HOLY WEEK & EASTER
Grace Episcopal Church, Oak Park, Illinois
Holy Week & Easter at Grace

Dear Friends and Members of Grace:

In just a few days we will gather to begin a week of ancient worship services (liturgies) that tell the stories of the last several days of the life of Jesus. Jesus, the son of Mary and Joseph, moves from being a storyteller (many parables), healer, rebel, life changer and more to the one we call Christ.

Why do we do this and why does it matter in your life?  We are a people who love sharing stories. Imagine in your own family the stories that your parents told and your grand parents told and the ones your children and grand children are beginning to tell. They help you to remember, to build community and enable the history to carry on. They help to define you.

As Christians, Holy Week is like a big family reunion where we tell the stories within the context of worship that helps them to come alive.  We gather with people we love, with strangers, with folks we are not sure we care about.  We gather as the Body of Christ to walk the walk that Jesus walked and to have our own resurrection experiences.

At Grace we offer worship services that are child-friendly and child-centered and yet all ages come.  We offer services that some think are just for adults and yet really are available to all. 

Come to any of them. Come to all. Come and join with others in the week we call Holy and be reminded of your own holiness.

-Shawn

Palm Sunday
March 24

9:00 a.m. - The Rite Place - Palm Sunday for Kids

10:30 a.m. - Choral Eucharist

Maundy Thursday
March 28

5:30 p.m. - The Last Supper, Kids' Style

7:00 p.m. - Foot-washing & Holy Eucharist

Vigil at the Lady Chapel until 10PM (click here to sign up to keep vigil) 

This evening marks the beginning of the Triduum. We reach back to the beginning of Lent to recall the confession we made on Ash Wednesday. This service is clearly different from the regular flow of the Eucharist as we celebrate it weekly, because what we commemorate this evening is different. Tonight we begin a celebration that will not end until the exultant conclusion of the Great Paschal Vigil. Tonight, we hear the words of forgiveness in a new way. It is only with the knowledge of being forgiven that we can engage the rest of the story. We watch and we eat a last supper with Jesus. We hear him offer all of himself to us, even his body and blood. We end the service with the stripping of the chancel. Adornment after adornment leaves the sanctuary as the words of the psalm drift through the air, and we are reminded of what this love will cost Jesus. We leave the service lingering. It is holy time.

 
Good Friday
March 29

12:00 Noon - Stations of the Cross (click here for stations you can pray at home)

5:30 p.m. - Good Friday Service for Kids

7:00 p.m. - Good Friday Liturgy 
including the Singing of St. John's Passion

When we return to the sanctuary on Good Friday, hours have passed. We hear about Jesus' betrayal, capture and trial. We hear of his humiliation, his interrogation. We know the night was long for him, and lonely. Our visual center is the cross. There is nothing else to distract us. The pace is slow, as those final hours must have been for him. We move relentlessly toward the end. We pray, interceding for the world around us, for our church, and ourselves. We are reminded that Jesus' death was paradoxically, the moment of his triumph. Through his death, he defeated death.  
 
The Great Vigil of Easter
March 30

7:00 p.m., followed by a festive reception in the Parish Hall

Now we are almost there, almost at the hour when Jesus' death itself was overcome, the death become life -- the victory we so need. Now time stands still for us to remember all that has gone before. No other service is so full of the heritage of faith; no other time in the year do we gather together all of the richest metaphors and symbols of faith. We gather around new fire, itself a sign of creation renewed. From it we light the paschal candle to illumine our way. As the pillar of fire led the people of Israel in the wilderness, so the paschal candle will lead us to Easter -- the light of Christ our beacon. In the silence from Good Friday, the light is rekindled. Gathered around the light, we wrap the great stories of faith like a blanket around ourselves. We recall our ancestors and God's saving work among us throughout the ages -- creation from a word, the earth washed clean in the flood, the deliverance at the Red Sea, dry bones given life again. The baptismal font beckons to affirm our baptisms, to remember our welcome into the community of faith, and to welcome others newborn into the faith. The Gospel reading draws us out of our holy recollections and into the events of the story again. Now we are prepared. We know where we have come from before we peek into the tomb with the women and Peter. When we hear the angel say, He is not here, but has risen, we know again that life is always God's way with us. Death is defeated. We dance through the holy meal, now each one confessing the truth of the story. Light the church! Shout Alleluia! Celebrate with high praise! He is risen! We continue our celebration in the Parish Hall with a gala reception.
 


Easter Sunday
March 31

9:00 a.m. - The Rite Place - Kids Do Easter
(followed by an Easter Egg hunt)

10:30 a.m. - Festival Choral Eucharist

About the Triduum
(Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Great Vigil of Easter)

The Three Days (or Triduum) slow down time as we move through the climax of the story of faith, Jesus' betrayal, death, and resurrection. Worship throughout the rest of the year skims the surface in some ways, whisking us through the story of Jesus' life. But in these three days we linger. There is so much centered here. We have to take our time to be able to receive it.

 

Worship on these days will cover it all: creation and redemption, death and life, fire and water, desolation and celebration. These days enact the great Christian drama, and the liturgies are, in many ways, dramas that embody the story, the tensions, and the teachings at the core of our faith.

 

The Triduum liturgies are, in effect, one continuous rite spread over three consecutive days. Thus, there is no blessing or dismissal until the conclusion of the First Mass of the Resurrection on Easter Eve.

 

Adapted from Sundays and Seasons 2004 (Augsburg/Fortress, 2003), pp. 158-159.

Easter Offerings 
If you would like to donate to Grace for Easter, we'd be most grateful. 

You may do so securely online here:










Grace








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Grace Episcopal Church
924 Lake Street
Oak Park, Illinois  60301

Grace Episcopal Church of Oak Park
All are welcome here.  Period.