TITLE: Tennebrae - A Rirual of Shadows 3/26/2015 By Susan LeDoux 03/26/15 |
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The Holy Week service called Tennebrae, meaning “darkness” or “shadows,” has become so rare today many Christians have never experienced the funereal tenor of this sorrowful ritual. I was so transfixed by the first Tennebrae service I attended, I had to learn more about it, and discovered it began in the Middle Ages.
Imagine it is Good Friday in the year 715 AD. An imposing monastery towers over a small medieval town, as the sun rises above the patchwork of fields and farms. The monks usually rise at dawn to begin their day with Matins, one of eight hours scheduled in each day during which they pray what is called the Divine Office. But on this Friday in Holy Week, two canonical hours (Matins and Lauds) will be offered together in the evening, so the village faithful can join the monks in a service to recall Christ’s last hours. The ritual is called Tennebrae, which means “shadows” or “darkness.”
The villagers enter the sanctuary, lit only by 15 candles lined up and down the large triangular candlestick holder that is mounted on a column. This “Tennebrae hearse” stands beside the altar. Surrounded by cold, stone walls, they shiver in this chilly spring evening, as they silently recall that awful death over 700 years ago. The service that begins in candlelight will end in near darkness.
Amazingly, this medieval ritual of shadows has survived the centuries in the Western church and is still enacted in some Catholic and Protestant churches during Holy Week. Depending on the denomination, or even the particular church, different verses of the Bible and hymns serve to recall Jesus’ last hours from the Last Supper to his sacrifice on the Cross.
Allow me to recall my first Tennebrae experience.
Upon entering the sanctuary, I noticed the window panes in the doors to the worship center were covered in black. The church was dim. I walked toward the altar on which stood seven candles on either side of a larger candle, called the “Christ candle.” Sliding into the pew next to my friend, I noticed that the large cross looming over our altar had been shrouded in black. I turned to her; she smiled, but didn’t say anything. It was not a time to speak.
The choir was dressed in black, as if ready for a funeral. Pastor walked forward, from the back of the church, with his acolyte, and they mounted the steps to the altar.
Ancient words — some Psalms, some from Lamentations, some from the Gospel of St. Paul — interspersed by prayer, led the faithful through Christ’s last hours. At intervals we joined the choir and sang hymns such as “Oh Sacred Head So Wounded,” and “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross.” In other churches, perhaps the choir would sing much older music such as the Kyrie Eleison (“Lord Have Mercy, Christ Have Mercy, Lord Have Mercy.”)
After each set of Scripture readings and worship, the acolyte extinguished one more candle, until the only light in the church came from the central Christ candle, burning to remind us of His coming resurrection.
A somber darkness hovered over us as the Christ candle tossed flickering shadows against the wall behind our altar. People seemed to be holding their breath. Suddenly the Pastor slammed the large Bible shut, sending a retort like a gunshot, through the church. I jumped, startled, at what I was to learn later was the “strepitus,” or "loud sound." In some churches a breviary or hymnal slammed against the pew, or stomping on the floor, creates the strepitus. Reminding us of the finality of Christ’s sacrifice, some say it could symbolize the earthquake at the moment of his death; or the stone as it struck against the opening of Christ’s tomb to seal him inside.
Tennebrae was over. We stood and left the sanctuary in silence. I felt deeply moved, as if I were walking away from the grave of a loved one.
I’m so thankful that of all the sacred rituals that have blessed the Western church over the centuries, only to disappear over time, we have somehow managed to keep this one.
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