Good Friday is the Friday within Holy Week, and is traditionally a time of fasting and penance, commemorating the anniversary of Christ's crucifixion and death.
For Christians, Good Friday commemorates not just a historical event, but the sacrificial death of Christ, which with the resurrection, comprises the heart of the Christian faith.
The Catholic Catechism states this succinctly:
For Christians, Good Friday commemorates not just a historical event, but the sacrificial death of Christ, which with the resurrection, comprises the heart of the Christian faith.
The Catholic Catechism states this succinctly:
Justification has been merited for us by the Passion of Christ who offered himself on the cross as a living victim, holy and pleasing to God, and whose blood has become the instrument of atonement for the sins of all men (CCC 1992).
This
is based on the words of St. Paul: "[Believers] are justified freely
by God's grace through the redemption in Christ Jesus, whom God set
forth as an expiation, through faith, by his blood... (Romans 3:24-25, NAB).
The customs and prayers associated with Good Friday typically focus on the theme of Christ's sacrificial death for our sins.
The evening (at sunset) of Good Friday begins the second day of the Paschal Triduum.
Good Friday worship services begin in the afternoon at 3:00 (the time
Jesus likely died). Various traditions and customs are associated with
the Western celebration of Good Friday. The singing (or preaching) of
the Passion of St. John's gospel consists of reading or singing parts of
John's gospel.
The
Veneration of the Cross is also common, where Christians approach a
wooden cross and venerate it. In addition to these traditions, Holy
Communion with the reserved host is practiced. In the modern Latin Rite
of the Catholic Church, no Masses are said on Good Friday or Holy Saturday, therefore the reserved host from the Holy (Maundy) Thursday Mass is used. This is called the "Mass of the Pre-Sanctified."
Another service started by the Jesuit Alphonso Messia in 1732, now less common, the Tre Ore
or "Three Hours," is often held from noon until 3:00 PM, and consists
of seven sermons on the seven last words of Christ. This service has
been popular in many Protestant churches. Good Friday, along with Ash
Wednesday, is an official fast day of the Catholic Church.
The
Eastern Churches have different customs for the day they call "the
Great Friday." The Orthodox Church begins the day with Matins (Morning
Prayer), where the "Twelve Gospels" is chanted, which consists of 12
passages drawn from the Passion narratives.
In
the morning, the "Little Hours" follow one after the other, consisting
of Gospel, Epistle, and Prophet readings. Vespers (Evening Prayer)
ends with a solemn veneration of the epitaphion, an
embroidered veil containing scenes of Christ's burial. Compline (Night
Prayer) includes a lamentation placed on the Virgin Mary's lips.
On Good Friday night, a symbolic burial of Christ is performed.
Traditionally, Chaldean and Syrian Christians cease using their customary Shlama greeting ("peace be with you") on Good Friday and Holy Saturday, because Judas greeted Christ this way.
They use the phrase "The light of God be with your departed ones" instead.
In Russia, the tradition is to bring out a silver coffin, bearing a cross, and surrounded with candles and flowers.
The faithful creep on their knees and kiss and venerate the image of Christ's body painted on the "winding sheet" (shroud).
History
The
celebration of Good Friday is ancient, and some of the practices
associated with Good Friday are attested to by Egeria in the 4th
century. The day gradually became a time of penance and fasting as the
anniversary of the death of Christ.
The name "Good Friday" possibly comes from "God's Friday," although the exact reason for the current name is unclear.
Various churches observe Good Friday in addition to Catholics and Eastern Christians.
Anglicans, Methodists, and Lutherans all observe Good Friday to varying degrees.
Questions
1. What are the Western Catholic Fast Guidelines for Good Friday?
Fasting means eating only one full meatless (no animal flesh) meal on this day. However, one may still eat a breakfast and even a lunch in addition to a full meal if the two additional small meals do not add up to a second full meal.
Snacking is not allowed.
Drinking coffee, tea, juices, etc, between meals is permitted on fast days.
The
requirements are slightly different for those of certain ages. Fasting
is only required of those from ages 18-59, although parents are
expected to teach their children the reasons behind their fasting, etc.
Those with health conditions are excluded.
Note
that some Western Bishop Conferences, Eastern Catholic Rites, and
Orthodox Christians have different fasting guidelines, so it is wise to
check with your local parish about expectations.
These are simply the minimum expectations.
Additional forms of self-denial, within reason, can also be spiritually beneficial.
2. What is the Paschal Triduum?
The Paschal Triduum, often called the Easter Triduum or simply the Triduum, consists of Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday.
This includes the Great Easter Vigil, the high point of the Triduum.
The
word Triduum comes from the Latin word meaning "three days." It begins
the evening of Maundy Thursday and ends at Evening Prayer on Easter
Sunday. Thus the Triduum consists of three full days which begin and end
in the evening.
The
Triduum technically is not part of Lent (at least liturgically), but
Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday are still reckoned as
part of the traditional forty day Lenten fast.
The
Triduum celebrates the heart of our faith and salvation: the death and
resurrection of Christ, and is thus the high point of the liturgical
year.
3. Why Does the Church Celebrate the Crucifixion and Death of Jesus on a Friday?
It is long-held Tradition, based on the Biblical texts, that Jesus died on a Friday and rose from the dead on a Sunday, which would place the Last Supper on a Thursday night. Scripture tells us that Jesus rose from the dead "early on the first day of the week" (Mark 16:2, RSV).
It
was on the same day (the first day of the week) that Jesus met his
apostles on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:1). John also confirms that
Jesus rose on a Sunday (John 20:1). The early Church Fathers universally
held that Jesus rose from the dead on a Sunday, and worshiped on
Sunday, "The Lord's Day."
The
Fathers also testify to the Institution of the Eucharist on a Thursday
and a Friday crucifixion of Jesus. Even though Jesus tells us that he
was to be in the heart of the earth for three days and three nights, in
ancient Jewish reckoning, this included partial days.
Thus,
Jesus was saying that his time in the earth would span three days
(Friday, Saturday, and Sunday). Saint Justin Martyr (writing in 150 AD)
testifies to both Sunday worship and a Friday crucifixion of Jesus:
But Sunday is the day on which we all hold our common assembly, because it is the first day on which God, having wrought a change in the darkness and matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ our Saviour on the same day rose from the dead. For He was crucified on the day before that of Saturn (Saturday); and on the day after that of Saturn, which is the day of the Sun, having appeared to His apostles and disciples... (First Apology 67)
The Didache (70-90 AD) also mentions Sunday worship, and fasting on Fridays (likely connected to Jesus' crucifixion that day):
Let not your fasts be with the hypocrites... but fast on the fourth day and the Preparation (Friday)...But every Lord's day gather yourselves together, and break bread, and give thanksgiving after having confessed your transgressions, that your sacrifice may be pure (8, 14).
The Apostolic Constitutions
(late 4th century) verifies the same chronology. Note that, based on
Scripture, this document provides the rationale for the dates of Maundy
Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday.
And on the fifth day of the week (Thursday), when we had eaten the Passover with Him, and when Judas had dipped his hand into the dish, and received the sop, and was gone out by night, the Lord said to us: "The hour is come that ye shall be dispersed, and shall leave me alone" (V:3:XIV).
...it being the day of the preparation (Friday), they delivered Him to Pilate the Roman governor, accusing Him of many and great things, none of which they could prove...[Jesus] commanded us to fast on the fourth and sixth (Friday) days of the week; the former on account of His being betrayed, and the latter on account of His passion (V:3:XIV, XV).
But when the first day of the week (Sunday) dawned He arose from the dead, and fulfilled those things which before His passion He foretold to us, saying: "The Son of man must continue in the heart of the earth three days and three nights" (V:3:XIV).
Virtually
every Church Father who addresses the issue agrees with the
traditional dating of a Thursday Last Supper, Friday Crucifixion, and
Sunday resurrection.
This
includes those Church Fathers and writings mentioned above, but also
Ignatius (105 AD), Pseudo-Barnabas (120 AD), Clement of Alexandria (195
AD), and many others.
This chronology is firmly based on Scripture, and universally verified by Tradition.