Book of Common Prayer

These readings are from the Anglican Church of Canada’s adaptation of the Revised Common Lectionary.

Liturgical Year C: Dec 1, 2024 to Nov 29, 2025
Liturgical Year A: Nov 30, 2025 to Nov 28, 2026

Thursday, April 2nd, 2026

Thursday in Holy Week commonly called Maundy Thursday (White or Red or Violet)
Day of Abstinence
Passiontide

Maundy Thursday

There should normally be only one celebration of Holy Communion on Maundy Thursday, in the evening. The Triduum, or the great Three Days, the heart of the church’s liturgical year, begins with this liturgy and ends with Evening Prayer on Easter Day.

“Tone” of the Service: There is some debate about the “tone” that should be adopted for the Maundy Thursday observances. In a tradition familiar to many, the colour is white and Glory to God in the Highest is sung to the accompaniment of bells, after which the organ and bells are silent until Glory to God reappears at the Great Vigil of Easter. This approach, when carefully planned, deepens our response to the mysteries we celebrate in Holy Week, evoking a kind of restrained joy in thanksgiving for the Lord’s gift to the church of the Holy Communion as his Passion begins. Those who find that this approach to Maundy Thursday interrupts the tone of Holy Week and anticipates the liturgical announcement of the Resurrection on Saturday night at the Vigil adopt Passiontide Red as the colour for the celebration, and the singing of Glory to God in the Highest and the use of bells are omitted. Whichever option is chosen, the centrality of Holy Communion in the life of the Church can be celebrated with unrestrained festivity on the feast of Corpus Christi, which is the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. Corpus Christi is not in the Canadian Calendar, but is observed in a number of places in the Anglican Communion and in the Anglican Church of Canada, and Propers are provided in this Ordo when the feast occurs.

Stripping of the Altars: After the liturgy, it is customary to “strip” the altars in preparation for Good Friday. This removal of ornaments and cloths from the church may be accompanied by the reading ofMt 26:30-46 and/orPs 22.

Altar of Repose and the Vigil of Maundy Thursday: In some places, especially if Holy Communion is to be administered from the Reserved Sacrament on Good Friday, bread (and wine) for this purpose are consecrated at the Maundy Liturgy and at the end of the service may be processed to an “altar of repose” where a watch is kept until midnight or longer (representing the Garden of Gethsemane).

Chrism Mass: In some dioceses the bishop presides over a “Chrism Mass” in the cathedral earlier on Maundy Thursday at which the oils of chrism and the sick are blessed and (in some places) clergy (sometimes priests and bishops only, sometimes all three orders) renew their ordination vows, reflecting the tradition that the ministerial priesthood was instituted by Our Lord on this day. For practical purposes, this liturgy is sometimes transferred to another day in Holy Week or at an annual clergy conference.

Morning Prayer: Office begins immediately with Invit 5; Venite without Gloria Patri; Ps 40, 41 (no Gloria Patri); Lam 1:1-14; Jn 17; Coll 169

Holy Eucharist: Propers 169; Int 67; Tract 22:22-26; Preface of Passion Sunday; (no Gloria)

Evening Prayer: Ps 116, 117 (no Gloria Patri); Lam 3:1-33; Jn 13:1-35; Coll 169

Lectionary citations are reprinted from Revised Common Lectionary Daily Readings, copyright © 2005 Consultation on Common Texts, admin. by Augsburg Fortress. Reproduced by permission.