Remembering the times
At church earlier
today, it dawned on me that I probably have never attended a Good Friday
service. In the Netherlands, Good Friday is usually not a holiday, though the
Monday after Easter is. Thinking of Nigeria, the only observance I can recall
was we did not eat meats at home on Good Friday, only fish. The only day of the
Passion weekend we celebrated was Easter Sunday.
As I sat in church, at
one point the dean of the cathedral born a large cross that he walked down the
aisle to the altar where the cross was set up and a mallet was used to knock it
into place. The sound of the hitting was quite impactful almost like hearing
the nails being hammered into the palms and the feet of the Lord as narrated in
the gospels.
Traditions holding
firm
Again, there was no
sermon as the readings were long enough to pass for a sermon itself. There were
a few familiar hymns sung by the lay clerics along with Latin recitations which
had accompanying English translations. During Communion, an African American
spiritual was sung which had none of the inflections or stirrings of African American
spirituals, yet, a very good rendition, all the same.
At the end of the
service, the clergy walked to the back of the hall just under the tower and as the
last hymn was concluded, the doors were slammed shut, signifying the closing of
the tomb. All the symbolism and back at home, I had a slow-cooked fish curry
bubbling away. I think, in terms of celebration, I have upheld to an extent the
traditions of old.
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