Maundy Thursday

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"The Last Supper" - museum copy of Master Paul's sculpture, from the main altar in St. Jacob's basilica in Levoča
"The Last Supper" - museum copy of Master Paul's sculpture, from the main altar in St. Jacob's basilica in Levoča

In the Christian calendar, Holy Thursday - also called Maundy Thursday and, in the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches, Great Thursday[1] - is the feast or holy day on the Thursday before Easter that commemorates the Last Supper of Jesus Christ with the Apostles. It is followed by Good Friday.

On this day four events are commemorated: the washing of the Disciple's feet by Jesus Christ, the institution of the Mystery of the Holy Eucharist at the Last Supper, the agony of Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane, and the betrayal of Christ by Judas.

For the year of 2007 Maundy Thursday is on the 5th of April.

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[edit] Name in English

"Maundy Thursday" is the traditional name for this day in England. It is therefore the usual name also in English-speaking Protestant Churches that originated in that country and even in some that originated in Scotland, where, though the Scottish Book of Common Prayer uses the name "Holy Thursday", English influence has also made the term "Maundy Thursday" familiar. Other English-speaking Protestant Churches, such as the Lutheran, use both "Maundy Thursday" and "Holy Thursday".[2] Among Roman Catholics, except in England, the usual English name for the day is "Holy Thursday", in line with the name used in languages such as French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese.[3]

The word Maundy, used only in this context, is generally held to be derived through Middle English, and Old French mandé, from the Latin mandatum, the first word of the phrase "Mandatum novum do vobis ut diligatis invicem sicut dilexi vos" (A new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another as I have loved you), the statement by Jesus in the Gospel of John (13:34) by which Jesus explained to the Apostles the significance of his action of washing their feet. The phrase is used as the antiphon sung during the "Mandatum" ceremony of the washing of the feet, which may be held during Mass or at another time as a separate event, during which a priest or bishop (representing Christ) ceremonially washes the feet of others, typically 12 persons chosen as a cross-section of the community.

Others [4] argue that the term is derived from the word maund, from Old French mendier, which in turn comes from Latin mendicare (to beg). The name "Maundy Thursday" would thus have arisen in England because of the custom whereby each year on this day the sovereign gives alms to selected poor people in a container also called a "maund" or "maundy purse".

Another word of note in this context is "Triduum," which is the term for the three days of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. These days of special devotion are understood as one whole action that celebrates the death and resurrection of Christ. Believers see these days as commemorating the central events of Christianity. (See footnote 12.)

[edit] Services

Church services held on this day typically include a reading from the Gospel account of the Last Supper, which includes Christ's taking bread and wine and, declaring them to be his body and blood, giving them to the Apostles. This day also stresses Jesus' washing of the feet of the Apostles at the start of the Last Supper, as recounted in the Gospel of John. At services on this day, a minister, priest, or lay leader(s) may wash the feet of some members of the congregation to commemorate Christ's actions and command. The Washing of the Feet is a traditional component of the celebration in many Christian Churches, including the Roman Catholic, Armenian[5], the Maronite, the Ethiopian, the Mennonite Church, and United Methodist[6] Churches. Feet washing is also increasingly popular as a part of Maundy Thursday liturgies in many Anglican, Lutheran and Protestant churches.

In the Roman Rite liturgy, the Holy Thursday Mass recalling the Last Supper is the last Mass before the Easter Vigil service. It usually includes a reenactment of the Washing of the Feet of the Apostles, and is followed by a procession taking the Blessed Sacrament to the Altar of Repose.

[edit] Other names

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, the day is referred to liturgically as Great Thursday but is also called Holy Thursday or Holy and Great Thursday.

In German, the usual name for the day is "Gründonnerstag" (Green-Thursday), a word of uncertain origin.[7] But other names are High, Holy and White Thursday.

The day has also been known in English as Sheer Thursday, due to the idea that it is the day of cleaning (schere) and because the churches themselves would switch liturgical colors from the dark tones of Lent, or because it was customary to shear the beard on that day,[8] or for a combination of reasons.[9] This name is a cognate to the word still used throughout Scandinavia, such as Swedish "Skärtorsdag", Danish "Skærtorsdag" and Norwegian "Skjærtorsdag".

[edit] Customs and names from around the world

  • The Maundy Thursday celebrations in the United Kingdom today involve the Monarch (at the time of writing Queen Elizabeth II) offering "alms" to deserving senior citizens (one man and one woman for each year of the sovereign's age). These coins, known as Maundy money or Royal Maundy, are distributed in red and white purses. This dates back to King Edward I. The red purse contains regular currency and is given in place of food and clothing. The white purse contains currency in the amount of one penny for each year of the Sovereign's age. Since 1822, rather than ordinary money, the Sovereign gives out special Maundy coins. [10]

Up until the death of King James II, the Monarch would also wash the feet of the selected poor people. There is even an old sketch, done from life, of Queen Elizabeth I washing people's feet on Maundy Thursday.

  • In Germany, the day is referred to as "Gründonnerstag," a word built of two roots, "grün" ("green") and "Donnerstag" ("Thursday"). However, the word "grün" probably does not mean "green" in this case. While its etymology is somewhat unclear, many trace it back to "grinan" ("to wail") in Old High German, a word connected with the English "groan".
  • In the Czech Republic, the day is called "Zelený čtvrtek", meaning "Green Thursday" as well. Sometimes it is speculated that the name comes from the perhaps green colour of vestments once worn at the Mass that day. Another theory says that the name comes from the green vegetable eaten on this day, such as spinach or cabbage, so that people were healthy all the year round. This habit has its origin in the Jewish Pesach dinner. [11] Because the church bells fall silent until Holy Saturday, here called "White Saturday", because "they have flown to Rome", in some regions they are replaced by groups of children walking round their village and making noise with wooden rattles. People come out of the door and give them coins.
  • In Malta, this day is known as "Ħamis ix-Xirka" which literally means Society Thursday. It is celebrated by the reenactment of the Washing of the Feet of the Apostles. This is usually done by selecting 12 men from amongst the congregation.
  • In the Philippines, a popular Holy Thursday tradition is the Visita Iglesia (Church Visit), which involves visiting several Churches at which the faithful commemorate the vigil that the Apostles kept while Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane. This is a custom in use in several European countries also.

[edit] References and Footnotes

  1. ^ See the section Other names below.
  2. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Church in America: Lutheran Family Churches
  3. ^ No modern language uses a literal translation of the Latin name that liturgical books of the Roman Rite give the day: Feria Quinta in Cena Domini (Thursday of the Lord's Supper). Similarly, "Good Friday" does not pretend to be a literal translation of Feria Sexta in Passione Domini (Friday of the Lord's Passion).
  4. ^ Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod
  5. ^ The Armenian Church: Maundy Thursday
  6. ^ The United Methodist Church: Maundy Thursday
  7. ^ Some say that on this day, green vestments may once have been used in some places for the [[Mass (liturgy|]], or people customarily ate green salad; others connect the name with the Germanic word that has given in English not "green" but "grin".
  8. ^ New Catholic Dictionary; Omnigraphics
  9. ^ "The old English name for Maundy Thursday was 'Sheer Thursday', when the penitents obtained absolution, trimmed their hair and beards, and washed in preparation for Easter" (Hungarian Saints.
  10. ^ The Royal Mint
  11. ^ Velikonoční týden - pašijový, svatý, velký
12.  Pfatteicher, Philip H. and Messerli, Carlos R.  MANUAL ON THE LITURGY, Lutheran Book of Worship (Minneapolis, MN:  Augsburg Publishing House, 1979), 421 pp.  See page 396.

[edit] See also

[edit] External Links


edit Holy Week

Palm Sunday | Holy Monday | Holy Tuesday | Spy Wednesday | Maundy Thursday | Good Friday | Holy Saturday | Easter Sunday | Easter Monday