Tenebrae ([1] —Latin for 'darkness') is a religious service of Western Christianity held during the three days preceding Easter Day, and characterized by gradual extinguishing of candles, and by a "strepitus" or "loud noise" taking place in total darkness near the end of the service.
Tenebrae was originally a celebration of matins and lauds of the last three days of Holy Week (Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday) in the evening of the previous day (Holy Wednesday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday) to the accompaniment of special ceremonies that included the display of lighted candles on a special triangular candelabra.[2] [3]
Modern celebrations called Tenebrae may be of quite different content and structure, based for example on the Seven Last Words or readings of the Passion of Jesus. They may be held on only one day of Holy Week, especially Spy Wednesday (Holy Wednesday).[4] [5] They may be held during the daylight hours and the number of candles, if used, may vary.
Tenebrae liturgical celebrations of this kind now exist in the Catholic Church's Latin liturgical rites, Lutheranism, Anglicanism, Methodism, Reformed churches and Western Rite Orthodoxy.[6]
In the Catholic Church, "Tenebrae" is the name given to the celebration, with special ceremonies, of matins and lauds, the first two hours of the Divine Office of each of the last three days of Holy Week. In the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church Tenebrae was celebrated in all churches with a sufficient number of clergy until the liturgical reforms of Pope Pius XII in the 1950s. The traditions regarding this service go back at least to the ninth century.[7] Matins, originally celebrated a few hours after midnight, and lauds, originally celebrated at dawn, were anticipated by the late Middle Ages on the afternoon or evening of the preceding day,[8] and were given the name "Tenebrae" because concluding when darkness was setting in.[9]
The celebration of matins and lauds of these days on the previous evening in the form referred to as Tenebrae in churches with a sufficient number of clergy was universal in the Roman Rite until the reform of the Holy Week ceremonies by Pope Pius XII in 1955. He restored the Easter Vigil as a night office, moving that Easter liturgy from Holy Saturday morning to the following night and likewise moved the principal liturgies of Holy Thursday and Good Friday from morning to afternoon or evening. Thus matins and lauds of Good Friday and Holy Saturday could no longer be anticipated on the preceding evening, and even matins and lauds of Holy Thursday was allowed to be anticipated only in the case of cathedral churches in which the Chrism Mass was held on Holy Thursday morning.[10]
The 1960 Code of Rubrics, which was incorporated in the next typical edition of the Roman Breviary, published on 5 April 1961, a year ahead of the publication of the 1962 edition of the Roman Missal,[11] [12] [13] [14] allowed no anticipation whatever of lauds, though matins alone could still be anticipated to the day before, later than the hour of vespers.[15]
In sum:
The structure is the same for all three days. The first part of the service is matins, which in its pre-1970 form is composed of three nocturns, each consisting of three psalms, a versicle, a silent Pater noster, and three readings, each followed by a responsory. The pre-1970 lauds consists of five psalms, a short versicle and response, and the Benedictus Gospel canticle, followed by Christus factus est, a silent Pater Noster, and the appointed collect. The Gloria Patri is not said after each psalm.[16] [17]
The principal Tenebrae ceremony is the gradual extinguishing of candles upon a stand in the sanctuary called a hearse.[18] Eventually, the Roman Rite settled on fifteen candles, one of which is extinguished after each of the nine psalms of matins and the five of lauds. The six altar candles are put out during the Benedictus, gradually reducing also the lighting in the church throughout the chanting of the canticle.[19] Then any remaining lights in the church are extinguished and the last candle on the hearse is hidden behind the altar (if the altar is such as does not hide the light, the candle, still lit, is put inside a candle lantern),[20] ending the service in total darkness. The strepitus (Latin for "great noise"), made by slamming a book shut, banging a hymnal or breviary against the pew, or stomping on the floor, symbolizes the earthquake that followed Christ's death, although it may have originated as a simple signal to depart.[8] After the candle has been shown to the people, it is extinguished, and then put "on the credence table," or simply taken to the sacristy. All rise and then leave in silence.[21]
The 1 November 1911 reform of the Roman Breviary by Pope Pius X radically reorganized the weekly recitation of the Psalter. In the Tridentine Roman Breviary of Pope Pius V (1568), Psalms 62/63 and 66/67 (treated as a single unit) and Psalms 148–150 (again treated as a single unit) were recited at lauds every day of the week. Pius X eliminated such repetitions and provided a quite different choice of psalms for lauds.
The situation before the 1911 reform is illustrated in 19th-century publications such as Prosper Guéranger's Passiontide and Holy Week, (Dublin 1870)[17] and The Complete Office of Holy Week According to the Roman Missal and Breviary, in Latin and English (Benziger 1875).[16] It is more difficult to find similar online 20th-century publication, but the text of the Tenebrae services as reformed by Pope Pius X in 1911 is available in the 1924 edition of the Liber Usualis.[22] The 1961 edition, with English rubrics and explanations, is available on more than one site.[23]
(note: Psalm numbering as in the Vulgate) | Maundy Thursday | Good Friday | Holy Saturday | Practices |
---|---|---|---|---|
Matins | ||||
First Nocturn (readings from the Lamentations of Jeremiah) | ||||
Antiphon | Zelus domus | Astiterunt reges terrae | In pace | |
Psalm | Psalm 68 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|68|63) | Psalm 2 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|2|63) | Psalm 4 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|4|63) | 1st candle extinguished at end |
Antiphon | Avertantur retrorsum | Diviserunt sibi | Habitabit in tabernaculo | |
Psalm | Psalm 69 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|69|63) | Psalm 21 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|21|63) | Psalm 14 (English: {{Bibleverse|Psalm|14|63) | 2nd candle extinguished |
Antiphon | Deus meus eripe me | Insurrexerunt in me | Caro mea | |
Psalm | Psalm 70[24] | Psalm 26[25] | Psalm 15[26] | 3rd candle extinguished at end |
Versicle | Avertantur retrorsum | Diviserunt sibi | In pace in idipsum | |
Our Father (silent) | ||||
1st reading | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|1:1–1:5|63 | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|2:8–2:11|63 | ||
1st responsory | In monte Oliveti | Omnes amici mei | Sicut ovis | |
2nd reading | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|1:6–1:9|63 | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|2:12–2:15|63 | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|4:1–4:6|63 | |
2nd responsory | Tristis est anima mea | Velum templi | Jerusalem surge | |
3rd reading | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|3:1–3:9|63 | English: {{Bibleverse|Lamentations|5:1–5:11|63 | ||
3rd responsory | Ecce vidimus | Vinea mea | Plange quasi virgo | |
Second Nocturn (readings from Saint Augustine's Commentaries on the Psalms) | ||||
Antiphon | Liberavit Dominus | Vim faciebant | Elevamini | |
Psalm | Psalm 71[27] | Psalm 37[28] | Psalm 23[29] | 4th candle extinguished at end |
Antiphon | Cogitaverunt impii | Confundantur | Credo videre | |
Psalm | Psalm 72[30] | Psalm 39[31] | Psalm 26[32] | 5th candle extinguished at end |
Antiphon | Exsurge, Domine | Alieni insurrexerunt | Domine, abstraxisti | |
Psalm | Psalm 73[33] | Psalm 53[34] | Psalm 29[35] | 6th candle extinguished at end |
Versicle | Deus meus, eripe me | Insurrexerunt in me | Tu autem | |
Our Father (silent) | ||||
4th reading | from Comm. on Psalm 54[36] | from Commentary on Psalm 63[37] | ||
4th responsory | Amicus meus | Tamquam ad latronem | Recessit pastor noster | |
5th reading | from Comm. on Psalm 54 | from Commentary on Psalm 63 | ||
5th responsory | Judas mercator pessimus | Tenebrae factae sunt | O vos omnes | |
6th reading | from Comm. on Psalm 54 | from Commentary on Psalm 63 | ||
6th responsory | Unus ex discipulis | Animam meam dilectam | Ecce quomodo | |
Third Nocturn (readings from two New Testament epistles) | ||||
Antiphon | Dixi iniquis | Ab insurgentibus | Deus adjuvat me | |
Psalm | Psalm 74[38] | Psalm 58[39] |
| 11th candle extinguished at end|-| Antiphon| Contritum est cor meum| Ait latro ad latronem| Attendite|-! Psalm| Psalms 62+66[41] (pre-1912)
Psalm 35[42] (from 1912)| Psalms 62+66[41] (pre-1912)
Psalm 84[43] (from 1912)| Psalms 62+66[41] (pre-1912)
Psalm 63[44] (from 1912)| 12th candle extinguished at end|-| Antiphon| Exhortatus es| Dum conturbata| A porta inferi|-! Old Testament
canticle| Canticle of Moses
English: {{Bibleverse|Exodus|15:1–15:18|63| Canticle of Habacuc
English: {{Bibleverse|Habakkuk|3:2–3:19|63| Canticle of Ezechias
English: {{Bibleverse|Isaiah|38:10–38:20|63| 13th candle extinguished at end|-| Antiphon| Oblatus est| Memento mei| O vos omnes qui transitis|-! Psalm| Psalms 148+149+150[45] (pre-1912)
Psalm 146[46] (from 1912)| Psalms 148+149+150[45] (pre-1912)
Psalm 147[47] (from 1912)| Psalms 148+149+150[45] (pre-1912)
Psalm 150[48] (from 1912)| 14th candle extinguished at end|-| Versicle| Homo pacis meae| Collocavit me| Caro mea|-| Antiphon| Traditor autem| Posuerunt super caput| Mulieres sedentes|-! Benedictus| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | Canticle of Zachary
English: {{Bibleverse|Luke|1:68–1:79|63| Altar candles extinguished at
different verses of Benedictus;
Last burning candle hidden
after repeat of antiphon|-|| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | Christus factus est (based on English: {{Bibleverse|Philippians|2:8–2:9|63)|-|| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | Our Father (silent)|-|| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | Psalm 50[49] (Miserere), omitted after 1955[50] [51] ||-! Prayer| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | Respice quaesumus| Followed by strepitus;
last candle brought back|-|}
See also: Lamentations of Jeremiah the Prophet, Leçons de ténèbres and Responsories for Holy Week. The lessons of the first nocturn at matins are taken on all three days from the Book of Lamentations and are sung to a specific Gregorian reciting tone,[52] which has been called "the saddest melody within the whole range of music".[53] The Lamentations of Jeremiah the Prophet have been set to polyphonic music by many composers, including Palestrina, Tallis and Lassus. Such High-Renaissance polyphonic choral settings of Lamentations at Tenebrae, culminating in those of Lassus (1584), share the same texts with, but in musical idiom are to be distinguished from, the French Baroque genre of Leçons de ténèbres, as composed by Marc-Antoine Charpentier (54 settings, H.91 - H.144), Michel Lambert, and François Couperin. In the 20th century Ernst Krenek wrote a Lamentatio Jeremiae prophetae, Op. 93 (1941–1942), and Igor Stravinsky composed Threni (1957–1958).
Each day, the lessons of the second nocturn are from writings of St. Augustine, and the lessons of the third nocturn from two New Testament epistles. These are chanted to the ordinary lesson tone and have been relatively neglected by composers, though there are a few settings by Manuel Cardoso.
The Tenebrae responsories have been set by, among others, Lassus, Gesualdo, Victoria, Marc-Antoine Charpentier, Francesco Antonio Vallotti, and Jan Dismas Zelenka. Gregorio Allegri's setting of the Miserere psalm, to be sung at the Tenebrae Lauds, is one of the best known compositions for the service. Also Gesualdo includes a setting of that psalm in his Responsoria et alia ad Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae spectantia, along with a setting of the Benedictus.
After the 1970 revision of the Roman Breviary, now called the Liturgy of the Hours, a 1988 circular letter from the Congregation for Divine Worship recommended communal celebration of the Office of Readings and Morning Prayer − which were formerly called matins and lauds − on Good Friday and Holy Saturday, and remarked that this office was "formerly called 'Tenebrae'".[54] The General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours says: "Before morning Lauds on Good Friday and Holy Saturday, the Office of Readings is, if possible, to be celebrated publicly and with the people taking part."[55] The Ceremonial of Bishops (1984) says: "It is also desirable that, if at all possible, the bishop take part with the clergy and people in the office of readings and morning prayer on Good Friday and Holy Saturday."[56] The Office of Readings and Morning Prayer have only 6 psalms (3 in either hour), not the older form's 14, after each of which a candle was extinguished. The readings are no longer 3, divided into 9 sections, but 2 longer readings, and there is provision for extending the Office of Readings on more solemn occasions.[57] In the older form, liturgical practice on those days differed from that on other days, even those of Lent: for instance, Gloria Patri was not included at the end of psalms and responsories.[58] The office of Tenebrae was abandoned at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem only in 1977 − although the rule against anticipation of Matins and Lauds to the previous evening was already in effect there − because the times of Catholic Holy Week services had to remain unchanged due to the established rights of other churches.[59]
Summorum Pontificum (2007) permits clerics bound to recitation of the Divine Office to use the 1961 Roman Breviary. Several religious and secular institutes and societies of apostolic life have availed themselves of this permission. The 1955 and 1960 changes incorporated into that edition of the Breviary continue to exclude anticipation of matins and lauds to the previous evening, whether celebrated with or without the Tenebrae ceremonies.
Services called Tenebrae, differing in several respects from the original form and not necessarily connected with Holy Week, are held even where the pre-Vatican II 1961 Roman Breviary is not used:
Unlike the original well-attended Tenebrae, these modern adaptations have attracted little attention on the part of musical composers.
Some Protestant denominations retained elements of the Roman Tenebrae liturgy, or added others. The Tenebrae services in the Lutheran and Anglican traditions, as well as in Methodist and Reformed (inclusive of Continental Reformed, Presbyterian and Congregationalist denominations) churches that hold them, all contain "the pattern of extinguishing the candles (and the overhead lights) and restoring the Christ candle", along with the strepitus. Some liturgical Baptist congregations also hold Tenebrae Services.[65] Variations of Tenebrae are sometimes celebrated in less formal or non-denominational churches as well.
In Lutheran churches that observe the celebration, the Tenebrae service is typically held on Holy Wednesday (Spy Wednesday) as the following days that form the Paschal Triduum have set liturgies.[66] [67] There is a gradual dimming of the lights and extinguishing of the candles as the service progresses. Toward the end of the service, the Christ candle, if present, is removed from the sanctuary. A concluding Strepitus, or loud noise, typically made by slamming shut the Bible, is made, symbolizing the earthquake that took place, and the agony of creation, at the death of Christ.
Certain Tenebrae responsory settings have led their own life in Lutheran practice, for instance:
Most Anglican churches that celebrate the Tenebrae service do so only on Wednesday, so as not to deflect attention from the Holy Thursday and Good Friday practices. But this practice is not universal.
In its Book of Occasional Services, the Episcopal Church (United States) provides for a single Tenebrae service on Holy Wednesday in the evening. That service preserves the number of nine Tenebrae lessons, each followed by a responsory.[70] Church Publishing also offers a booklet called, In the Shadows of Holy Week: The Office of Tenebrae. It provides the full ancient form of Tenebrae as it appears in basic outline in The Book of Occasional Services. This booklet develops that outline providing all of the materials necessary for a recitation of the office: All of the psalms, canticles, responsories, antiphons, and readings are reproduced in full. Rubrics guide participants through each phase of the service. [71]
Parishes of the Anglican Church of Canada that do celebrate Tenebrae follow a variety of practices. The Church of St. Mary Magdalene (Toronto) is notable for the excellence of its music, of which the musical Tenebrae services are exemplary. Christ Church Cathedral (Fredericton) uses Tenebrae in a sung traditional language form on the Wednesday evening of Holy Week which includes lessons from Jeremiah with responding psalms, the fourth being from John 17, and Benedictus. At the Church of the Epiphany (Oakville) Tenebrae is described as the reversal of the Advent wreath: "starting Lent with the brightness of six candles, the darkness grows as a candle is extinguished each week in anticipation of Jesus dying on the cross on Good Friday." This abbreviated Tenebrae liturgy begins worship services on Sundays during Lent.[72] The Sisterhood of Saint John the Divine have their own liturgy, "The Order of Tenebrae", published in 1933.[73]
In the Methodist tradition, fourteen candles, along with a central Christ candle, are lit on the Tenebrae hearse after the Opening Prayer. They are consequently extinguished after each of the Tenebrae lessons. Prior to the reading of the sixteenth lesson, the Christ candle on the Tenebrae hearse is extinguished and then the church bells are tolled. The sixteenth lesson is read in darkness, followed by the conclusion of the liturgy.[74]
The Polish National Catholic service usually takes place on Good Friday, mostly at night. A standing cross is put on the altar with a black veil over it and 12 to 14 candles are placed behind it. The service has a combination of Bitter Lamentations, Matins, and Vespers. Several of the PNCC clergy, vested with cantors, are seated at the high place and the service is chanted. Gradually a minor cleric puts out each candle except for the top one that is taken around the sanctuary into the vestry. At that time a moment of silence is held for Christ's death. Then the candle is placed back; the lights in the church are turned back on; and the final hymns are sung.
Congregationalist versions of Tenebrae service, particularly on Maundy Thursday or Good Friday, often contain readings from the gospels which describe the time between the Last Supper and the Passion of Christ.[75] [76]
Some Western Rite Orthodox parishes observe the service of Tenebrae. Among the Byzantine Rite Orthodox the nearest equivalent is Matins of Great Friday, when a candlestick with 12 candles is set up in the center of the temple behind the analogion from which the Twelve Passion Gospels are read. However, here after each reading one of the candles is lit rather than extinguished.