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The Easter Vigil - practice and theory

The Vigil is 'the mother of all vigils' in theory, but in practice it is ignored - but can we improve the liturgy so that it is a richer event for those who do take part? And can we remove elements that distract and cause heat, rahter than bring light?

Thomas O'Loughlin zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA The Easter Vigil poses many practical difficulties for celebration. However, are we by-passing the deeper problems it poses to believers today, and missing its greatest opportunities as an expression of our faith? Thomas O'Loughlin is a Professor of Historical Theology at the a revival of the pre-1970 High Mass. Yet, University of Nottingham. zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA the Vigil is one of the few moments in the formal liturgy that is full of drama — a great owhere in the entire liturgy is the bonfire is mandated, the strange activity of zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA chasm between theory and practice so passing 'light from light', an eerie candlegaping as at the Easter Vigil. Anyone readlit procession into a darkened building, ing books about the Easter Vigil meets and the events linked to a baptism (either nothing but superlatives: this is the centre actual or virtual) — and the drama is built of the whole year, mother of vigils, the into the very rubrics! Yet, this drama is greatest moment of joy, night truly blessed, very often skipped, frequently minimized, and on and on. The same writers then and almost never properly exploited. quote beautiful early sources: a homily from Sardis, another from Ambrose, and Faced with 'the problem of the Vigil' I have some nuggets from Origen — for ancient watched over a period of three decades a Christian footnotes it cannot be beaten! tacit down-grading of this liturgy so that On the ground it is very different. After now it is often a matter of just an hour's sixty years of a public night-time vigil (the duration, that which can be dropped is zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfed Easter Vigil was reformed before the reforms of Vatican II), it has in many places become just another Saturday evening Mass with 'bits' added. In most communities it has Wed to capture the imagination of the majority, and seems just an elaborate set of jobs to be 'got through because it is Easter.' Quite apart from the fact that 'an Easter break' is now a fixed part of the holiday plans of many people, it is often a time of relatively empty pews. If we think of attendance as a measure of dropped, and the notion of 'a vigil' per se significance, then the Vigil is a thorough avoided: it is Easter Sunday Mass anticifailure: at no other time is felt worth so out pated in the same way that every other of kilter with that formal 'authorized' Sunday's gathering is held on Saturday explanation. evening. But is this a case of selling people short and are we, charged with being leadThere is a further irony. Recent decades ers of communities in their worship of God have seen a massive level of experimentain Christ Jesus, failing in that task? tion in liturgy to find the dramatic, that which arrests the senses, and that which I de nt it y a nd hope engages people's bodies and feelings as It seems self-evident that we gather at the well as their minds. I have seen this desire Vigil `to celebrate the Resurrection' and `to to engage the senses used to justify every remember the first Easter' — and with such form of ritual from dance-based liturgy to words most introductions to the Vigil N Darkness is the unique element in this liturgy. We gather in darkness, we wait in darkness, we perform many parts of it in darkness 10 The Pastoral Review zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA Volume 14 Issue 2 begin. But this up-beat message does not take account of the bitter reality that is a small part of every life and, sadly, a major part of many lives. To tell someone who has just been told that their pension has lost 10% of its value (I write as the Carillion debacle unfolds), that their child has learning difficulties, their mother's much needed hip replacement has been postponed, and Who has just heard of a famine in one country and of whales being killed by floating plastic, that all is joy and rejoicing because 'Christ has conquered' seems like some silly mix of dreaming, delusion, a con: 'don't worry: it'll be all right in heaven.' Somehow, having to huddle around a bonfire, having to remind ourselves that there is another way, and feeling faith as trying to see by the glimmer of a candle in the darkness, seem far closer to our experience. We actually live much of our lives in a darkened state, and faith is a straining after the light as we journey on in darkness. Paul caught this when he said 'for now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then' - looking forward - 'we will see face to face.' Newman put it in more intellectual terms: we move out of shad- zyxwvutsr The Past oral Review zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA Volum e 14 I ssue 2 11 Fire and light — the chasm between theory and practice ,at the Easter Vigil — Thomas O'Loughlin zyxwvutsrqponmlkji ows and images into the truth. This is not some 'dark night of the soul' as written about by mystics, it is a normal part of life that faces the facts of tragedy, evil, and mess. We are in the darkness but looking forward to the dawn, we are as convinced of that dawn — a better way in this life and a victory over death — as we are convinced of the dawn of the Sun tomorrow after its setting this evening. We are not so much 'an Easter people' — there are moments for such rejoicing — as a people of hope. Every dawn after a dark night is a sacrament for us of the divine dawn we await for in hope in the darkness of life. So the Vigil is not so much 'rejoicing in the Resurrection' as celebrating our identity as people who in darkness hope for, look forward to the dawn. This raises two practical questions: 1 Are we giving our sisters and brothers an opportunity to experience this sense of being together in the darkness — openly declaring its reality — and being a group who draws strength from being a group who wait for the dawn? Put another way, do we ever .provide a moment in the liturgical year when we let people use the basic human clock — the alternation of day, night, day — to be a metaphor for their pilgrimage of faith? And we should remember that this basic clock is the metaphor in almost every other area of life! D a r k ne ss Take a piece a paper and jot down the symbols used in the Easter Vigil. The list will be a long one: fire, candles, paschal candle, water, oil (at a baptism), vestments, bread, wine ... ... the list goes on. But have you listed darkness? Yet it is darkness that is the unique element in this liturgy. We gather in darkness, we wait in darkness, we perform many parts of it in darkness. The darkness is a declaration of reality: this is where we are at now — and it is a symbol of so much of our lives, and our sense of our lives, and it is the experience of so many humans. Our world can be a dark place — and we Christians start there and we face that fact! But do we? The simple answer is no. We short-change people by refusing to take darkness seriously in liturgy, but people in `real life' have no such choice. Why do I say we don't take it seriously? A spot check a couple of years ago [when Easter fell late] of 20 parishes in a single diocese [I picked the first 20 who had put the times of the Vigil on their websites] showed me that 18 held the Vigil while there was still daylight, one was in real darkness, and one was on the cusp of darkness. But we must embrace the reality of darkness not as morbid depressives, but as people who face human reality but live in hope of the damn. We owe it to our sisters and brothers to give them the opportunity to affirm this part of their existence in the presence of God and his people. 2. Thinking of the Vigil as expressing our But even when we do gather after darkcosmic situation as Christians — we are ness has fallen, we seem so embarrassed in a dark world but believe the darkness we race through it to get inside with all the is not final: there will be a dawn — how lights on — this may reflect our deep desire do we let people experience this as their for light but it also represents a flight from identity? Put another way, if we believe reality and denies that Christians have to there will be a dawn, how can I express persevere in hope. We have to live and work in the darkness. If the darkness lasts that in a way that is not only my affirmation, but our affirmation (because just a couple of moments — and sometimes faith is always what we believe before it there is the ever 'helpful' sacristan with a is my appropriation of that hope)? zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA torch, intended for use when changing a 12 The Past oral Review zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA Volum e 14 I ssue 2 zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA Fiw and light — the chasm between theory and practice at the Easter Vigil — Thomas O'Loughlin zyxwvutsrqponm I m age Dream st im e zyxwvutsrq ei rift!t,i zyxw tyre, acting as a spotlight on the president `so that Father can see the book' — and seen as just an introduction, then we have not taken the symbol seriously. If a Vigil is to speak to us, and our life situation, it has to take darkness seriously — and in the midst of that darkness we have to affirm our identity. zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXW The darkness has to be prolonged. The best way to do this is to celebrate using just the fire's light until the Paschal Candle has been lit, and then have the whole of the liturgy of readings by candlelight. Indeed, the most effective use of darkness was where the candles alone provided light until the liturgy of the Eucharist began (which • is not supposed to begin until dawn!). Not only was this a real statement of how we strive to see, with just glimmers of light, the glory of God in the midst of a darkened world, but it stopped the silliness of extinguishing candles one minute to have them relit a few minutes later for the renewal of baptismal commitment. Rea dings a nd ident it y There is one matter on which there is widespread agreement abbut the Vigil: 'the readings are too long,' they don't make sense,' or 'that Old Testament stuff is awful.' When I ask ordinary people about this Vigil these opinions are openly expressed, when I ask clergy the answers are more coy but amount to the same thing — the proof is that in many (most?) places they are reduced to the legal minimum, and it is virtually unknown for the whole set of readings to be done in an `ordinary parish.' Let us not worry about the reasons given to justify this, let us simply note the fact: this set of readings is 'like The Past oral Review zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDC Volum e 14 I ssue 2 13 Fire and light — the chasm between theory and practice at the Easter Vigil — Thomas zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVU O'Loughlin zyxwvutsrqponmlkj salt that has lost its flavour and can now only be thrown out to be trodden underfoot'! (Matthew 5.13) mally presented by the Church as a Being who deliberately brings violence into the world and rejoices in it. But there is another problem. While almost everywhere the list of readings . is curtailed, most still think that they are OK so long as they 'keep the rubrics.' This means that the third reading (Exod. 14.15-15.6; 17-18), because it is obligatory, is still read. This, with the Canticle of Moses which follows it, is the type of the Passover and the antetype of the Paschal Mystery — and hence is considered so special. Alas, almost no reading causes so much confusion. We as listeners — as distinct from religious trained in the methods of lectio diving — do not think in terms of types, antitypes, and antetypes. This means that when we hear of God slaughtering the Egyptian soldiers (who were just doing their duty) and even their horses we are repulsed. Surely there is enough perversion in the world which rejoices in warfare, mayhem, and waste? Surely there are enough warrior-images of God and enough people who want to use religion as a cover for violence that we can do with out this? Every year, with the same regularity as the arrival of Easter eggs in the shops, I am asked why are we reading about God killing men and horses — and then being asked to rejoice in this? One can try to explain that there is an ancient near-Eastern genre of praise poetry that is based on the image of 'the warrior saviour,' and this was transferred to the Lord, and then understood by analogy ... using this hermeneutic within that cultural content ... and that it is read symbolically and not literally ... ... (one can keep going). The simple fact is that this is a reading which, even if it worked in an earlier age or when the only people who understood it were a small group of literate, theologically trained clergy, is now counter-productive. In our world we must not present God as a warrior. We must not leave open the possibility that God is for- So what should we do? The central theme of this sequence of readings — and the sequence is the most ancient continuous zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfe 14 Every year I am asked why are we reading about God killing men and horses - and then being asked to rejoice in this? element in the Vigil — is that they express our identity as those who hope in the Christ. We are a people who look forward to deliverance now and in the future, because of the event of the Paschal Mystery. So the question we have to ask is not 'what readings should we read?' but how would we express who we believe we are as the people of hope? This is not an easy question to be answered in a moment with a few jotted notes: this asks us to examine ourselves, reflect, pray, and talk with one another. In this way, selecting the readings that we will use at the Vigil — and remember that de facto we do not use the ones formally provided — needs to be the outcome of the discussions and reflections of Lent. This week, next week, with that group, with another group, in this situation and in that, we need to discuss: who are we as the baptized? zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQ Preparation - celebration Lent is when we prepare for Easter, for the baptism of new sisters and brothers, and recall who we are as the baptized people; the Vigil then celebrates this. In any community there will be a variety of answers to this question of identity, and, indeed, no two Christians will be identical: the Spirit speaks to each of us in our individuality. zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgf The Pastoral Review Volume 14 Issue 2 Fire and light — the chasm between theory and practice at the Easter Vigil - zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVU Thom as O'Loughlin zyxwvutsrqponml I m age: Drearnstim e zyxwvut But we come together to share these Word made flesh. These fruits of preparainsights and to learn from one another. tion — the results of Lent — then form the Perhaps some will find a part of that idenspine of a time of waiting in darkness, with tity in a passage from the Torah or the zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDC only the glimmer of candles all drawing their light from just one candle, for the dawn. We live in an often-dark universe, but stand together in hope because of the Christ prophets, others may fasten on a passage from the Psalms or the wisdom literature. Others still will fasten on a Christian text or even feel the need to compose a new answer to express their identity in the The Vigil offers us a dramatic context both to affirm our identity and acknowledge where we are: we live in an often-dark universe, but stand together in hope because of the Christ. Celebrating this is not easy, and it demands much more than taking the ritual as 'a given' and 'following the rubrics.' But acknowledging the extra work, we owe it to those we serve to facilitate them to celebrate it well. ■ The Past oral Review Volum e 14 I ssue 2 zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcb 15