Seasonal Services Festivals and Holy
Days
Thanksgiving Day - 10 AM - November
22 Advent: Midweek services preparation for Christmas.
Vespers - Wednesdays - 7:30 PM
December 3rd - Vespers (a formal prayer service) 7:30
PM
December 10th - Vespers (a formal prayer service) 7:30
PM
December 17th - Vespers (a formal prayer service) 7:30
PM
Christmas: Ladies Christmas Party -
Date TBA - 1:00 PM Christmas Eve - 7:00 PM Christmas Day - 10:00 AM
Lent:
Six midweek services in preparing for the celebration of the
Resurrection of our Lord. Beginning March 5th, Ash Wednesday.
Vespers - Wednesdays - 7:30 PM
Holy Week:
Monday, April 14; Vespers 7:00 PM, Holy Communion immediately following.
Tuesday, April 15; Vespers 7:00 PM, Holy Communion immediately following.
Wednesday, April 16; Vespers 7:00 PM, Holy Communion immediately following.
Maundy Thursday, April 17; The Divine Service, 7:00 PM.
Good Friday, April 18; The Divine Service, 7:00 PM.
The Festival of the Resurrection, Sunday April 20.
Easter Matins, 8:00 AM.
Easter Breakfast, 9:00 AM.
The Divine Service, 11:00 AM.
Seasons and Festivals
How did Christmas become such a great festival season even
for unbelievers? Why is the Easter season known to the entire world? Why is the
enjoyment of Sundays as a day of rest so widespread? These blessings came to us
by very humble means. We enjoy them because Christians faithfully held their
public gatherings on these occasions. Without the regular public assemblies of
the Church these good things would not be part of life today. We all enjoy
these days of rest and seasons of joy because of the faithfulness of those
going before us. Festival days center on festival services and festival
services center on the life and work of Jesus Christ. In these services the
events of Jesus' life unfold before us throughout the seasons of the year. By
hearing the texts and the exposition of those texts in preaching, canticles,
hymns, and creeds the faithful receive the benefits of Jesus life and work.
Each service uses the theme of the season to build the faithful from the
foundation of Jesus' Baptism and refresh them in the Sacrament of His Body and
Blood.
Saint James Lutheran Church keeps the Liturgical calendar.
The Liturgy takes the Christian through the birth, life, death, burial,
resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ once each year. This discipline has
been diligently observed down through the centuries so that each follower of
Christ might grow strong in the "whole counsel of God."
Advent
Advent is the season that prepares us for the Christmas
festival. The weekly services in Advent center on Bible readings, chosen to
prepare us for our celebration of the coning of Christ in the flesh into our
world. The hymns and prayers of the Advent services flow from these readings.
In addition to the Divine Service on the Sundays of Advent, midweek services
are traditionally held. These services focus on themes of the promise of Christ
coming in the flesh the first time, His first advent; at the end of the world,
His second advent; to us as individuals, His advent by means of His Word,
Baptism, and His Body and Blood in the Sacrament of the Altar.
Lent
Like Advent, the season of Lent is a season of
preparation. Beginning with Ash Wednesday midweek services are held. These
services prepare us for the joyful celebration of the resurrection of Jesus;
the Easter season. The goal is to increase in our hearts joy in the forgiveness
of sins secured for us by Jesus' resurrection. The readings draw us into themes
of self examination and repentance so that we may never begin to trust our own
righteousness, but be turned to trust in and clothe ourselves with the
righteousness that Jesus Christ provided us through His perfect obedience for
us, His suffering and death in our stead, and His absolution secured for us
through His glorious resurrection. The lessons of the season turn us from
ourselves and to Him who supplies our every need.
Liturgy means public service. In true Christian
Liturgy the faithful gather to receive the gifts of absolution from Christ and
to be refreshed in the promise of everlasting life. Christ Jesus Himself
provides the public service and is present by means of His Word and Sacrament
serving the faithful.
Holy Week
Palm Sunday
This festival recalls Jesus' entry into Jerusalem on the
week of His crucifixion. (Matthew 21:1-9) Palm Sunday marks the beginning of
the greatest celebration season in the Liturgy. Dr. Luther Reed explains. "This
Sunday begins the 'Holy Week,' or the 'Great Week,' the latter name being
explained by Chrysostom as referring to 'the great things wrought at this time
by the lord.' Palm Sunday owes its name to fourth-century observances in
Jerusalem, where on this day the faithful assembled on the Mount of Olives and
from there went in procession to the city, carrying palm and olive branches and
singing, while the bishop rode in their midst sitting a donkey. Similarly,
other events in the days preceding the crucifixion were dramatized in the later
services of Holy Week. It was not until the sixth century that services in the
West included a procession with palms. The present lengthy Roman office of
blessing the palms precedes the Mass for the day dates only from the ninth
century. In the early church the candidates for baptism and confirmation were
again taught the creed. This fact gives some justification for the
administration of confirmation on this day, though too frequently now this
feature dominates the service almost to the exclusion of its deeper
significance."
Holy Week
Most of us are not as familiar with this season as with
the other great festivals. That is because in our generation we have let many
of the services of Holy Week fall into disuse. This is sad because Holy Week is
one of the great festival seasons in the year. It begins with Palm Sunday and
ends with Holy Saturday. The more ancient name for this week is the Great Week
for it commemorates the "great" works accomplished by Jesus Christ during this
week. Each day of the Great Week has been appointed a festival day by
Christians since the earliest times.
Each day of Holy Week has an appointed service. At St.
James Lutheran Church a portion of the Passion History of Jesus selected from
the Gospels' of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John is read. Psalms, hymns and sermon
themes are selected to refresh us in the profound truths of Jesus' obedience
and suffering during that week. The purpose is to refresh us in the joys of our
redemption; He obeyed and suffered for us and for our salvation. Though the
mood is dark and heavy in view of Jesus' death on the cross, there is an
undercurrent of increasing joy which anticipates the celebration of The
Resurrection of Our Lord. That day greets us with the joyous words "He is
risen" -joyous because "he was raised for our justification." Holy Week
prepares us for that joyous celebration. The Epistle to the Hebrews captures
the mood of the Passion season perfectly. Those words urge us to look "to
Jesus
who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross."
(Hebrews 12:2)
The Great Week services provide wonderful time for retreat
and refreshment, a time to set aside our busy routines for a short season and
retreat into the Word of Redemption. Keeping these festivals not only serves
and blesses us individually with the Word of God, but those around us and those
who will come after us.
Saint James Lutheran Church holds services each day of
Holy Week, Monday of Holy Week through Good Friday, at 7:00 PM. The reading of
the Passion History, the Psalms and hymns are set in the Service of the Word.
For the confirmed, the Service of Holy Communion follows at 7:45 PM.
"And it shall be in the last days,
many people
shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the
house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk
in his paths." (Isaiah 2:1&2)
Luther Reed, The Lutheran Liturgy, Fortress Press,
Philadelphia Pa. Fourth printing 1975, p497. |