Religion Magazine

Holy Saturday

By Marilyngardner5 @marilyngard

Holy Saturday
Yesterday was Good Friday, a day when all of Christendom takes a moment to stop and pause at the memory of sacrificial love.

But what happens between Good Friday and Easter Sunday?
What happens to us on the days between tragedy and healing? What transpires when the crisis is over, but the end is not yet revealed? The days after the car accident, but before the broken leg has healed and the insurance has been paid. The days after diagnosis of cancer, but before treatment. The days after a funeral, but before we've adjusted to the loss.
These are the days between, when instead of darkness or light there is a lingering nervousness and knowledge that something is not quite settled, not quite right. The days between are often the most difficult and the most lonely, and they are undoubtedly the most common.

So has this day often seemed to me - this day between Good Friday and Easter Sunday, where we are suspended between death and life.

"It is Finished" has been spoken, "He is Risen" is yet to come.

In the West the day is often filled with shopping for marshmallow chicks, chocolate bunnies, and fake grass to line plastic easter baskets.

As I've moved into the Eastern Orthodox Church, I've formed a different view of this day between. A day between - yes, but a day of immeasurable importance in the Christian faith tradition.

Madeleine L'Engle describes her journey of greater understanding of this day in her book, The Irrational Season:

" In the Western Church, we jump directly from Good Friday to Easter Day, with Saturday a vague blank in between. But in the Eastern Church, Great and Holy Saturday is one of the most important days of the year."


She goes on to say:

"Where was Jesus on that extraordinary day between the darkness of Good Friday and the brilliance of Easter Sunday? He was down in hell. And what was he doing there? He was harrowing hell, or to put it in simpler words, he was ministering to the damned."

Madeleine L'Engle says this about the first time she ever saw the fresco of the Harrowing of Hell over the altar in the Chora Church in Istanbul:

"I stood there, trembling with joy, as I looked at this magnificent painting of the harrowing of hell. In the center is the figure of Jesus striding through hell, a figure of immense virility and power. With one strong hand he is grasping Adam, with the other, Eve, and wresting them out of the power of hell. The gates to hell, which he has trampled down and destroyed forever, are in cross-form, the same cross on which he died. . ."

This same icon has become a part of my church tradition.

I am almost ready to head out the door to our Holy Saturday service, because I have come to realize that what happens in the days between, between Good Friday and Easter Sunday, is crucial to the final outcome.


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