Good Friday in the Orthodox Church is when we commemorate Christ’s crucifixion, death, and burial through three major services: the Royal Hours in the morning, Vespers in the afternoon, and the Matins service (which we often call the Service of the Twelve Gospels) in the evening.
The day starts early. The Royal Hours aren’t your typical morning prayer, they’re expanded services at the third, sixth, and ninth hours with special hymns that stop you in your tracks. “Today He who hung the earth upon the waters is hung upon a tree.” That’s the refrain you’ll hear, and it captures the cosmic reversal happening on this day. God is dying.
At Vespers, usually around 3 p.m. (the hour Christ died), we take down the Cross that’s been in the center of the church. There’s kneeling. There’s silence between the chanted prayers. The priest censes the church, and you can smell the incense mixing with the flowers people have brought.
But the evening service is what people remember.
The Matins service features twelve Gospel readings that walk through Christ’s Passion from the Last Supper to the burial. It’s long, often two hours or more. Between each Gospel, we sing hymns and the priest censes the entire church. The readings come from all four Gospels, and by the time you’ve heard all twelve, you’ve lived through that night with Christ. The betrayal, the trials, the mockery, the nails, the darkness, the death.
Then comes the Epitaphios. It’s an embroidered cloth icon showing Christ laid out in death, and it’s been decorated with flowers, roses, lilies, whatever people bring from their gardens here in Southeast Texas. The priest lifts it (sometimes with help because these things can be heavy and unwieldy) and carries it in procession around the inside of the church. We’re processing with Christ’s body to the tomb. Everyone holds candles. We sing the Lamentations, these haunting hymns that are part funeral dirge, part theology lesson. “Come, let us see our Life lying in the tomb, that He may give life to those that in their tombs lie dead.”
After the procession, the Epitaphios is placed on a table in the center of the church, usually surrounded by more flowers. We call this the tomb. And then everyone comes forward to venerate it, to kiss it, to bow before it, to stand there for a moment looking at the image of God dead.
This isn’t symbolic. We’re not pretending or playacting. Orthodox theology says that God truly died on Good Friday. Not just Christ’s human nature, though His divinity remained united to His body and soul even in death. The Second Person of the Trinity experienced death. That’s what makes our salvation possible. Death itself had to be invaded from the inside.
If you’re coming from a Protestant background, this might feel unfamiliar. Many Baptist and non-denominational churches in Beaumont have Good Friday services, but they’re usually shorter, focused on preaching or maybe a dramatic reading. We don’t do the Stations of the Cross like Catholics do. Our approach is more immersive, more liturgical. We’re not watching Christ’s Passion, we’re entering into it through these ancient services that go back to the church in Jerusalem.
The fasting on Good Friday is strict. No meat, dairy, fish, oil, or wine. Some people eat nothing at all until after the evening service. It’s the darkest day of the year liturgically, and the fast reflects that. We’re mourning.
The Epitaphios stays in the center of the church overnight and into Holy Saturday. Christ is in the tomb. We sit with that reality. Saturday morning there’s another service where we’ll process with it again, but Friday night we leave it there. The tomb is occupied. The stone is rolled in place.
And we wait.
If you’ve never been to an Orthodox Good Friday service, come. St. Michael’s services will be packed, and yes, you’ll be standing for a long time (bring comfortable shoes). But there’s something about walking around that flower-covered image of Christ’s body, candle in hand, that makes His death real in a way that’s hard to explain. You’re not just remembering something that happened two thousand years ago. You’re there.
