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Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity - COMID The
mission of the Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity (COMID) is to foster our community and
environment where the richness of our diversity is
recognized, respected and embraced. Our view on diversity
includes, but is not limited to, ethnic, racial and
linguistic heritage; religious traditions; gender; sexual
orientation; age; and socioeconomic status.
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he Cary Academy Committee
on Multicultural Initiatives and Diversity (COMID) would
like to inform the community about the week from Palm Sunday
through Easter, April 9 – April16, 2006.
Palm Sunday through
Easter

The Holiest
season of the Christian liturgical year is the week from
Palm Sunday through Easter Sunday. The date of Easter is
not a fixed yearly date and therefore changes each year.
Following a set of liturgical rules established in 325 ce,
Easter will always fall on a Sunday and can never occur
before March 22 or later than April 25. Several other
Christian Holy days fix their yearly celebration in
reference to the date of Easter. During the week between
Palm Sunday and Easter, Christians celebrate the events in
the last week of Jesus of Nazareth's life as recorded in the
Biblical text. This year Palm Sunday is April 9th and
Easter Sunday is April 16th. Eastern Orthodox Churches
calculate the Easter date according to the Julian calendar,
and will celebrate Easter Sunday this year on April 23rd.
The Christian
Holy week begins on Palm Sunday, one week before the Easter
celebration. This worship celebration marks the account of
Jesus' triumphal entry in Jerusalem. His greeting by crowds
waving palm branches is commemorated in many Churches with
the use of palm fronds.
Maundy Thursday
is the Thursday before Easter. Its name comes from the
Latin version of Jesus' words, "A new command (mandatum) I
give to you." This celebration marks the Last Supper, which
Jesus shared with his disciples in Jerusalem. The Christian
tradition of using bread and wine to celebrate the life,
death, and resurrection of Jesus comes from the Biblical
account of this meal.
The most important events in
Christianity are the death and later resurrection of Jesus
Christ, the Jewish prophet believed by Christians to be the
Son of God, and whose life and teachings are the foundation
of the Christian faith. Good Friday is the Friday before
Easter and is marked as a day of mourning in Christian
churches. It marks the day on which Jesus was executed by
crucifixion. In many churches a special service of
meditation, readings, and hymns remembers Jesus' seven last
words from the cross.
The Great Easter vigil, celebrated in
some churches, occurs on the Saturday night before Easter.
It marks the confidently hopeful waiting of Christians for
the return of Jesus at midnight. This return is
symbolically marked by the lighting of a special candle
known as the "Paschal" candle. Its use symbolizes the
return of Christ as the "light of the world". The Easter
Vigil often begins outdoors and the lit candle is carried
into a darkened Church where, among prayers and readings,
worshippers light their individual candles from the Paschal
candle.
The Easter Sunday service is the most
important Christian Holy day and marks the resurrection of
Jesus. It is celebrated with great joy, special hymns, and
readings. In many churches the word "Halleluiah" returns to
worship, not having been pronounced during the season of
Lent. George Frederic Handel's musical composition
"The Messiah"
which includes the well-known
"Halleluiah Chorus"
is an example of this practice. Some Churches mark the day
with special services at sunrise. There are many cultural
practices and traditions which have also come to be
associated with the celebration of Easter.
(Written by Matthew
Ripley-Moffitt for COMID, April 2006)
Best regards
Jason Franklin
Director of Diversity
Cary Academy
919.228.4571
http://web1.caryacademy.org/comid/default.htm
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