Christianity: Details about 'Palm Sunday'
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Home
|
For the book by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., see Palm Sunday (book).
SymbolismThe feast commerates the Triumphal Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem in the days before his execution. This was the only day in which Jesus Christ set aside His ministerial role to make a political statement before His covenant people. Many Christians and Messianic Jews regard this event was the terminus of the first 69 weeks of Daniel's Prophecy of Seventy Weeks, and thereby a very holy day. Even setting this aside, the nature of the entry and its circumstances are usually deemed enough to warrant a special feast. In ancient times, the palm branch was a symbol of triumph and victory. (Leviticus 23:40 - Feast of Tabernacles, and Revelation 7:9) It was also a custom in all lands to cover, in some way, the path of someone thought worthy of the highest honour. Consequently, when Jesus entered Jerusalem, the crowd greeted him by waving palm fronds, and carpeting his path with them, thereby giving the day its name. The prophecy often cited as having been fulfilled by the Triumphal Entry reads as follows: Rejoice greatly, O Daughter of Zion! Day of WeekOn the tenth of Nisan, according to the Mosaic Law, the lambs to be slaughtered at Passover were chosen. Because of the link of this to the Triumphal Entry, some new interpretations report that the event was not even on Sunday, because Nisan 10 would not be a Sunday if the Crucifixion occurred on Friday the fourteenth. This day in the year of the Passion saw Messiah presented as the sacrificial Lamb. It heralded His impending role as the Suffering Servant of Israel (Isaiah 53, Zechariah 12:10). Observation in the LiturgyOriginally the Roman Catholic Church officially called this Sunday the Second Sunday of the Passion; in 1970 the formal designation was changed to Passion Sunday, a change that has caused considerable confusion because the latter term had heretofore been affixed to the previous Sunday, or the fifth within Lent. Concomitant with this revision, the entire week before Easter was redesignated Passion Week (formerly called "Holy Week" officially, and still usually referred to as such by the general public). In the Passion Week liturgy, on Palm Sunday palm fronds (or in colder climates some kind of substitutes) are blessed outside the church building and a procession enters, singing, re-enacting the entry into Jerusalem. These palms are saved in many churches to be burned later as the source of ashes used in Ash Wednesday services. The Roman Catholic Church considers the palms to be sacramentals. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, Palm Sunday is often called the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem, and is the beginning of Holy Week. The day before it is Lazarus Saturday, remembering the resurrection of Lazarus from the dead. On Lazarus Saturday believers often prepare palm fronds by knotting them into crosses in preparation for the procession on Sunday. The Troparion of the feast indicates the resurrection of Lazarus is a prefigurement of Christ's own Resurrection: O Christ our God, In the Russian Orthodox Church, the custom developed of using pussy willows instead of palm fronds because palm fronds were not readily available. It is not determined what kind of branches should be used, so some Orthodox believers uses olive branches.
Palmesøndag Palmsonntag Domingo de Ramos Palmusunnuntai Dimanche des Rameaux Domenica delle Palme 聖枝祭 Palmzondag Palmesundag Palmesøndag Niedziela Palmowa Cvetna nedelja Palmsöndagen Вход Господень в Иерусалим
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||