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Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemene - Great and Holy Thursday
THE ICON
Two events shape the liturgy of Great and Holy Thursday: the Last
Supper of Christ with His disciples, and the betrayal of Judas. The meaning of both is
in love. The Last Supper is the ultimate revelation of God's redeeming love for man, of
love as the very essence of salvation. And the betrayal of Judas reveals that sin, death
and self-destruction are also due to love, but to deviated and distorted love, love
directed at that which does not deserve love. Here is the mystery of this unique day,
and its liturgy, where light and darkness, joy and sorrow are so strangely mixed,
challenges us with the choice on which depends the eternal destiny of each one of us.
"Now before the feast of the Passover, when Jesus knew that His hour was come... having
loved His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end..." (John 13:1). To
understand the meaning of the Last Supper we must see it as the very end of the great
movement of Divine Love which began with the creation of the world and is now to be
consummated in the death and resurrection of Christ.
God is Love (1 John 4:8). And the first gift of Love was life. The
meaning, the content of life was communion. To be alive man was to eat and to drink, to
partake of the world. The world was thus Divine love made food, made Body of man. And
being alive, i.e. partaking of the world, man was to be in communion with God, to have
God as the meaning, the content and the end of his life. Communion with the God-given
world was indeed communion with God. Man received his food from God and making it his
body and his life, he offered the whole world to God, transformed it into life in God
and with God. The love of God gave life to man, the love of man for God transformed this
life into communion with God. This was paradise. Life in it was, indeed, eucharistic.
Through man and his love for God the whole creation was to be sanctified and transformed
into one all-embracing sacrament of Divine Presence and man was the priest of this
sacrament.
But in sin man lost this eucharistic life. He lost it because he ceased
to see the world as a means of Communion with God and his life as eucharist, as adoration
and thanksgiving. . . He love himself and the world for their own sake; he made himself
the content and the end of his life. He thought that his hunger and thirst, i.e. his
dependence of his life on the world - can be satisfied by the world as such, by food as
such. But world and food, once they are deprived of their initial sacramental meaning -
as means of communion with God, once they are not received for God's sake and filled with
hunger and thirst for God, once, in other words, God is no longer, their real "content"
can give no life, satisfy no hunger, for they have no life in themselves... And thus by
putting his love in them, man deviated his love from the only object of all love, of all
hunger, of all desires. And he died. For death is the inescapable "decomposition" of life
cut from its only source and content. Man thought to find life in the world and in food,
but he found death. His life became communion with death, for instead of transforming the
world by faith, love, and adoration into communion with God, he submitted himself entirely
to the world, he ceased to be its priest and became its slave. And by his sin the whole
world was made a cemetery, where people condemned to death partook of death and "sat in
the region and shadow of death" (Matt. 4:16).
But if man betrayed, God remained faithful to man. He did not "turn
Himself away forever from His creature whom He had made, neither did He forget the works
of His hands, but He visited him in diverse manners, through the tender compassion of His
mercy" (Liturgy of St Basil). A new Divine work began, that of redemption and salvation.
And it was fulfilled in Christ, the Son of God Who in order to restore man to his pristine
beauty and to restore life as communion with God, became Man, took upon Himself our nature,
with its thirst and hunger, with its desire for and love of, life. And in Him life was
revealed, given, accepted and fulfilled as total and perfect Eucharist, as total and
perfect communion with God. He rejected the basic human temptation: to live "by bread
alone," He revealed that God and His kingdom are the real food, the real life of man.
And this perfect eucharistic Life, filled with God, and, therefore Divine and immortal,
He gave to all those who would believe in Him, i,e. find in Him the meaning and the
content of their lives. Such is the wonderful meaning of the Last Supper. He offered
Himself as the true food of man, because the Life revealed in Him is the true Life. And
thus the movement of Divine Love which began in paradise with a Divine "take, eat. .."
(for eating is life for man) comes now "unto the end" with the Divine "take, eat, this is
My Body..." (for God is life of man). The Last Supper is the restoration of the paradise
of bliss, of life as Eucharist and Communion.
But this hour of ultimate love is also that of the ultimate betrayal.
Judas leaves the light of the Upper Room and goes into darkness. "And it was night"
(John 13:30). Why does he leave? Because he loves, answers the Gospel, and his fateful
love is stressed again and again in the hymns of Holy Thursday. It does not matter indeed,
that he loves the "silver." Money stands here for all the deviated and distorted love
which leads man into betraying God. It is, indeed, love stolen from God and Judas,
therefore, is the Thief. When he does not love God and in God, man still loves and
desires, for he was created to love and love is his nature, but it is then a dark and
self-destroying passion and death is at its end. And each year, as we immerse ourselves
into the unfathomable light and depth of Holy Thursday, the same decisive question is
addressed to each one of us: do I respond to Christ's love and accept it as my life, do
I follow Judas into the darkness of his night?
The liturgy of Holy Thursday includes: a) Matins, b) Vespers and,
following Vespers, the Liturgy of St Basil the Great. In the Cathedral Churches the
special service of the Washing of Feet takes place after the Liturgy; while the deacon
reads the Gospel, the Bishop washes the feet of twelve priests, reminding us that Christ's
love is the foundation of life in the Church and shapes all relations within it. It is
also on Holy Thursday that Holy Chrism is consecrated by the primates of autocephalous
Churches, and this also means that the new love of Christ is the gift we receive from
the Holy Spirit on the day of our entrance into the Church.
At Matins the Troparion sets the theme of the day: the opposition
between the love of Christ and the "insatiable desire" of Judas.
"When the glorious disciples were illumined by washing at the Supper,
Then was the impious Judas darkened with the love of silver And to the unjust judges does
he betray Thee, the just Judge. Consider, 0 Lover of money, him who hanged himself because
of it. Do not follow the insatiable desire which dared this against the Master, 0 Lord,
good to all, glory to Thee."
After the Gospel reading (Luke 12:1-40) we are given the contemplation,
the mystical and eternal meaning of the Last Supper in the beautiful canon of St Cosmas.
Its last "irmos," (Ninth Ode) invites us to share in the hospitality of the Lord's
banquet:
"Come, 0 ye faithful Let us enjoy the hospitality of the Lord and the
banquet of immortality In the upper chamber with minds uplifted...."
At Vespers, the stichira on "Lord, I have cried" stress the spiritual
anticlimax of Holy Thursday, the betrayal of Judas:
"Judas the slave and Knave, The disciple and traitor, The friend and
fiend, Was proved by his deeds, For, as he followed the Master, Within himself he
contemplated His betrayal...."
After the Entrance, three lessons from the Old Testament:
1) Exodus 19: 10-19. God's descent from Mount Sinai to His people as
the image of God's coming in the Eucharist. 2) Job 38:1-23, 42:1-5, God's conversation
with Job and Job's answer: "who will utter to me what I understand not? Things too great
and wonderful for me, which I knew not..." - and these "great and wonderful things" are
fulfilled in the gift of Christ's Body and Blood. 3) Isaiah 50:4-11. The beginning of the
prophecies on the suffering servant of God,
The Epistle reading is from I Corinthians 11:23-32: St Paul's account
of the Last Supper and the meaning of communion.
The Gospel reading (the longest of the year is taken from all four
Gospels and is the full story of the Last Supper, the betrayal of Judas and Christ's
arrest in the garden.
The Cherubic hymn and the hymn of Communion are replaced by the words
of the prayer before Communion:
"Of Thy Mystical Supper, 0 Son of God, accept me today as a communicant,
For I will not speak of Thy Mystery to Thine enemies, Neither like Judas will I give Thee
a kiss; But like the thief will I confess Thee: Remember me, 0 Lord, in Thy Kingdom."
by The Very Rev. Alexander Schmemann, S.T.D. Professor of Liturgical
Theology, St Vladimir's Seminary
Text taken from the OCA Website
Troparion - Tone 6
Of Your Mystical Supper, O Son of God,
Accept me today as a communicant.
For I will not speak of Your mysteries to Your enemies,
Neither like Judas will I give You a kiss,
But like the thief will I confess You.
Remember me, O Lord, in Your Kingdom!
Troparion - Tone 4
By Your precious blood,
You have redeemed us from the curse of the law.
By being nailed to the cross and pierced by a spear,
You have poured forth immortality for man.
O our Savior, glory to You!
Kontakion - Tone 8
Come, let us all sing the praises of Him who was crucified for us,
For Mary said when she beheld Him upon the tree:
Though You do endure the cross, You are my Son and my God!
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