Pentecost (Whitsunday)
by F.G. Holweck
Transcribed by William Stuart French, Jr.
Dedicated to Brenda Eileen Metcalfe French
This article is reprinted here with the kind permission of Kevin Knight, who has undertaken a project to transcribe an online version of the 1907 Catholic Encyclopedia.
While this article is taken from a volume written well before the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council, it is still relevant from an historical perspective, allowing us to study the history of the feast of Pentecost. It is no longer called "Whitsunday," and now marks the close of the Easter season. There is no longer an octave celebrated, and the Monday following begins Ordinary Time.
A feast of the universal Church which commemorates the Descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Aostles, fifty days after the Resurrection of Christ, on the ancient Jewish festival called the "feast of weeks" or Pentecost (Ex 34:22; Deut 16:10).
Whitsunday is so called from the white garments which were worn by those who were baptised during the vigil; Pentecost (Pfingsten in German) is the Greek for "the fiftieth" (day after Easter).
Whitsunday, as a Christian feast, dates back to the first century, although there is no evidence that it was observed, as there is in the case of Easter; the passage in I Corinthians 16:8 probably refers to the Jewish feast.
This is not surprising, for the feast, originally of only one day's duration, fell on a Sunday; besides it was so closely bound up with Easter that it appears to be not much more than the termination of Paschal tide.
That Whitsunday belongs to the Apostolic times is stated in the seventh of the (interpolated) fragments attributed to Saint Irenæus.
In Tertullian (De bapt. xix) the festival appears as already well established.
The Gallic pilgrim gives a detailed account of the solemn manner in which it was observed at Jerusalem (Peregrin. Silviæ, ed. Geyer, iv). The Apostolic Constitutions (V, xx, 17) say that Pentecost lasts one week, but in the West it was not kept with an octave until at quite a late date.
It appears from Berno of Reichenau (d.1048) that it was a debatable point in his time whether Whitsunday ought to have an octave.
At present it is of equal rank with Easter Sunday.
During the vigil formerly the catachumens who remained from Easter were baptized, consequently the ceremonies on Saturday are similar to those on Holy Saturday.
The office of Pentecost has only one Nocturn during the entire week.
At Terce the Veni Creator is sung instead of the usual hymn, because at the third hour the Holy Ghost descended.
The Mass has a Sequence, Veni Sancte Spiritus, the authorship of which by some is ascribed to King Robert of France.
The colour of the vestments is red, symbolic of the love of the Holy Ghost or of the tongues of fire.
Formerly the law courts did not sit during the entire week, and servile work was forbidden.
A Council of Constance (1094) limited this prohibition to the first three days of the week.
The Sabbath rest of Tuesday was abolished in 1771, and in many missionary territories also that of Monday; the latter was abrogated for the entire Church by Pius X in 1911.
Still, as at Easter, the liturgical rank of Monday and Tuesday of Pentecost week is a Double of the First Class.
In Italy it was customary to scatter rose leaves from the ceiling of the churches to recall the
miracle of the fiery tongues; hence in Sicily and elsewhere in Italy Whitsunday is called Pascha rosatum.
The Italian name Pascha rossa comes from the red colours of the vestments used on
Whitsunday.
In France it was customary to blow trumpets during Divine service, to recall the sound of the mighty wind which accompanied the Descent of the Holy Ghost.
In England the gentry amused themselves with horse races.
The Whitsun Ales or merrymakings are almost wholly obsolete in England.
At these ales the Whitsun plays were performed.
At Vespers of Pentecost in the Oriental Churches the extraordinary service of genuflexion, accompanied by long poetical prayers and psalms, takes place.
(Cf. Maltzew, Fasten und Blumen Triodion, p.898 where the entire Greco-Russian service is given; cf. also Baumstark, Jacobit. Fest brevier, p.255.)
On Pentecost the Russians carry flowers and green branches in their hands.
KELNEER, Heortology (St. Louis, 1908); HAMPSON, Medii viæ kalendarium, I (London, 1841) 280 sqq.; BRAND-ELLIS, Popular Antiquities, I (London, 1813), 26 sqq.; NILLES, Kalendarium Manuale, II (Innsbruck, 1897), 370 sqq.
F.G. HOLWECK
Transcribed by William Stuart French, Jr.
Dedicated to Brenda Eileen Metcalfe French
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XV
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
Reprinted by permission of copyright owner.
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See also
CNP Music for Eastertide
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