In the proverbial early church, there was no service at all on the    Saturday before Easter Sunday. What they did was a solemn watch, and    just before dawn, the catechumens, those who had been instructed in the    faith toward conversion, were baptised and confirmed and made their    first Communion, rising to a new life in Jesus at the hour when Jesus   rose from  the dead.
Over time, a service did develop, and the   time moved  back from before dawn to the evening before, and eventually   to Holy  Saturday morning! On top of that, the service, though retained   in the  Reformation, including Latin texts, fell into disuse amid the   Thirty  Years War, rationalism and Pietism, which effect continued here   in the  US.
Ironically, it was a recovery of the Vigil in  German  Lutheran  churches that in turn contributed to the Catholic  reform of  the Vigil  in 1955 by Pope Pius XII, who had been papal  nuncio to  Germany.  The  service was then hacked over by the Vatican II  novus  ordo.  Its use has  been spreading in American Lutheranism.
Though   the overall order of the service has remained from the earliest  times   -- something of a watch with various observances, then reception  of   converts and mass --  this is hardly a recovery of a practice of the    "early church".  Their idea was not at all a vigil that begins and ends    in the night before, any more than it was a Saturday morning service,    but rather a service that was timed, for reasons we saw above, to   conclude with the break of day!
These days, the Vigil is   generally held  by everyone who holds it on the evening  before Easter.   But, while the  service  contains some ancient practices, holding it as  a  Saturday evening rather than a pre-dawn service no more restores  some imagined purity or practice of the "early church" -- it would  seem  St Paul  wrote all those epistles because the early church was not  in  that great a  shape! -- than holding it Saturday morning or  not holding  a service at all on Saturday anytime stands apart  from such an  imagined restoration.
The contrast between leaving the church in darkness and silence after a  Seven Last Words Tenebrae with nothing until Easter morning conveys the  tomb that is then empty much better than all this modern recasting, of  which I served many as a youth in the 1950s and 60s.
The  Western Easter Vigil has  four parts: 1) The  Blessing of the Fire,  Incense and Paschal Candle;  2) The Reading of the  Prophecies; 3) The  Blessing of the Baptismal  Font, Baptism and  Confirmation of Converts,  and the Litany of the  Saints; 4) the Mass of  the Risen Christ.
The first  part   begins where Good Friday left off, in darkness. Outside the  church,   the celebrant strikes a fire from flint and ignites coals and  blesses   five grains of incense. They enter and begin the Lucemarium: at  the   back of the church the deacon intones "Lumen Christi" or Light of    Christ, and the people respond "Deo gratias" or Thanks be to God. They    move up the aisle to the middle of the church and do the same. Then  they   enter the sanctuary and do the same a third time, for each person  of   the Trinity. Along the way, the people, holding small candles,  light   them from the candle fire and pass it along, so that at the end,  the   darkness is gone.
In the sanctuary the deacon then blesses  the   Paschal Candle itself and places the five grains in it in the  form of a   cross -- and in modern times, the interior church lights are  now turned   on -- and the darkness of Good Friday is now dispelled by  the light of   the risen Christ! The prayer which contains this blessing  was not  always  this but for many centuries has been the "Exsultet".
During   this  prayer, the most amazing thing is said, before the incense  grains  are  put in the candle. The glory of salvation, the sureness of  the  Risen  Lord, is so great that even the sin which made it necessary  is  called a  happy thing! Wow. O felix culpa quae talem et tantum  meruit  habere  redemptorem -- O happy fault, that merited to have such  and so  great a  Redeemer!
The second part    is a series of twelve readings, or prophecies, which are a reader's    digest version of the Hebrew Scriptures, outlining the faithfulness of    God from Genesis 1 and Creation through Noah, Abraham, Moses, and the    Prophets. Some places have used a different set number, but whatever  the number, it is set.  Unfortunately, in the modern revisionist  liturgies the   readings are often cut down from twelve to seven, and  sometimes from   even that to four, or from whatever the set number is  to less, but always include the Passover and crossing the Red   Sea.
As  if we had something better to do than hear salvation   history from  start to finish once a year to prepare to celebrate the   fulfillment in  the Resurrection.  As if the Passover and Red Sea   passages are  essentials and the rest can be skipped if it makes the  service "too  long".  It's all essential  -- when the church defined the  Bible, did  it say while these are the  books you can rely on, if it's  getting a  little long for you, just skip  over some of it?
The third part    is the blessing of the baptismal font and water, the sprinkling of  the   people with some of the blessed water in remembrance of their  Baptism,   and then the Baptism of any new converts, and finally all  recite the   Litany of the Saints, which in Lutheran use became "the"  Litany, a Litany of the Saints without the saints.
The  fourth part   is the mass of Easter! Purple is now replaced by  white vestments, and   the celebrant for the first time intones again the  prayer "Gloria in   excelsis Deo", Glory to God in the highest, as church  bells ring out! A   mass of great joy continues, culminating in the  Eucharist of course,   where it all comes to-gether, not only for those  who now for the first   time receive it, but for all the faithful.
This joy of the  fourth  part, the mass of Easter, which in contemporary observance  happens sometime Saturday evening and was supposed to happen with the  break of dawn Sunday morning, is just as real  and just as present if one celebrates it on Easter  morning itself.
For  after  Maundy Thursday until this moment  Communion is not given  (exception is  made for the dying), but now the  promise of Maundy  Thursday and the death  of Good Friday, celebrated separately, come  to-gether,  in the Risen Christ who gives us now his  Body and Blood as  the sure  pledge of our salvation!
This day of the week is called  Sunday in  English, a Germanic language, which like all Germanic  languages took  over the names of the days of the week from the Romans,  who in turn got  it from the Egyptians.  They thought there were seven  planets, named  after Roman gods, namely, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars,  Sun,  Venus, Mercury  and Moon. Each planet had an hour of the day associated  with it, and the  one that ruled daybreak each day had the whole day  named after it.
Easter  happened on dies Solis, the "Day of the  Sun" in Latin, which Germanic  languages modified to their gods as  Sun-day, Sonntag in German, Sunday in English.   Other days were also so  named, for example Moon Day becoming what is  called Monday in English  and Montag in German, but in non-Germanic  languages more directly  descended from Latin, for example in Spanish,  lunes, from luna, the  word for moon in Latin and then Spanish.
In  fact, the joy of  these gifts of our Saviour is so great on this morning  of that day of  the week called Sunday in English that the church  celebrates it the  morning (not the night before) of every such day of  the week throughout  the year.  Justin "Martyr",  in chapter 67 of his  Apology (meaning  defence) written about 150 AD, gives the earliest  reference surviving  to this practice of the Christian church.
He  called the day by  its Roman name, and the practice led to Christians  calling it the  "Lord's Day", which is why in those more direct  descendants of Latin  such as again Spanish it is called Domingo, from  the Latin dominus for  lord.
So this joy in the crucified and  risen Saviour who gives  us his body and blood in the transformed  Passover of the mass of  Easter, the sure pledge of our salvation, his  testament to us his heirs  as the testator who left it to us until our  entry into eternal  salvation in heaven with God either through death or  the end of times,  becomes a "little" Easter, a little Pascha or  Passover, every week on  Sunday!
And the  dismissal includes something else we haven't heard through Lent, the  Alleluia, or Praise the Lord!  So --
PRAISE THE LORD!
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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31 March 2013
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