Weekly Update from CCM

Dear Students,

I hope you are enjoying your short week on campus!  Due to the Easter holiday we will not be having our usual Wednesday night dinner this week, nor will there be Mass on campus this Sunday.  I hope you all are able to celebrate Easter at home with your families.  For those who are staying on campus this week, I am including below the Holy Week schedule for St. Mary’s parish.  Please post on our Facebook Group if you need a ride or can offer a ride to St. Mary’s for any of them.  
  • TUESDAY (Today)
    • Adoration in the chapel from noon till 12:30.
    • Community Table volunteer service from 3:30 to 6:00.  Meet at CCM by 3:15 for a ride over.
  • WEDNESDAY
    • No Supper @ the Center because of Easter Break.
THE FOLLOWING ARE AT ST. MARY’S PARISH
  • HOLY THURSDAY
    • Mass of the Lord’s Supper at 7:00pm
  • GOOD FRIDAY
    • Hispanic Outdoor Stations of the Cross at 1:00pm
    • Stations of the Cross (English) in the Church at 3:00pm
    • Celebration of the Lord’s Passion at 6:00pm
    • Remember Good Friday is a day of fasting and abstinence from meat.
  • HOLY SATURDY
    • Easter Vigil Mass at 8:00pm
    • Though Holy Saturday is not a mandatory fasting day, the faithful are encouraged to maintain their fast until the Easter Vigil if they are able.
  • EASTER SUNDAY
    • Mass at 9:00am
    • Mass at 11:00am
    • No Mass on Campus
FAITH FACTS: SACRED TRIDUUM AND STATIONS OF THE CROSS

The Sacred Triduum marks the high point of the Church’s liturgical year.  Over the course of the year the Church recounts the important facts of Jesus’ life and incorporates them into the life of the Church.  The Sacred Triduum is the time when we, in a very particular way, remember the suffering, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ — the central events of our salvation.  Triduum means “three days,” and the Sacred Triduum runs from the evening of Holy Thursday to the evening of Easter Sunday.  The USCCB web site says, “Though chronologically three days, they are liturgically one day unfolding for us the unity of Christ’s Paschal Mystery.”  It also makes mention of the Triduum as a “single celebration.”

If you are able to celebrate with your local parish in the Triduum, I encourage you to do so.  The Triduum begins on the evening of Holy Thursday with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper, where the Church recounts the institution of the Eucharist and the Priesthood.  The celebration ends with a procession with the Eucharist out of the church to “an altar of repose,” recalling Jesus’ time praying in the Garden of Gethsemene on the night before He died.  But the liturgy does not end on Holy Thursday.  There is no ita missa est, no “the Mass is ended, go in peace.”  For it has not ended.  On Good Friday (the only day of the year when no Mass is celebrated), the liturgy silently resumes as the priest, deacon and servers process into the church and prostrate themselves before the bare altar and empty tabernacle.  No bells are rung; there is minimal singing.  The cross is venerated.  Again, the celebration never formally ends.  The people depart in silence.
Though not part of the Triduum liturgy, it is customary in most parishes to pray the Stations of the Cross on Good Friday.  (In many places they are prayed every Friday during Lent, or even all year long).  The Stations of the Cross is a traditional devotion recalling the events of the Passion.  What many people do not realize is that praying the Stations is actually a pilgrimage in miniature.  One of the most important aspects of our Catholic faith is that it is based on historical events.  Jesus Christ is not a fairy tale.  He walked the streets in Jerusalem.  He was actually arrested, tried, condemned and crucified.  And He truly rose from the dead.  
Because these are historical events, faithful Christians throughout history have sought to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and walk the Via Dolorosa (“Way of Sorrow”), following in Jesus’ footsteps and visiting the places associated with His Passion.  In the Middle Ages, that became difficult because of Muslim occupation of the Holy Land, so St. Francis is said to have established the first Stations of the Cross, so that people unable to travel to the Holy Land could make a spiritual pilgrimage.  Today most every Catholic church has Stations of the Cross within the church — some even outside on the church grounds.  On Good Friday, in many cultures, the Stations of the Cross are reenacted dramatically; even more poignantly recounting the historical events of this day.  (As will be the Hispanic Stations of the Cross at St. Mary’s at 1:00pm).
The high point of the Triduum, and the pinnacle of all the Church’s liturgies, is the Easter Vigil Mass, when the Resurrection is finally proclaimed, our fasting ends, the bells once more ring out and the people sing “Alleluia!”  This is the Mass at which catechumens are traditionally baptized and many thousands of people world wide will be born again into Christ on this night.  It is the longest Mass of the year, with multiple readings from the Old Testament recounting all of salvation history.  Finally, after the joyful celebration of the Risen Lord, we are told, “Go in peace, the Mass is ended, Alleluia, Alleluia!”  The events set in motion on Holy Thursday night have come to pass.  It is finished.
Whether you are celebrating Holy Week at home with your family, or right here in Cullowhee, I encourage you to join with the Church in prayer at this very special time of the year.  Pray for the grace to know Christ more intimately in your own life, so that you may join with Him in sorrow at His suffering for our sins, and join with Him in glory in His resurrection this Easter.
To learn more about the Sacred Triduum, read this message from Pope Benedict XVI from 2011.
God Bless,
Matt

WCU Catholic Campus Ministry
Matthew Newsome, MTh, campus minister
  
(828)293-9374  |   POB 2766, Cullowhee NC 28723