Beginning with the Easter Triduum as its source of light, the new age of the resurrection fills the whole liturgical year with its brilliance.
Catechism of the Catholic Church #1168
Set a festive table — a large low table your group can gather around and sit on the floor, or a regular table that all can sit around. Set it with three candles, plates, and wine or juice glasses for all. Place the following symbolic foods for the meal in the center:
Matzos (unleavened bread);
A drink for making toasts. Sparkling catawba juice makes a festive substitute for wine.
Gathering
LEADER: On the first day of Passover, the Festival of Unleavened Bread, the day before he died, Jesus gathered with his closest friends for a sacred meal in an upstairs room. Now, we also gather in our upper room to pray and to celebrate the care God has shown us through Jesus and through each other.
Blessing of Light
Light one candle with each blessing.
CANDLE 1: Creator God, you light our days with sun and our nights with stars. You turn our world toward spring and bring us to this night of freedom.
ALL: Blessed are you, Creator God, Giver of Light.
CANDLE 2: Compassionate God, open our eyes to the holy in our human lives as we celebrate this night of breaking bread.
ALL: Blessed are you, Redeeming God, who gather us as your friends.
CANDLE 3: Spirit God, you are with us in our anger and desire, our dreams and discontent. Bring us in this night through death to life.
ALL: Blessed are you, holy fire of love, who make your home with us.
LEADER: Our God has created us all and summons us all to friendship. Quietly tell God about the people and things on your mind today. Pray a special prayer that Christ’s light will shine on those who need help with a problem or relationship. Listen and reflect during the music.
MUSIC: “We Shall Be Free,” by Garth Brooks, or “One Road to Freedom,” by Ben Harper.
LEADER: That we will come to know and love you, God.
ALL: Life-giving God, show us how to love.
LEADER: That we will learn to see you in the needs of others.
ALL: Life-giving God, show us how to love.
LEADER: That we will be there for others in times of need.
ALL: Life-giving God, show us how to love.
LEADER: That we will be signs of your love in our relationships.
ALL: Life-giving God, show us how to love.
LEADER: That we will do what you ask of us in the world.
ALL: Life-giving God, show us how to love.
Blessing of Bread and Wine
Fill a glass with juice for each person
STORYTELLER: We come together this night to eat unleavened bread. It is the bread of freedom our ancestors ate when they escaped from slavery in Egypt. In this upper room today let us be a community God sets free to love.
ALL: Blessed are you, Giver of Life.
GIVER OF THE TOAST: Our God, you call us to freedom and service. You give us this wine, this supper, these friends. May we be poured out for others as this drink is poured out for us.
ALL: Blessed are you who challenge us to give. All drink.
BLESSER OF THE BREAD: (Holds up the matzos) Blessed are you, Creator of the earth. You call us this night to throw out the old yeast of our lives and to become new leaven for others.
ALL: May this bread make us hungry for a table where all eat.
MARY MAGDALENE: This is the moment when Jesus broke the bread and gave it to us, his friends, saying, “Take this and eat. This is my body to be given for you. Do this to remember me.” And we always have.
ALL: We pray for our companions in breaking bread and the whole Church to which we belong.
The Questions
QUESTIONER 1: Why is this night different from all other nights?
QUESTIONER 2: On other nights we eat leavened bread. Why on this night do we eat unleavened bread?
QUESTIONER 3: On all other nights we talk about many things. Why on this night do we remember the Passover?
The Story
MIRIAM THE PROPHETESS: Let me tell you the ancient stories of this night. Once my people were slaves of Pharaoh in Egypt. Life was good there, but not for us. Our hands made the bricks for Pharaoh’s cities. He was afraid of us because we grew so numerous, so he told the midwives to kill every male baby. Shiphrah and Puah were our midwives.
The midwives didn’t do what Pharaoh said. They told him the Hebrew women always had their babies before they could get there. In my own family I’m the one who hid my brother in a basket in the rushes where Pharaoh’s daughter bathed. She saw him and wanted him saved. That was when I turned up and offered to find him a wet nurse — our mother.
ALL: We outsmarted Pharaoh.
MOSES: Our people cried out in our suffering and God heard and created a future for us with a strong hand and an outstretched arm. God called me to speak even though I stuttered. I did as our God commanded. Such plagues befell the Egyptians!
The Nile turned to blood; frogs and gnats and flies came; pestilence, boils, hail, locusts; then darkness and the night we still remember when Death passed over our houses and God opened a dry path through the midst of the sea where Pharaoh’s armies pursued us.
ALL: Our strength and courage is God, who sets us free.
QUESTIONERS: What is the meaning of the unleavened bread?
STORYTELLER: This is the bread of freedom like that our ancestors took with them out of Egypt when they left too quickly for bread to rise. Passes matzos. Each takes one.
CHRISTIAN: This bread is like the unleavened bread that Jesus and his followers ate at their special supper long ago. Let us each eat a piece to show each other we are willing to carry the gift of Jesus’ life to the world.
ALL: We believe in the great gift Jesus gave us, the Eucharist. All eat matzo.
LEADER: Let us join hands. We have shared together a sign that we want to be ready for the mission Jesus has given us — to share him with the whole world, particularly those most in need of Christian help. Let us pray as he taught us. Pray the Our Father.
Meal
After these prayers at a passover meal, everyone eats a full dinner. Do so, too, at this point if you plan to have food besides the symbolic foods.
Footwashing
JOHN: This was the night Jesus washed all our feet like a house slave. He put a towel around him and washed our feet one by one. Peter objected, but Jesus insisted. I’ll never forget what he said when he finished. “What I just did was to give you an example. As I have done, so you must do.”
LEADER: Jesus showed us how to be Christians who serve others. We invite you, in the spirit of Jesus’ example, to share a sense of togetherness and a sign of the service we will give the world once we leave our upper room. Hand out warm, wet wash cloths and wash one another’s hands in pairs.
MUSIC: “Wondrous Love,” Music for Lent and Easter, Marty Haugen.
LEADER: Let us join hands. God, our Creator, we have shared a special sense of togetherness and friendship in Jesus. As we prepare to leave our upper room, we thank you for giving Jesus to us. And we thank you for the challenge to serve which he hands on to each of us. We ask that you be with us as we try to share ourselves in service for others.
ALL: Amen.
MUSIC: “Beautiful Day,” U2; or “No Greater Love,” Michael Joncas; Gather, #628.
ALL: Praise to you, Jesus Christ. You are the seed that falls into the ground to grow in our faith and love. Amen.