Renewal Sunday: The Eighth
Day After Pascha
By Sergei V. Bulgakov
The eighth day after Pascha as the ending of the celebration of Bright Week was
a special celebration since ancient times, as if it replaced the very same Day
of Pascha and was called Antipascha, and means "instead of
Pascha".
From this day the cycle of Sundays and weeks of the entire year begins. On this
day the commemoration of the resurrection of Christ is updated for the first
time. This Sunday of the Antipascha was called the New Sunday, i.e. the first day
of renewal or simply renewal [1].
The more proper
name is the real day, the eighth day after Pascha, that on this eighth day the
Lord Himself willed the renewal of the joy of His resurrection with a new
appearance to the Holy Apostles [2].
St. Gregory the Theologian says in his Homily on this Sunday: "With the
ancient and good purpose, it is to honor the day of renewal as established law,
or better to say, to honor the new benefactions with the day of renewal. But
was not the day of renewal also the first Resurrection Day, followed by the
blessed and radiant night? Why you give this name to the present day? That was
the day of salvation, but this day is the commemoration of salvation. That day
differentiates the burial and the resurrection in itself, but this day is
purely of the new birth. It is the first day among those following it and
eighth among those coming before it."
Commemorating this day of "renewal" the Holy Church inspires in us
the necessity for our beneficial spiritual renewal. "The real
renewal", the same Holy Father teaches, "we now celebrate, is the
going from death to life. And so we put off ourselves the old man and renewed
ourselves; that we too might walk in newness of life (Rom. 6:4). ... The old
has passed away, behold, the new has come (2 Cor. 5:17). ... Let us bridle all
lusts from which death was born, let us become accustomed to the feeling of
obedience, let us begin to hate any evil food from prohibited fruit and let us
remember the former only and henceforth first be wary of the same. Christian be
made new from the old and in this way celebrate the renewal of the soul. ... Change
yourself with a good change, and in this case do not think highly of yourself,
but say with David: 'This is a change being wrought by the right hand of the
Most High' (Ps. 76:11), from whom is everything successful in people. God the
Word wants that you not stand in the place alone, but that you ever move,
moving smoothly, be completely newly created and if you sin turn yourself away
from the sin, and if you are successful, you will have strained the powers even
more."
1 According to the explanation of the Synaxarion there was an
ancient custom to periodically do a solemn commemoration for some major events.
So that time in the annual cycle does not pass by this very day on which the
known event occurred, it annually did a commemoration in order that the memory
of the great events was not forgotten. On this basis the Hebrews celebrated the
Passover in Gilgal for the first time, renewing their memory of the passage
through the Red Sea. On this same basis they celebrated the foundation, and
with special solemnity, the renewal of the witness of the Tabernacle. According
to this they commemorated the reign of David and other events of which there is
no need to list. But so that the incomparably greatest of all events in the
life of every one and exceeding every idea is the resurrection of the Lord that
we not only commemorate annually, but also continually through every week. So
the first renewal of this event in memory of the real Resurrection Day, which
it would be possible to call the first renewal of this event by its own meaning
both the eighth and the first: the eighth because it is the eighth from Pascha,
as the first because it is the beginning of other Sunday commemorations. And
this day can still be named the eighth because it will be placed in the image
of that eternal day in the future age, which will also be the first and
undoubtedly one not divided by night (Vladimirskiia Eparchialniia Vedomosti [Vladimir
Diocesan News] 1898, 7).
2 So that the renewal of the appearance of the resurrected Savior was
especially for the sake of the Holy Apostle Thomas, who at this appearance also
saw the salvatory wounds of the body of the Resurrected One, that from here and
of our other more common usage of the name of Antipascha or by the Sunday of
St. Thomas, or Thomian. In the ancient church Antipascha Sunday had yet another
more special name of "White Sunday", which even now remains in the
Roman Catholic Church. It is called so because the newly baptized, who received
the sacraments of Baptism and Chrismation on the eve of Holy Pascha and wore
the paschal white vestments for seven days in the image of the infancy and
renewal in Christ, on Thomas Sunday, as the last day established for the
commemoration after the reception of Baptism, the chrism was washed off from
the body and they solemnly wore those clothes in which they were vested after
the holy font in the temple.
Our simple people called Thomas Sunday the Sunday of the "wire", or
of the "wires", obviously, because these celebratory days come to an
end and is led by the Bright Sunday of the Resurrection of Christ. Thomas
Sunday is also called "Krasnoiu gorkoiu [with bitter beauty]" from
the ancient Pagan games, which were played in mountainous places in Spring,
before other places were free from snow and were covered by the first beautiful
grass, which in the majority concluded in marriages (see details inRukovodstvo
dlia Seljskikh Pastirej [Manual for Village Pastors] 1892,
15;Tserkovnyi Vestnik [Church Messenger] 1896, 8).