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APR 2026 Holy Week Easter section

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Holy Week • Easter

BY EMMALEE ITALIA  Contributing Editor

H

oly Week recalls the final days of Jesus Christ’s life, unfolding through ritual, symbol and communal prayer. From the joyful procession of Palm Sunday to the radiant celebration of Easter Sunday, the week invites believers to move through shifting emotional and spiritual landscapes – what Bishop David M. O’Connell, C.M., described as a “week of crowds.” “The crowds welcome Jesus with great enthusiasm,” he reflected in his Palm Sunday homily in St. Anthony of Padua Parish, Hightstown, recalling Christ’s entrance into Jerusalem. Yet that same crowd changes as the week progresses: “By Holy Thursday, the town seems eerily quiet . . . the crowd becomes ugly on Good Friday . . . and the crowd is reduced.” His observation highlights one of Holy Week’s essential movements – not only the physical journey of Christ, but the interior journey of the faithful. “Holy Week invites us – not to remain in the shifting crowds – but to draw closer to Christ himself . . . To walk with him. To stay with him. To trust him.”

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Holy Week was commemorated across the Diocese with both traditional and special devotions, such as Living Stations of the Cross. This physical reenactment of Christ’s path to Calvary draws participants into the suffering and sacrifice of

the Passion, as experienced in St. Charles Borromeo Parish on Good Friday. Another powerful observance is Tenebrae, a service marked by the gradual extinguishing of candles, celebrated this year on Palm Sunday in St. Catherine Laboure Parish, Middletown. As light fades into darkness, it symbolizes the abandonment of Christ and the apparent triumph of death, often ending with a sudden noise evoking the chaos of the crucifixion. Cultural traditions, such as the blessing of Easter foods – typically on Holy Saturday morning – also form part of the broader Holy Week experience, linking faith with daily life and anticipation of celebration.  The Sacred Triduum – three evenings but one continuous liturgy – begins with Holy Thursday, commemorating the Last Supper and the institution of the Eucharist. The celebration includes the washing of feet, an act rich in meaning. “Jesus used what was common to create . . . a symbolic moment intended to make the point that we owe each other great respect and care,” Bishop O’Connell explained in his homily in St. Rose Church, Belmar. The gesture of humility is inseparable from the institution of the Eucharist, where “the bread became his Body, the wine, his Blood.” These actions together reveal what he called “the essence of

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A Story of Transformation A look back at the profound spiritual journey of Holy Week

A shot from Easter Sunday Sunrise Mass celebrated by the commuinity of St. Francis of Assisi, Long Beach Island. Facebook photo April 2026

 THE MONITOR MAGAZINE   9


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APR 2026 Holy Week Easter section by Diocese of Trenton - Issuu