Catholic Church The Roman Missal states: "Of this night’s Vigil, which is the greatest and most noble of all solemnities, there is to be only one celebration in each church. It is arranged, moreover, in such a way that after the Lucernarium and the "Exsultet", The Easter Proclamation (which constitutes the first part of this Vigil), Holy Church meditates on the wonders the Lord God has done for his people from the beginning, trusting in his word and promise (the second part, that is, the Liturgy of the Word) until, as day approaches, with new members reborn in Baptism (the third part), the Church is called to the table the Lord has prepared for his people, the memorial of his Death and Resurrection until he comes again (the fourth part)." In the
Roman Rite liturgy, the Easter Vigil consists of five parts: • The Lucernarium • The
Liturgy of the Word • The
rite of Baptism (Consecration of the water of baptism and bestowal of the sacrament of baptism if there are
catechumens. Renewal of the
baptismal vows by the whole congregation) • The
Asperges •
Liturgy of the Eucharist The vigil begins between sunset on
Holy Saturday and sunrise on
Easter Sunday outside the church, where an
Easter fire is kindled and the
Paschal candle is blessed and then lit. This Paschal candle will be used throughout the season of Easter, remaining in the sanctuary of the church or near the lectern, and throughout the coming year at baptisms and funerals, reminding all that Christ is "light and life". Once the candle has been lit, it is carried by a deacon through the nave of the church, itself in complete darkness, stopping three times to chant the acclamation 'Light of Christ' (
Lumen Christi), to which the assembly responds 'Thanks be to God' or 'Deo Gratias'. As the candle proceeds through the church, the small candles held by those present are gradually lit from the Paschal candle. As this symbolic "Light of Christ" spreads, darkness is decreased. The deacon, priest, or a cantor now chants the
Exsultet (also called the "Easter Proclamation" or "Paschal Praeconium"), after which the people sit for the Liturgy of the Word. Once the paschal candle has been placed on its stand in the sanctuary, the lights in the church are switched on and the congregation extinguish their candles (although in some churches, the custom is to continue the liturgy by candlelight or without any lights until the Gloria). The
Liturgy of the Word consists of seven readings from the
Old Testament, although it is permitted to reduce this number for pastoral reasons to at least three, or for
very pressing pastoral reasons two. The account of the Israelites' crossing of the Red Sea may never be omitted, since this event is at the centre of the Jewish
Passover, of which Christians believe Christ's death and resurrection is the fulfillment. (1) Genesis 1:1-2:2 (the story of creation); (2) Genesis 22:1-18 (the binding of Isaac); (3) Exodus 14:15-15:1 (crossing of the Red Sea); (4) Isaiah 54:5-14; (5) Isaiah 55:1-11; (6) Baruch 3:9-15,32-4:4; (7) Ezekiel 36:16-17a, 18–28. Each reading is followed by a psalm or biblical canticle (i.e., 1.
Psalm 104 or
Psalm 33; 2.
Psalm 16; 3. Exodus 15:1-18; 4.
Psalm 30; 5. Isaiah 12:2-6; 6.
Psalm 19; 7. when Baptism is celebrated: a combination of
Psalm 42 and
Psalm 43; 7. when Baptism is not celebrated: Isaiah 12:2-6 or
Psalm 51) instituting several changes to the Easter Vigil in an experimental basis. Previously, the Easter Vigil was held on Holy Saturday morning. He changed the hour of the celebration to after sunset. Pope Pius XII made the changes obligatory in 1956. Outside the church the Easter fire was lit and blessed, and five grains of incense were blessed. All lamps and candles within the church were quenched, so as to be relit later with the new fire. The rubrics did not envisage electricity or gas lighting. At the church entrance, in the center of the church, and then at the altar, each of the candles on a triple candlestick was lit from a candle that had been lit from the new fire. On each occasion, this was followed by a genuflection and the chanting of "Lumen Christi". During the singing of the Exsultet, which then followed, the five grains of incense were placed in the paschal candle. The paschal candle was lit from one of the candles on the triple candlestick. The Liturgy of the Word consisted of twelve readings, for the most part without responsory chants: (1) Genesis 1:1-2:2 (the story of creation); (2) Genesis 5:31-8:21 (the account of the flood); (3) Genesis 22:1-19 (the binding of Isaac); (4) Exodus 14:24-15:1 (the crossing of the Red Sea); (5) Isaiah 54:17-55:11; (6) Baruch 3:9-38; (7) Ezekiel 37:1-14 (the valley of the dry bones); (8) Isaiah 4:1-6; (9) Exodus 12:1-12 (the introduction of the Paschal rites, also read then on Good Friday but now on Holy Thursday); (10) Jonah 3:1-10; (11) Deuteronomy 31:22-30; (12) Daniel 3:1-24 (the story of the three youths). The prayers after the readings were preceded by
Flectamus genua and a genuflection, except for the last. After the Old Testament readings the baptismal font was blessed, and the conferral of baptism was envisaged, though rarely performed. The
Litany of the Saints followed. Violet vestments were worn except for the deacon, or the priest performing the deacon's functions, who wore a white dalmatic in the procession and at the Exsultet. The priest, unless acting as deacon, wore a violet cope for the blessing of the Paschal Candle, after which the priest wore a violet chasuble. After the blessing of the Baptismal Font and the Litany of the Saints, white Mass vestments were put on, and Mass followed. The Mass was in the then normal form, including the prayers at the foot of the altar, but without Introit, Agnus Dei, and Postcommunion. Its Epistle was Colossians 3:1-4, and the Gospel was Matthew 28:1-7. Mass was followed immediately by abbreviated
Vespers. Under Pope Pius XII, the Easter Vigil was restructured. He separated the blessing and lighting of the Candle from the Exsultet to the beginning, the present position. The triple candlestick was no longer used. It was from the Paschal candle that, at the chanting of "Lumen Christi", without genuflection, the priest would light his own candle at the Paschal candle. For the second, the rest of the clergy plus altar servers would. For the third, the entire congregation. The Exsultet's function was turned, without change in the text, into a jubilant praise of the Paschal candle already blessed and lit. Of the Old Testament readings, only four were kept: what had been the first (story of Creation; now still the first), the fourth (parting of the Red Sea; now the third), the eighth (from Isaiah; now the second) and the eleventh (from Deuteronomy; now the fourth). Then followed the first part of the Litany of the Saints (only the names of the saints), the blessing of the font, possible baptisms, renewal of baptismal promises, a novelty with respect to the past and the first inclusion of the vernacular language in the general Roman liturgy, and the second part of the litany. After this came Mass, without prayers at the foot of the altar. This was followed by Easter
Lauds, no longer Holy Saturday Vespers. In virtue of the 2007
motu proprio Summorum Pontificum, this form may, under certain conditions, still be used because of its inclusion in the 1962
Roman Missal of
Pope John XXIII.
Lutheran Churches The Easter Vigil, like the
Christmas Vigil, remained a popular festive worship service in the
Lutheran churches during and after the
Reformation. It was often celebrated in the early morning hours of Easter Sunday. As in all Lutheran services of this period, vernacular language was used in combination with traditional liturgical texts in Latin, such as the
Exsultet. Elements which were considered unbiblical and superstitious were eliminated, such as the blessing of the new fire, the consecration of the candles or of water. Emphasis was placed on the scriptural readings, congregational singing and on the Easter sermon. In
Wittenberg the Easter
Gospel (Matthew 28. 1 - 10; 16 - 20) was sung in the German language in a tone similar to the tone of the
Exsultet - a gospel tone only used for this worship service. The devastation caused by the
Thirty Years' War led to a decline in worship culture in the Lutheran Churches in Germany. The
rationalism of the 18th century also brought about a change in worship habits and customs. The liturgical movement that arose in the German Lutheran Churches after World War I rediscovered the Easter Vigil in its reformational form. In an article from 1934 for the Liturgical Conference of
Lower Saxony and for the
Berneuchen Movement,
Wilhelm Stählin appealed to fellow Lutherans for an Easter service on early Easter Sunday or on
Holy Saturday night using elements from the
Missal, the
Orthodox tradition and from reformational service orders. An order for the Easter Vigil was published in 1936. Several Lutheran congregations in
Hannover observed the Easter Vigil in 1937. Since then, the Easter Vigil has experienced a revival in many parishes throughout Germany. This movement within the German Lutheran Churches contributed to a revival and revision of the
Roman Catholic order for the Easter Vigil by
Pope Pius XII in 1951. The "Agende II" for the Evangelical Lutheran Churches and Parishes in Germany from 1960 gave the "Osternacht", German for "Easter Vigil", a normative form. The most recent agenda for the Easter Vigil was published by the "Vereinigte Evangelisch-lutherische Kirche" in 2008. The order for the Easter Vigil is comparable to the order of service used by American Lutherans. It is characterized by a number of
Gregorian chants, medieval and reformational
hymns which have been in use in German worship services for centuries. In North America the
Lutherans, similarly to the Anglicans, have in many places returned to the observance of the Easter Vigil [including the restoration of the blessing of the new fire]. The recent service books of both the
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod and the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America assume the service as normative. In the
Lutheran Service Book, the Altar Book, the Vigil comprises the Service of Light with the
Exsultet; the Service or Readings with up to 12 readings; the Service of Holy Baptism at which candidates may be baptized, the baptized confirmed, and the congregation remember its
Baptism into
Jesus; the Service of Prayer, featuring an Easter
litany; and concluding with the Service of the Sacrament, at which the
Holy Eucharist is celebrated.
Anglican Churches Although the Easter Vigil is not universal in the
Anglican Communion, its use has become far more common in recent decades. Formerly it was only common in parishes in the
Anglo-Catholic tradition, having been recovered by the 19th-century
Tractarian movement. The service, as provided for example in the current version of the
Book of Common Prayer of the
Episcopal Church in the United States of America (TEC), the
Book of Alternative Services of the
Anglican Church of Canada and the
Times and Seasons volume of the
Church of England's
Common Worship, follows more or less the same form as the Roman Catholic liturgy described above, with some variations in texts and ritual. The four-part structure of the Vigil is retained, though in the TEC rite the service of
baptism may follow immediately after the readings from the Old Testament. The service normally consists of four parts: • The Service of Light. • The Service of Lessons. • Christian Initiation, or the Renewal of Baptismal Vows. • The Holy Eucharist with the administration of Easter Communion. Some of the other particular differences from the Roman Catholic observance include: • If the service of baptism takes place after the Old Testament readings, the Gloria is sung after the Baptism or Renewal of Baptismal Vows. The Te Deum Laudamus or the Pascha Nostrum may be used in place of the Gloria. • The number and particular passages in the Service of Lessons differs. There are up to nine (as opposed to seven) readings from the Hebrew Bible.
Confirmations occur only when the bishop is present, because, in the Anglican tradition, only a bishop may administer confirmation.
Reformed Churches In the
Reformed Church, the Easter Vigil follows the pattern of Service of Light, Service of the Word, Service of Baptism, and Service of Communion. The liturgy contained in
The United Methodist Book of Worship divides the Easter Vigil into four parts: • The Service of Light • The Service of the Word • The Service of the Baptismal Covenant • The Service of the Table The Service of Light begins in silence outside of the church building in the nighttime. There, a new fire is kindled and each member of the congregation is given a candle. A greeting, opening prayer and lighting of the
Paschal Candle from the new fire then solemnly occurs. The clergy and congregation receive the new light from the Paschal candle and then take part in a
procession into the church, as a hymn is sung. The
Easter Proclamation is then chanted by a
deacon. If there is no deacon, a
concelebraing minister does the task. If there is no concelebrating minister, it is entrusted to a lay
cantor. The Service of the Word contains
readings explicating the following topics: "The Creation", "The Covenant between God and the Earth", "Abraham's Trust in God", "Israel's Deliverance at the Red Sea", "Salvation Offered Freely to All", "A New Heart and a New Spirit", "New Life for God's People", and "Buried and Raised with Christ in Baptism". After each reading, a canticle is sung and then a prayer is offered. Following the hearing of the "record of God's saving deeds in history", the
Gospel lesson is proclaimed by the minister. Then he/she gives the
sermon. The Service of the Baptismal Covenant follows with the
baptism of
catechumens and then their
confirmation, as well as that of those who are being received into the United Methodist Church. The Service of the Table includes the celebration of
Holy Communion. It is concluded by a
benediction and
recessional hymn. ==Eastern Christian Churches==