Pastor William Weedon explains about the appointed readings for Holy Week:
Why did we read about BOTH the triumphal entry and the Passion and death of our Lord in the Palm Sunday liturgy. First, remember that the observance of โthis happeningโ on โthe same dayโ is a rather late convention in the Churchโs liturgical life. The foundational mystery is celebrated each and every Lordโs Day: Christ crucified is raised from the dead. Even on Palm Sunday that remains the focus. And come Holy Week the Church delights to hear the Passion story told from each Evangelistโs perspective. Palm Sunday belongs to Matthew; Monday we begin some of Johnโs story (actually continued from the processional Gospel on Palm Sunday); Tuesday is Markโs and Wednesday is Lukeโs. Come Thursday we go back to John and hear of some events on Maundy Thursday. Friday is given over wholly to Johnโs Passion. So rather than thinking of it as a progression from this to that, in the Western liturgy we hear the whole story as it is told all four times during Holy Week, so that nothing of what Scripture gives us about our Lordโs passion, death, and burial is lost.










