Its Ascension Day today. (Its always a Thursday, you know).
One of the best of the Feast Days to celebrate. All of the glory, none of the angst.
Bishop Gregor is keeping it in St Mary’s tonight at 7.30. The music will include the lovely Little Organ Mass by Haydn.
I confess that I was pleased to see the candle extinguished this evening. Always seems to me to be a particularly appropriate symbol at this service. And, yes, a certain poignancy…… after all, what DID it feel like for them left behind to await the next promise ?
(Perhaps there could be an extinguishing of ALL liturgical candles until Pentecost………. that’d make us think a bit………).
Yes – I like the symbolism. These days, most modern liturgists tell us that the Pashcal candle should be lit for the 50 days of Easter, which culminate on the Feast of Pentecost. Its one of the few times when I disagree and think the former practise to be much more evocative and moving.
The smell is certainly most evocative! The candle produced more smoke than the thurible last night.
Well that’s how the choir like it, no?
(Hmmmnnnn………….. The Padre appears to be playing with matches again PamB……… )
I always think it is an intensely sad day. There he goes, scarred now, and yes, home, at last – but we who wave him off? We who know that we will never truly see him, with the eyes of the flesh, never again hold or be held by him, until we too pass into changes we can barely imagine? We who so need him at times, and can never touch however urgent out need? Ah glory, of course, but like most glory – at a terrible price.
I agree with Rosemary, ascension can make me feel quite bereft.
I must also admit to great liturgical confusion. 50 days of Easter, but 40 days from Easter to Ascension. Why are we in Eastertide between Ascension and Pentecost and not Ascensiontide or Ordinary Time?
This article from the US Prayer Book Society throws a little light on the confusion and how we have ended up where we are with the calendar as it is at the moment.
The fifty days of Easter notion does seem to be a relatively modern liturgical invention that was claimed to be a reconstruction of “definitive” early chruch practice now lost.
Like the Easter Vigil then…
I’d be interested in hearing in further comments, from anyone who has better knowledge of the history of these changes than I have.
Oooo . . . modern reconstructions (i.e. inventions) of definitive ancient practices – my favorite! What’s the point of having a liturgical tradition if you can’t embroider it a bit from time to time?
I could tell you that the 40 Days/50 Days paradox is part of the Celtic tradition.
Would that help, Elizabeth?
Better and better! (I mean it, I really do love modern re/complete/inventions of practices of varying degrees of ancientness)
I could tell you it was all to do with the Knights Templar….
Or the masons….
*claps hands*