| Great
Lent and Pascha
Continued from Page
Four
Pascha!
It is not until the evening Service, the Matins and Liturgy
of the Resurrection, that we stand on the steps of the
Church and proclaim to all the world: "Christ is Risen!
" The exuberant joy of Pascha then fills the Church,
with the services of the Great Feast-of-Feasts upon which
our whole faith is based. The clergy repeatedly shout out
"Christ is Risen! "in as many languages as are represented
in the congregation, and the people respond: "Truly He
is Risen! " The services almost seem to be rushed,
as we become more and more exuberant in our joy. Here is our
Salvation made full:
"In
the flesh Thou didst fall asleep as a mortal man, O King and
Lord. Thou didst rise on the third day, raising Adam from
corruption and destroying death: O Pascha of incorruption,
the salvation of the world!" (Exapostallarion)
This
feast is for all, as St. John Chrysostom explains: "The
Lord both accepts the deeds, and welcomes the intention, honors
the act and praises the offering...You sober and you heedless,
honor the day! Rejoice today, both you who have fasted and
you who have disregarded the fast: the table is full laden...!
"
Since
we have had Divine Liturgy at midnight, we do not repeat it
during the day. In the afternoon, however, we serve the Vespers
of Love, as the Lord appears to the disciples in the upper
room. The meaning of the resurrection becomes clearer as the
news sinks in, and we begin to take God's viewpoint, earlier
expressed in the Homily of St. John Chrysostom. At the Apostikha
of Vespers we sing:
"This
is the day of Resurrection, let us be illumined by the feast:
let us embrace one another. Let us call brothers and
sisters even those that hate us, and forgive all by the resurrection;
and so let us cry: "Christ is risen from the dead, trampling
down death by death, and upon those in the tombs, bestowing
life! "
By
opening ourselves to the work of the Holy Spirit in the community,
we are truly made present to these realities. This is no mere
re-enactment, however skillfully produced. Because the events
of Great Week and Pascha are historical, but also transcend
history, we can enter into them by the power of the Holy Spirit,
and be filled with them: "Come, let us drink a new vintage
from the fount of incorruption, springing from the tomb of
Christ. In Him we are established! "
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