure everyone's bathed and hair washed by bedtime. Well ahead of time, we get out everyone's Easter clothes and make sure they're pressed and ready to go for Easter Mass. This is Easter Egg coloring day, too (usually supervised by an older sibling) and any remote prep like baking goodies is done on Holy Saturday.Easter Sunday
* In years past, Dan and I would split Masses, only bringing children who were fairly guaranteed to behave for midnight Mass. When we were especially blessed, my sister (Thank you, sis!) stayed overnight and held down the fort with the Littles while we Bigs attended the Paschal Vigil and Midnight Mass; then she took the "big-enough" Littles with her to morning Mass.* When we got back from midnight Mass, Dan and I would lay out all the Easter goodies and decorate the dining room table, with a place set for each child with their own special treats. And then, at long last, bedtime for us...

























