St. Mary's Slough

Picture of the inside of St. Mary's Church used in header of pages

What is Holy Week?

We call the week before Easter 'Holy Week'. It marks the time during which all Christians re-live the Passion of Christ through the drama of the liturgy. A brief summary of the key events during Holy Week are listed below:

Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday received its name from the ceremony of palms that accompanies it. Our worship at Saint Mary's recalls the triumphant entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, where He was met by crowds that covered His path with branches of palms as he rode into the Holy City on a donkey. We commence our service with a blessing of small crosses made out of folded palm leaves, and a procession in which our sister churches throughout the parish join us. During the service, in which we all share, the Gospel of the Passion is dramatised, often re-enacted by the children of the parish.

Maundy Thursday

The name Maundy Thursday has derived from a key-point in Jesus' so-called 'farewell discourses', found in the Gospel according to Saint John: 'a new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another' (Gospel according to Saint John, 13.34). The Latin word for 'commandment' - mandatum - became the English 'maundy' which lent its name to our commemoration of the washing of His disciples' feet by Jesus, as well as the Institution of the Holy Eucharist. Another key liturgical feature that takes place on Maundy Thursday (or close to Maundy Thursday) is the blessing of the Holy Oils and renewal of priestly vows by the clergy, often in the Cathedral of the Diocese in which they serve, in our case Christ Church Cathedral in Oxford.

At Saint Mary's, Maundy Thursday is marked by a solemn evening celebration of the Holy Eucharist during which, for the only time in Lent, the Gloria in excelsis Deo ('Glory be to God on high') is sung while bells are rung in great joy and expectation for the last time before Easter Day. Before the Eucharist, the tabernacle is emptied as all are expected to receive Holy Communion from the bread consecrated at this Eucharist. Before the Eucharist is celebrated, the priest divests himself of his robes, and girding himself with an apron, washes the feet of his congregation in rembrance of the divine mandatum to love one another as Christ has loved us. After the celebration of the Eucharist, the bread required for the communion of Good Friday is taken in solemn procession to the Altar of Repose, where we keep watch before the Sacrament, in remembrance of the watchful hours of pain and agony Christ held in the garden of Gethsemane before His arrest at dawn. At the end of the service we strip the church of all its adornments - altar frontals, altar cloths and candles - and shroud crucifixes and statues as a sign of mourning in preparation for Good Friday.

In some traditions, Maundy Thursday has become known as Green Thursday (so for instance in Germany, from the Middle High German greinen, 'to weep and mourn') or Sheer Thursday (from the Old English skere, 'to be clean', 'to be free from guilt', a reference to the washing off of sins and guilt by the washing of feet and ceremonially stripping and washing the altars that day).

spacer image

picture of a doorway

 

 

St. Mary's logo - the Christian Fish

 

Good Friday

Good Friday is the solemn remembrance of the Crucifixion of Christ. Like Ash Wednesday, it is a solemn day of fasting and penitence. Together with the Saturday that follows it, it is a day on which there is no celebration of Holy Communion, although we do receive the bread of the Eucharist consecrated the previous night during our solemn service of remembrance. The service of remembrance at Saint Mary's consists of three key-elements: the scripture readings and prayers that remind us of the Passion of Christ, with the reading or chanting of the Passion according to St John; the Veneration of the Cross, with the chanting of the Reproaches (twelve verses which speak of God's compassion for His people and the outrages committed in bringing the Christ to the cross); and the communion of the pre-consecrated bread.

In Reformed Europe and Scotland, Good Friday, has become a feast of the triumph of the Cross over the evils of the world, rather than a fast, with a key celebrations of the Lord's Supper, and the preaching of the Passion. At Saint Mary's we have, in the past, marked the day with a liturgical performance of J. S. Bach's Saint John Passion, the passion traditionally read that day, in the context of Vespers. With our ecumenical partners, we take part in an annual procession of witness through Slough's town centre.

Easter scene

 

Holy Saturday

On Holy Saturday, or Easter Even, we commemorate the resting of Christ in the tomb. It is a day without any formal services, and one of the two days (together with Good Friday) of the year where there is no celebration of Holy Communion although the Vigil and First Mass of Easter may well be celebrated after dusk on Saturday evening


For more information, click the links below:

Easter painting
Updated: August 29, 2006