Holy Week isn’t like the rest of the year. The services are longer, darker, and more intense. We’re not commemorating events from a distance. We’re walking through them.
Most Sunday Liturgies last about ninety minutes. The Twelve Gospels service on Holy Thursday night runs three to four hours. You stand through twelve readings from the Passion accounts while the priest carries a large cross through the church and people venerate it. Your feet hurt. That’s part of it. We’re keeping vigil while Christ suffers, and the Church doesn’t let us forget that discipleship has a physical cost.
The whole week feels different the moment you walk in. During the year, our church is bright. Icons glow under lamplight, the altar cloth is gold or green or red depending on the feast, and there’s a sense of celebration even on ordinary Wednesdays. But Holy Week strips all that away. The altar stands bare after Holy Thursday. Black vestments replace the usual colors. In some parishes, icons get veiled. A single candle flickers where there used to be many. It’s stark, and it’s supposed to be.
The services themselves follow Christ’s final week in Jerusalem step by step. We start with Palm Sunday, waving palms and singing “Hosanna,” but the hymns already mention the cross. By Monday night we’re singing about the Bridegroom coming at midnight, and the tone shifts to judgment and watchfulness. Tuesday and Wednesday repeat that Bridegroom theme. These aren’t just memorial services. The Church believes we’re entering into the events themselves, becoming present to what happened two thousand years ago.
Wednesday night brings the Anointing service. If you’ve never experienced Orthodox Holy Unction, it’s powerful. Seven Gospel readings, seven prayers, and the priest anoints everyone with oil for healing and forgiveness. People who work the plants around here sometimes can’t make every service because of their rotation schedules, but they try hard to make Holy Wednesday. There’s something about being anointed before the crucifixion that prepares you for what’s coming.
Holy Thursday morning we celebrate the Liturgy of St. Basil, remembering the Last Supper. Then that night comes the Twelve Gospels. Twelve readings. Twelve accounts of betrayal, trial, mockery, crucifixion. The priest processes with the cross, and we venerate it one by one. Some people weep. Others stand silent. You can’t do this service and remain unmoved.
Friday is the hardest day. There’s no Liturgy because Christ is dead. We serve the Royal Hours in the morning, reading the Passion accounts again at specific times. Then Friday afternoon we have Vespers, and the priest brings out the Epitaphios, a cloth icon showing Christ’s body being taken down from the cross. We process around the church with it, singing the funeral hymns. It feels like a real funeral because in a sense it is. We’re burying God.
Friday night we return for the Lamentations. More funeral hymns, more standing, more grief. The service is beautiful and heartbreaking. We sing “Today He who hung the earth upon the waters is hung upon the Cross.” The paradoxes pile up. The immortal One dies. The Giver of life is laid in a tomb. We don’t rush past these contradictions. We sit in them.
Saturday morning the church is silent and waiting. That evening we serve the Liturgy of St. Basil again, the barest Liturgy of the year, and then just before midnight everything changes. The lights go out. We wait in darkness. And then the priest comes out with a single candle and sings, “Come, receive the light,” and suddenly it’s Pascha and Christ is risen and the whole week of darkness explodes into joy.
That’s what makes Holy Week different. It’s not about information. We’re not learning facts about what happened to Jesus. We’re walking through it ourselves, letting the Church guide us from triumph to betrayal to death to resurrection. The services are long because transformation takes time. They’re dark because we have to enter the tomb before we can experience the empty tomb. They’re physically demanding because salvation isn’t just a mental concept.
Fr. Alexander Schmemann wrote that in Holy Week, “the Church becomes what she is.” All year we celebrate the resurrection every Sunday, but in Holy Week we remember that resurrection only comes through the cross. You can’t skip from Palm Sunday to Pascha and understand what we’re celebrating. You have to walk the whole way.
If you’ve never been to Holy Week services, start with one or two. Come to the Twelve Gospels, or come Friday evening for the burial service. You don’t have to make every service to participate. But once you’ve experienced Holy Week in the Orthodox Church, regular Sundays feel different. You remember what they cost.
