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Christmas Doesn't End On the 25th

Liturgical Octaves
by Father Joseph Totton

I am often struck at the impatience with which some folks end their celebration of Christmas. Today, I walked into the local hospital, when I commented that the registration area looked like it had been remodeled, the admitting nurse looked at me with a blank face and replied, oh, yeah, they took down all the Christmas stuff! The reader should note that the Christmas stuff had been up since around Thanksgiving coinciding with what we, in North America, have come to experience as the Holiday Season. Not five minutes later I was in the chaplains office reviewing the Catholic census when one of the hospital staff chaplains asked, Father, did you have a nice Christmas? My cheerful response was, Yes, and I am still having it, I celebrate Christmas for at least eight days! Oh, he said, taking a page from the Jewish playbook?! I stopped for a moment to think about it, and said, something like that. I had parishioners to visit and didnt have time to talk to him about the concept of an Octave, but his comment set me to thinking about the origin of this ancient Christian practice of observing certain solemnities as Octaves. Currently, only two major solemnities enjoy the prolonged celebration of a liturgical Octave those of Our Lords Nativity and His Glorious Resurrection. When the liturgical calendar was revised after the second Vatican Council, many such octaves were suppressed, including one for Pentecost, for Epiphany, and even Corpus Christi, among many others. Whatever one may think of the suppression (or celebration) of these octaves, we should stop to consider the origin of the liturgical octave and its significance for twenty-first century Catholic Christians. The chaplains response set me to thinking of a celebration I had attended earlier in the week. A Jewish friend with whom I play ice hockey had invited me (among others) to his home for an informal celebration of Hanukkah. Many Christians are only vaguely familiar with the custom, and usually only then as it often coincides, roughly, with out celebration of Christmas. It is not my intention to go into great detail regarding Hanukkah, but suffice it to say, it is a celebration of the triumph of the Maccabbean revolt over the Hellenists who had defiled the Temple and compelled the Jews to abandon their proper worship of the One True God, and to embrace the worship of the Greek pantheon of false gods. Hanukkah is celebrated for eight days to commemorate that a single days supply of oil lasted for eight days. To this day, among Jewish families, Hanukkah (a festival of lights, often symbolized by the menorah fashioned on the menorah or lampstand from the Temple is celebrated not for a single day, but for eight days. It is not unreasonable to consider that the concept of an octave, or a period of eight days, was familiar to the apostles during the formation of the early Church. In addition to the Maccabbean victory, the apostles, all Jewish, would have also been familiar with the observance of the eight day festival Sukkot or Feast of the Tabernacles (see Leviticus 23:34), but the resurrection brought about another reason for the observance of liturgical

Octaves. In the Early Church, Sunday was reckoned to be the first day (the day of creation) but following upon the Sabbath (of seventh day) early Christians observed it also as an eighth day the day when Jesus Resurrection from the dead turned the world upside down! So great was this change that it led the Church to move the observance of the Sabbath to the Dies Domini or Day of the Lord. Let us also recall that just as Jesus had appeared to the Apostles in the upper room in the evening of His Resurrection and again, eight days later when they were gathered once more. Thus the Christian liturgical octave has its roots in Jewish observance, but developed as a natural means of celebrating the Mysteries of Our Lord. If we wish to understand the significance of the Octave, it is simply an extension of the solemnity of whatever mystery is being observed. By observing the octave the Church is saying, in effect, that this mystery (be it the Incarnation or the Resurrection the only two official liturgical octaves in the [ordinary form] Roman Calendar) is too great to be celebrated for a mere day. She says this Mystery must be unfolded, and we need time to do that. Liturgically speaking, the prayers of the Mass and of the Office, the readings chosen for these services, typically unpack various aspects of these Mysteries and help us to celebrate more fully! Yet the octave goes a bit further. Just as the concept of Sunday as an eighth day expresses the intersection of time and eternity, so the celebration of a liturgical octave also helps us to understand the eternal significance, that the Incarnation (or the Resurrection) is not a mere earthly event, but that these mysteries represent the confluence of time and eternity. Just as we celebrate such Solemnities (and their respective octaves) within the Church (through official forms of worship) so we should also celebrate them in the home, in our daily lives. While it is not possible to go full bore for eight days, with feasting, one may, and should, insert some element of festivity into the principal meal. We should use these days (whether of Christmas or Easter) to invite family and friends to share in our celebration. In the case of Christmas, so many well-meaning people begin celebrating the season on Thanksgiving day and are, understandably exhausted by the start of Christmas. If we re-order our lives around the liturgical calendar, we will begin observing the month of December as a time of preparation primarily interior preparation for the coming of our Lord, then when Christmas actually arrives we will be poised to shift into the more festive celebration. Finally, I would like to offer a reflection on the rich tapestry of feasts which are observed within the Christmas Octave. Unlike the Easter Octave, which trumps the sanctoral calendar (feasts of various saints), the Christmas Octave, falling every year on the same dates (12/25-1/1), encompasses various saints feast days. Days 2 and 3 of the octave commemorate first century saints St. Stephen, protomartyr, and St. John, apostle and evangelist. The fourth day of the octave (December 28) is in commemoration of the Holy Innocents those children who were massacred by Herod in his rage as he sought to destroy Jesus. Day 5 is the feast of St. Thomas Becket, the twelfth century bishop who was martyred for his defense of the primacy of the Roman Pontiff. The Sunday within the octave is in commemoration of the Holy Family of Nazareth (This year, since the Octave begins and ends on Sunday, the Holy Family is transferred to Friday, December

30). Finally, the penultimate day of the octave is in commemoration of St. Sylvester, the fourth century pope whose reign coincided with the Constantinian reforms of that period. I mention each of these saints and/or mysteries as a means of considering that in the lives of His followers, we see the impact of the Divine Word who became man and was born at Bethlehem. We might wish to imagine a nativity scene which includes men and women from throughout the twenty-one centuries of the Church whose lives, motivated by the Mystery of the Incarnation, had an impact upon the world around them. In this, we can grasp the call for our lives to be energized, motivated, by the liturgical celebration of these same mysteries, but lives whose impact is felt far beyond the doors of the Church, or a single calendar day! Merry Christmas!!!

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