The story of Good Friday is found in the gospel of LUKE chapters 22 and 23.
Good Friday in United States
Quick Facts
Good Friday commemorates Jesus Christ's crucifixion.
Good
Friday occurs two days before Easter Sunday in the United States. It is
the day when Christians commemorate Jesus Christ's crucifixion, which
plays an important part in the Christian faith. It is not a federal
holiday in the United States, although it is a state holiday in some
states.
©iStockphoto.com/kelly cline
What do people do?
Some Christians may attend special church services or prayer vigils.
Good Friday is a day of mourning and quiet prayer for many Christians.
The candles are often extinguished and statues, paintings and crosses
may be draped in black, purple or gray cloth. Some Catholics treat Good
Friday as a day of fasting, while others observe a partial fast
involving the exclusion of meat.
Some homes keep a quiet atmosphere, with little or no outside
activities and limited television, radio, and computer use, in observing
Good Friday. Others choose to play music such as JS Bach's St. Matthew's Passion. Some people bake hot cross buns, a traditional Good Friday sweet.
Good Friday is another day at work for many Americans, as it is not a
national holiday. Some people may choose to take a day off work and
have a long “Spring Break” weekend. In some states, employees are given a
day off on Good Friday.
Public life
Good Friday is a state holiday in some states such as Hawaii, where
city and state offices are closed and some forms of public transport
(eg. buses) run on the state holiday schedule. In some areas, such as
Perry County in Tennessee, Good Friday is a school holiday. Good Friday
is a holiday designated by the governor as a day of fasting and prayer
in Connecticut.
In accordance with state law, Indiana state employees are given a day
off on Good Friday, a religious holiday. In 1999, in the case of Bridenbaugh v O'Bannon,
an Indiana state employee sued the governor for giving state employees
Good Friday as a day off. The US Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
against the plaintiff, stating that the government could give state
employees a paid day off when that day is a religious holiday, including
Good Friday, but only so long as the state can provide a valid secular
purpose that coincides with the obvious religious purpose of the
holiday.
Background
Good Friday is the day when Christians commemorate the crucifixion and death of Jesus Christ. The Easter date depends on the ecclesiastical approximation of the March equinox.
This is an important event in Christianity, as it represents the
sacrifices and suffering in Jesus' life. The crucifixion was the
culmination of a number of events in Holy Week, including: the triumphal
return of Jesus to Jerusalem on Palm Sunday; the washing of the
disciples' feet by Jesus; and the Last Supper on Maundy Thursday. Some
churches organize a prayer vigil on Good Friday for various causes, such
as for cancer patients or for the American troops who have been sent to
the middle-east.
Symbols
The crucifix, or cross, which represents the way Jesus died, is an
important symbol seen on Good Friday. Some crosses bear a figure of
Christ. Other symbols of Good Friday include black cloth used to cover
the cross, paintings and statues in churches and some homes to signify
mourning.
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