Channel Button

There are 34 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #1 by Helium's members.

Relationships & Family   >

Easter

Commentary: Why churches are packed on Easter and not on regular Sundays

Simply put most Catholic/Christian churches are packed on Easter because of the Catholic belief of one's 'Easter Duty'. Some debate whether this duty is an official church rule or people who never go simply made the term up as a way to say they go to church on the most important day of the year. Also some claim that since Easter masses are long and generally require going multiple times in one weekend, that makes up for missing shorter masses.

The idea is that by going to church twice a year on Christmas and Easter one is fulfilling their duty of going to church by going to church on the most holy and religious days of the year. Although some debate suggests that Good Friday is in fact the holiest day of the Catholic calender year because it is a solemn day marking when Christ died.

Some people also tie in the tradition of going to church on Easter because they have been doing it for years. For them it has little religious value and they simply do it as part of the Easter holiday in between easter baskets, easter egg hunts, and ham dinners.

I was an altar server from about age 9 to about age 19 and saw this increased attendance every year. We put a lot of time and effort into perfecting every aspect of this event from every piece of clothing to counting steps taken to proper lighting and obsessively on time signals and cues. Again many people seemed to attend for the 'glamor' factor of it all. After all on Holy Saturday (Easter Eve) most churches have long and elaborate masses filled with many stories, intense mood altering lighting, long processions, and very ornate vestments and items. Not to mention elaborately decorated altars. I know many of us altar servers when we became teenagers seemed to take pride in our 'work' and it seemed to be more an act of how well we could put on this show then a strictly religious event. It also became more of a 'job' to put on a full scale special mass with us contributing hours a day to rehearsals and masses; from the Tuesday before Easter to the Monday after it was a full time responsibility. Not to say that it isn't religious at its root, but there is a lot more incentive and 'entertainment' if you will in Easter Eve mass.

Learn more about this author, Maxwell Payne.
Contact this writer Click here to send author comments or questions.


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Commentary: Why churches are packed on Easter and not on regular Sundays

  • 1 of 34

    by Maxwell Payne

    Simply put most Catholic/Christian churches are packed on Easter because of the Catholic belief of one's 'Easter Duty... read more

  • 2 of 34

    by Ann Marie Dwyer

    What defines Christians as such is their belief that Christ rose from the dead and ascended to Heaven, as the final s... read more

  • 3 of 34

    by Pam Uher

    Easter is the most significant celebration of the Christian faith. It is the "High Season of the Church" and the hol... read more

  • 4 of 34

    by Michelle White

    Churches are packed out on Easter and other holiday's because people are accustomed and programmed by tradition. If w... read more

  • 5 of 34

    by Vonda Sines

    Many regular churchgoers dread Easter even though Christians commemorate it as a holy day and a magnificent celebrati... read more

View All Articles on:
Commentary: Why churches are packed on Easter and not on regular Sundays

Add your voice

Know something about Commentary: Why churches are packed on Easter and not on regular Sundays?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Who should pay for the Valentine's Day dinner?

Click for your side. Must be logged in.

170382

Featured Partner

International Campaign for Tibet (ICT)

International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) believes there must be a political solution to the Tibet issue, based on direc...more

What is Helium? | User Guide | Community | Link to Helium | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA