| Celebrating
Our Holy Days
by Fr. Fred Saato Office
of Educational Services Melkite
Eparchy of Voice 732-556-6917- Cell 201-417-3804- email doccolie@yahoo.com |
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CELEBRATING
OUR HOLY DAYS by Fr. Fred Saato
The Eastern Christian Churches have always celebrated certain moments
In the story of salvation, chiefly from the life of Christ, as major
festivals: extensions and elaborations of the Easter celebration. Twelve of
these have become known as
the Great Feasts, solemnly celebrated in all the Eastern Churches and eventually
penetrating the Western Church as well. In the Middle Eastern and Eastern
European cultures of old, society joined to facilitate celebration of these
feasts: work was halted, pilgrimages made and the festivals loomed large in the minds of the
people as the central events of the community.
In our society it is vastly different. Not only does the secular
culture ignore these feasts, but many parishes minimize them as well, because
no one will come. At the same time, parish announcements, bulletins and
flyers will hawk for weeks in advance an approaching St. Valentines Party
or Las Vegas Night. These events have in fact replaced the liturgical holy
days in many parishes as the Great Feasts of the local community. However,
if parishes approached these social times with the same lack of preparation
and creativity as they approach the holy days, it could be guaranteed that no one
would come to them either! Try to plan and organize a hafli three days in
advance and see. So it is clear that to reconstitute the holy days as prime
festivals for our Church, several steps may be taken: A)
The most obvious is, of course, to celebrate the
liturgical services at convenient times: the Vigil Service and/or Divine
Liturgy served in the evening will accommodate most parishioners. B)
Secondly, the parish must be helped to see the importance
of the feast by giving it the same planning, effort and publicity as it now
gives its social events. C)
A third consideration is to actually make the liturgical
feast the occasion for the important parish socials, as most of our churches
do at Christmas and Easter. Those festivals celebrated in the summer
are
especially suited to this kind of planning as school is out and families less
pressured by school schedules. A picnic or outing at Pentecost, a supper or ice cream
social
on Transfiguration, a cookout on Holy Cross would certainly boost attendance at
the services and begin raising the consciousness of people to seeing
these days as our most important Church events. Most communities have summer
socials: what
reason can there be for not joining these events to the major liturgical
celebrations of our Church and reestablish in the minds of our people their
importance? A case in point is the Feast of the Holy Cross (September 14), one of the
most popular of the year in the Middle East and the last holiday in summer.
Liturgically it is known for the exultation and veneration of the cross, an
impressive ceremony which many of our people have never seen. The cross, adorned
with basil sprigs, is carried in procession
through the church, special litanies are prayed and the cross is lifted in
blessing over the four corners of the earth. An evening service, including this
ceremony, coupled with a church supper, is an appropriate way to highlight this
celebration. In this connection, one traditional practice may be used to
highlight the event. In the Middle East, especially in the mountains, it is customary to light
bonfires on this day in memory of the discovery of the cross by St. Helen in the
fourth century. To spread the news of the crosss finding from Jerusalem to
Constantinople a relay system of bonfires was employed. Since that day
Christians in the Middle East have rekindled these fires
on the anniversary of this event. Using the bonfire as a do-it-yourself activity, cooking center or campfire
is another way of impressing the importance and meaning of the feast on
peoples minds. The children of the parish make fine firewood gatherers and
that project, coupled with an explanation of the bonfires significance makes
them an eager part of the celebration. Another traditional custom, which can be highlighted on this feast, is the
use of sweet basil to adorn the cross. In many parishes families grow this herb
during the summer and bring plants to church for the feast. The herb, said to
have grown on Calvary, is distributed to all at the close of the service.
Younger children would delight in growing and contributing this herb for the
celebration. Preparation for the feast could include a catechetical program on the
preceding
Sunday which liturgically is a day of preparation for the feast. Such a session
could include an explanation of the feast and its troparion and
icon to
the whole group and then a breakdown into activity groups. The activities
outlined below, each typed on separate index cards, could be drawn as lots,
executed and then shared with the entire parish as part of the feast-day
celebration. The activities are arranged according to the following age levels:
1 (grades 1,2), 2 (grades 3,4), 3 grades 5,6)
and 4 (grades 7,8). Combining a full liturgical celebration with a catechetical preparation
and a social extension can help restore these feasts to their intended role in
our tradition as the major points of celebration in the life of our Church. ¨
Color the cross in the Byzantine Coloring Book (Byzantine
Seminary Press, Pittsburgh, PA 14214). Find out why the cross has three bars.
Find out why there are flowers around it. Make
a paper cross. Decorate it with a Scripture
verse (e.g. 1 Corinthians
1:30). Show how
you make the sign of the cross. How should you hold your hand? When during
church services should you make it? ACTIVITIES
FOR LEVEL TWO Think
quietly about some time when you were asked to do something hard or something
you didnt want to do. Was it hard to do it? Jesus called hard things like
this a cross. Why do you think He did that? Make
a paper cross. On it write the things you dislike doing most. Then copy this
verse from the Bible, Matthew 16:14. It tells what Jesus asks us to do with our
crosses.
Complete the Morse Code exercise in Together (Book 3, God
With Us Publications, McKees Rocks, PA 15136), page 61.
Collect
enough twigs to make these crosses: Latin
Greek
Maltese Tie
with string and glue to a stiff backing (cardboard or construction paper). Write
the description of each below. Make
a string art cross according to the following pattern: 1
Hammer nails into the wood as follows:
1
2
3
4
9
13
10
14 2
Connect the yarn to the nails as follows:
1 to 8; 8 to 7; 7 to 2; 2 to 3; 3 to 6; 6 to 5; 5 to 4; 9 to 16; 16 to
15; 15 to 10; 10 to 11; 11 to 14; 14 to 13; 13 to 12.
ACTIVITIES
FOR LEVEL THREE ·
Make a
photo and word collage about the cross. Use the hymn from Matins called the
Exapostilarion for ideas. ·
Read the
chapters Jesus Is Judged and Jesus Christ on the Cross from the book
God Is With Us
(OCEC, Yonkers, NY 11210). They tell of the events of Jesus suffering and
death. After you have read them, think about the following questions: 1
if Jesus death is so sad, why are we
celebrating on the Feast of the Cross? What do you think? 2 The cross we honor today does
not have the body of Jesus on it. It has jewels instead. Why would you think
this might be? ·
Write a paragraph explaining your answers to these two
questions. Then mount it on construction paper for display. ·
Write a haiku (Japanese poem) about the cross. A haiku
has three lines. The first line has five syllables; the second line has seven
and the third line has five. They do not rhyme. ACTIVITIES
FOR LEVEL FOUR ·
Read chapter 14 in the book
The Creed (Book 11, Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, Brookline
MA 02146). Write down any ideas you have not heard before. ·
Read the hymns of vespers for the Feast of
the Cross (from The September Menaion
or Byzantine Daily Worship). Find
an image in them to make into a banner or poster announcing the feast.
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