Holy Saturday

I sort of wanted to post something about Holy Saturday, but haven't had time, so I'll link to this, from Sally Thomas, instead.

The thought I had, that I wanted to elaborate on, but which, now that I think about it, perhaps needs no elaboration, is this: in a sense most of our lives, at least the rest of our lives after we really learn the meaning of pain, is spent in Holy Saturday: the suspended time between death and the possibility of some kind of resurrection. I don't think that hope is entirely absent even in those who don't believe. It has a way of not being dead even when you think it is.


14 responses to “Holy Saturday”

  1. Yes, it has a way of not being dead even when you would like it be.
    AMDG

  2. That wasn’t meant to sound so dire.
    AMDG

  3. I don’t think it did sound dire. It strikes me as true, though. And epigrammatic (if that’s the word I want).

  4. No, I didn’t think so, either. Though it’s paradoxical: you don’t completely want it to be–if you did, it would be.

  5. Thanks for the link, Maclin.
    Tangentially, my husband has pointed out that Christ’s being in the tomb on Holy Saturday (though He’s also off harrowing hell?) is a fulfillment of the Law: no rising from the dead on the Sabbath.
    After reading his comment, I was also trying to put together a thought about a new creation — God doing the work of restoring man to (at least the hope of) Eden, then resting on the Sabbath. Of course, if He’s harrowing Hell, then He’s not completely resting . . . not being the family theologian, I’m not sure about all this.

  6. You’re welcome. Also not being a theologian, I will also let the Sabbath question go.

  7. Francesca

    I am reading parts of the Wakefield Mystery with my class tomorrow, including the ‘Harrowing’ and it says he stays in hell in fulfillment of the law.

  8. Something tells me there is no de fide statement on this. Although that idea seems a bit more plausible as an explanation for the three days than the keeping of the Sabbath.

  9. Well, the “no rising from the dead” was my gloss on his comment: “Christ in the tomb on the Sabbath: His last act of keeping the law in its fullness.”

  10. Francesca

    I was aiming to note the agreement of the Wakefield Mystery with Sally’s husband.

  11. Oh, I thought you were saying they were in contradiction.

  12. You are allowed to pull people out of pits on the sabbath. I’m sure it says that somewhere.

  13. Well, oxen anyway, and I would suspect that implies people.
    AMDG

  14. Ah, I see, Francesca. I read that as a contradiction at first, too — not that that would have been a bad thing! It’s interesting that on every level the Law is perfectly kept and completed.

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