Good Friday
Friday
immediately preceding Easter, celebrated by Christians as the anniversary
of Christ's crucifixion.
The name Good Friday is generally
believed to be a corruption of God's Friday. Since the time of the early
church, the day has been dedicated to penance, fasting, and prayer.
In the Roman Catholic church, the
Good Friday liturgy is composed of three distinct parts: readings and prayers,
including the reading of the Passion according to St. John; the veneration
of the cross; and a general communion service (formerly called the Mass
of the Presanctified), involving the reception of preconsecrated hosts
by the priest and faithful.
From the 16th century on, the Good
Friday service took place in the morning; in 1955 Pope Pius XII decreed
that it be held in the afternoon or evening. As a result, such traditional
afternoon devotions as the Tre Ore (Italian, “three hours”), consisting
of sermons, meditations, and prayers centering on the three-hour agony
of Christ on the cross, were almost entirely discontinued in the Roman
Catholic church.
In most of Europe, in South America,
in Great Britain and many parts of the Commonwealth, and in several states
of the U.S., Good Friday is a legal holiday.