Holy Week: light in the abyss – 5

April 5, 2026

🌅 Easter Sunday: Light Beyond the Abyss

Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Easter is the dawn after silence, the ascent after descent. The cross has already spoken its final word—“It is finished.” The tomb, once the abyss of death, becomes the place where rest gives way to rising. The Most High illuminates the abyss by transforming death into life, wounds into glory, and silence into song.

Scripture Weaving

– Genesis 1: “God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light.” 
– Hebrews 7:26: “Such a high priest truly meets our need—holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens.” 
– Revelation 21:22–23: “I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb. The city has no need of sun or moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb.” 
– Gospels (Matthew 28:6; John 20:20): “He is not here; he has risen… The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord.”

Litany Cadence


Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The cross is finished; the tomb is empty. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: Christ is risen, higher than the heavens. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The Lamb is the temple, the light of the city. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: Death is illumined, life forever reigns. 

Reflection


Easter does not erase Good Friday—it fulfills it. The finality of the cross remains the foundation: redemption accomplished, once-for-all. Yet resurrection reveals that the abyss of death is not the end but the place where light shines most brightly. 

Hebrews proclaims Christ exalted above the heavens, enthroned as eternal High Priest. Revelation shows the Lamb as Temple and Lamp, his wounds forever visible yet radiant. Genesis’ first light now finds its ultimate echo: the abyss illumined not only at creation but at redemption’s dawn. 

Easter is the paradox of finality and eternity. The cross is finished, yet its light continues. The Lamb slain-yet-standing is the lamp of the new creation, illuminating the abyss forever. 

Closing Refrain


THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
On Easter Sunday, the abyss is illumined by resurrection, and the finality of the cross becomes the eternal light of life. 

Holy Week: light in the abyss – 4

April 4, 2026

🌌 Holy Saturday: Rest in the Abyss
Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Holy Saturday is the day of silence, the day between. The work of the cross is finished, yet the world waits. Christ rests in the tomb, and this rest is not defeat but Sabbath. The abyss is illumined by the paradox of finality: the cross has accomplished all, and now creation pauses in holy stillness.

Scripture Weaving

– Genesis 2:2: “On the seventh day God finished his work that he had done, and he rested.” 
– Hebrews 10:12: “When Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God.” 
– Revelation 6:9–11: “I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain… They were told to rest a little longer.” 
– Gospels (Luke 23:54–56): “It was the Sabbath, and they rested according to the commandment.

Litany Cadence

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The work is finished; the cross is final. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In the tomb, Christ rests in Sabbath silence. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The abyss waits, yet light hovers over the deep. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: Rest is not absence but completion. 

Reflection

Holy Saturday is the paradox of silence and finality. The cross has already accomplished redemption—Hebrews insists that Christ’s sacrifice is once-for-all, definitive, unrepeatable. Yet the tomb is not empty; the body rests. This rest echoes Genesis: creation’s work completed, God resting on the seventh day. 

Revelation shows the souls under the altar, told to rest until the fullness of God’s plan is revealed. Christ’s rest in the tomb is not inactivity but testimony: the abyss is illumined by the finality of the cross. The silence of Holy Saturday is the silence of completion, the pause before resurrection’s dawn. 

Closing Refrain

THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
On Holy Saturday, the abyss is illumined by rest, the silence of completion, the finality of the cross. 

Holy Week: light in the abyss – 3

April 3, 2026
✝️ Good Friday: Work Done, Rest in the Abyss
Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Good Friday is the day when the abyss is entered fully. The Word who spoke creation into being now breathes his last. The paradox is stark: the work is finished, yet rest begins in the tomb. The Most High illuminates the abyss by making death itself the place of completion and repose.

Scripture Weaving


– Genesis 1: “On the seventh day God finished his work that he had done, and he rested.” 
– Hebrews 10:10, 14: “We have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all… By one sacrifice he has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.” 
– Revelation 5:9–10: “You were slain, and with your blood you purchased for God persons from every tribe and language and people and nation.” 
– Gospels (John 19:30; Luke 23:46): “It is finished… Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.”

Litany Cadence


Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The work is finished; the Word rests. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: Once-for-all, the sacrifice is complete. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The Lamb slain ransoms the nations. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In death, rest becomes illumination. 

Reflection

Good Friday is paradox: the abyss of death is not avoided but illumined. The cry “It is finished” echoes Genesis’ completion of creation. Just as God rested on the seventh day, Christ rests in the tomb after the work of redemption. Hebrews insists that his sacrifice is once-for-all, definitive, unrepeatable. Revelation shows the slain Lamb enthroned, his wounds forever visible, his blood purchasing a kingdom of priests. 

The tomb is not defeat but Sabbath. The Most High illuminates the abyss by entering it, transforming death into the place of rest and completion. The throne of God is now cruciform, marked forever by wounds, yet radiant with light. 

Closing Refrain

THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
On Good Friday, the deepest abyss is illumined by the cross, and death itself becomes the place where work is finished and rest begins. 

Holy Week: light in the abyss – 2

April 2, 2026
🍞 Maundy Thursday: Silence in the Abyss

Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Maundy Thursday confronts us with the paradox of fellowship and betrayal, of speech and silence. Around the table, bread is broken and covenant renewed. Yet in the courts of power, the Word who spoke creation into being chooses silence. The abyss of betrayal and injustice is illumined not by argument but by surrender.

Scripture Weaving

– Genesis 1: “The Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, ‘Let there be light.’” 
– Hebrews 2:9: “He tasted death for everyone.” 
– Revelation 12:11: “They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.” 
– Gospels (Mark 14:22–24; 15:5): “Take; this is my body… This is my blood of the covenant, poured out for many… But Jesus still made no reply, and Pilate was amazed.”

Litany Cadence

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: At the table, covenant is renewed. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In betrayal, love descends deeper still. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In court, the Word keeps silence. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The Lamb’s wounds speak louder than words. 

Reflection

Maundy Thursday is the hinge of descent. The abyss of betrayal opens as Judas departs into the night. Yet Christ does not resist; he offers bread and cup, symbols of a covenant sealed in his own blood. 

In court, silence becomes paradoxical testimony. The Word who spoke light into darkness now refuses to speak against injustice. His silence illumines the abyss, showing that divine power is not in self-defense but in self-offering. Hebrews reminds us that he tasted death for everyone, while Revelation insists that victory comes through the blood of the Lamb. 

Maundy Thursday teaches us that silence is not absence but presence. The Lamb’s wounds will become the speech of God, redefining justice as cruciform love. 

Closing Refrain


THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
In fellowship, betrayal, and silence, the descent continues—toward the cross that will illumine death itself. 

Holy Week: light in the abyss – 1

March 29, 2026
🌿 Palm Sunday: The King Comes on a Donkey

Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Palm Sunday reminds us that joy and paradox walk hand in hand. The King enters not on a warhorse but on a donkey, and children’s voices rise above the crowd. Majesty cloaked in humility—this is the descent of the Most High into the abyss of human vulnerability.

Scripture Weaving


– Genesis 1: “Darkness was over the face of the deep… And God said, ‘Let there be light.’” 
– Hebrews 4:14: “We have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God.” 
– Revelation 5:6: “I saw a Lamb, looking as if it had been slain, standing in the center of the throne.” 
– Matthew’s Gospel (21:5, 15–16) reports:  “See, your king comes to you, gentle and riding on a donkey… The children shouted in the temple courts, ‘Hosanna to the Son of David!’”

Litany Cadence

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The King comes, not in power but in peace. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: Children’s praise silences the wise. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: The Lamb slain stands at the throne. 

Reflection

Palm Sunday is the paradox of glory hidden in humility. The abyss of human expectation—longing for triumph, craving spectacle—is illumined by a King who chooses weakness. The donkey is not a joke but a sign: the Most High descends into the ordinary, into the vulnerable, into the abyss of our world. 

The children’s cries of Hosanna echo Genesis’ first light: praise breaking into darkness. Hebrews reminds us that this King has passed through the heavens, yet Revelation insists that his throne is forever marked by wounds. Palm Sunday is not the end of the story but the beginning of the descent that will illuminate the abyss of death itself. 

Closing Refrain


THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 

Holy Week brings light into the abyss

As we approach the season of remembering the Lord Jesus Christ and his passion we want to recognize the unprecedented entrance of light into human darkness.  We can dabble in the viral narrative, look for impressive Ines in the speeches of Passion Week, or immerse ourselves in its emotional waves.  I offer five reflections on Passion Week anchored in the conviction that light invaded human darkness and permanently changed the dynamic.

🌌 Holy Week Prelude: Light in the Abyss
Series: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS

Life is fun but not a joke. Holy Week is the paradoxical journey of Christ from highest to lowest and back again. It is the story of creation and redemption woven together: the Word who spoke light into darkness descends into death, and by rising illuminates the abyss forever. 

This series follows the litany refrain: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. Each day of Holy Week reveals a facet of this paradox—Palm Sunday’s humility, Maundy Thursday’s silence, Good Friday’s finality, Holy Saturday’s rest, and Easter’s dawn.

Scripture Weaving

– Genesis 1: “The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep… And God said, ‘Let there be light.’” 
– Hebrews 4:14; 7:26: “We have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens… exalted above the heavens.” 
– Revelation 5:6; 21:22–23: “I saw a Lamb, looking as if it had been slain, standing at the center of the throne… The city has no need of sun or moon, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb.”

Litany Cadence


Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In creation, light shines in darkness. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In redemption, the cross is final. 

Leader: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 
People: In resurrection, the Lamb is light forever. 

Reflection

Holy Week is not just remembrance—it is participation in paradox. The abyss of chaos, betrayal, death, and silence is illumined by the Most High who descends and ascends. Genesis provides the interpretive hub: light breaking into darkness. Hebrews insists on the finality of the cross, once-for-all. Revelation shows the Lamb enthroned, his wounds forever radiant. 

I am inviting us to walk day by day through the descent and ascent, hearing the refrain that anchors every station: THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS.

THE MOST HIGH ILLUMINATES THE ABYSS. 

From creation to cross to consummation, the abyss is illumined, and light reigns forever.Â