Carrots for Michaelmas

Cultivating a Catholic family through literature, liturgical living, and urban homesteading

Follow Carrots!

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • About
    • About Haley
    • Advertise
    • Privacy
  • My Books
    • The Grace of Enough
    • The Literary Medicine Cabinet
    • Liturgical Year eCookbooks
  • Faith & Liturgical Living
    • Our Conversion Story
    • Catholicism
      • Saints
        • St. Anne
        • St. Anthony of Padua
        • St. Anthony of the Desert
        • St. Benedict of Nursia
        • St. Brigid
        • St. Dominic
        • St. Joachim
        • St. Lucy
        • St. Patrick
        • St. Scholastica
      • Christian Year
        • Advent
        • Christmas
        • Epiphany
        • Lent
        • Mardi Gras
        • Easter
  • Family & Homesteading
    • Birth
    • Children
    • DIY
    • Finances
    • Homeschooling
    • Marriage
    • NFP
    • Our Home
  • Bookishness
    • Blog
    • Book Lists
  • Fashion
  • Podcast
    • Episodes
  • Speaking

How to Celebrate Holy Week at Home During a Pandemic

April 1, 2020 By Haley 11 Comments

Welcome to Carrots! I'm so glad you're here. This is where I share thoughts on liturgical living, faith, parenting, culture, and an extra dose of Jane Austen. You can sign up for my email newsletter here to stay in touch, or look me up on Instagram!

Welcome to Carrots! I'm so glad you're back. You can sign up for my email newsletter here to stay in touch, or look me up on Instagram!

Holy Week is the best time of the year to be Catholic. It’s a tour de force of incredible liturgies. It’s my favorite week of the year and this year…well, it’s going to be different.

I’m grieving the loss of our Holy Week Masses. A Holy Saturday without going to the Easter Vigil? Until a pandemic swept the globe it really seemed unimaginable. 

But here we are. It’s an Easter for staying home. The Domestic Church is more important than ever. 

If you’re not familiar with the phrase “Domestic Church” it’s actually a simple concept. It’s the home. It’s the life of faith in the family. How can we walk beside Jesus through his Passion and celebrate his Resurrection in our little domestic churches?

I have a few ideas and I’m sure generous folks will contribute more ideas in the comments, so here we go!

(links to Amazon are affiliate links)

Palm Sunday

“Go” to Mass. Yes, I know. Most of us can’t go to Mass but we can either livestream a Mass (we’ve enjoyed watching Mass from Bishop Barron’s chapel and for the Extraordinary Form, Mass at St. John Cantius). If watching a Mass isn’t appealing (I find watching Mass really comforting, but some people just really don’t like it) you can do the Mass readings as a family.

Palm Sunday is the start of Holy Week and the Gospel reading is really powerful, so don’t miss it! You can even assign different “roles” to your family members to read aloud with a narrator, Jesus, Judas, Peter, Pilate, the crowd, etc. If you have palm branches handy, then wave those palms. If not, you get one year’s reprieve from children poking their siblings with palms. Congratulations! 

Holy Monday

It’s time to get your home ready for Easter. That means spring cleaning, meal planning, etc.

Play some good Holy Week music like Handel’s Messiah, Bach’s St. Matthew’s Passion, or The Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles’s Lent at Ephesus. (You can find them all on Spotify.)

Holy Tuesday

More of the same, folks. Give the kids chores to do. Figure out what you’re going to eat Wednesday-Sunday. There’s not really any rules here because it’s a pandemic!

Spy Wednesday

Okay, now things really get rolling. Spy Wednesday is the day we remember that Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. Holy week is like walking through the story in real time and that is cool, folks.

My friend Kendra Tierney recommends hiding 30 coins in your home for your kids to find and then reading aloud the passages in the Holy Scriptures about this event so that’s our plan. (Kendra’s book, The Catholic All Year Compendium is a treasure trove of ideas, by the way).

Spy Wednesday is also the day that parishes have Tenebrae services (when we don’t have to social distance). Tenebrae means “shadow” or “darkness.” It’s a beautiful and haunting service. The Liturgy of the Hours is chanted and with the completion of each reading, a candle is extinguished until the church is pitch black.

So what about having a Tenebrae at home after dark? You can light the candles, do the readings (chanting not required) and extinguish a candle with each one, then have the kids spearhead the strepitus at the very end. This is the loud banging and noise representing the confusion, panic, and fear of the disciples during the arrest of Christ and the earthquake that accompanied his Crucifixion. In a parish it’s usually made by banging hymnals on the pews but I’m sure your children will be resourceful noisemakers!

If you’re looking for a good resource to have a Tenebrae at home, here is a great free downloadable order of service.

Holy Thursday

Holy Thursday is the beginning of the Paschal Triduum. Most years we’d be at the Mass of the Lord’s Supper celebrating the Institution of the Eucharist and the command Jesus gave his disciples to love one another. But even if we have to stay away from Mass, we can watch the Mass or do the readings as a family. And how about washing our family member’s feet?

If you’re going to make hot cross buns with that sourdough starter that quarantine convinced you to set up (do you know ANYONE who isn’t making sourdough right now?) you’ll want to get them started Thursday night to be ready for Good Friday!

Good Friday

The good news about Good Friday is that coronavirus doesn’t interfere with our ability to fast and abstain.

via GIPHY

Okay, so maybe that’s not GREAT news, but what’s a little more mortification during the worst Lent of our lives, right? Anyhow, fasting definitely makes Good Friday feel like Good Friday.

You can also pray the Stations of the Cross as a family. My favorite prayers for Stations are by St. Alphonsus Ligouri and you can find them online. Catholic Icing also has printable Stations of the Cross.

And this recipe for hot cross buns looks really good (but don’t forget to start it on Thursday night!)

Holy Saturday

Holy Saturday always makes me think of the awful silence of Christ in the tomb. Easter hasn’t yet arrived, but we are inching closer! This is the day that we do the last minute meal prep for Easter Sunday and quiet activities like dyeing eggs (if there’s any to be had this year! Eggs have been unavailable at our grocery store for awhile). Or print out these images for home altars by artist Daniel Mitsui and let your kids color them.

We also often watch a religious film to keep kids occupied for a couple of hours. The Gospel of John is on Amazon Prime and it’s a good one for Holy Saturday because it’s the entire Scriptural text dramatized (and it’s not as gory as The Passion of the Christ).

After dinner, get all dressed up in your Easter clothes even though we can’t wear them to Mass and watch a livestream of the Easter Vigil Mass (ideas for celebrating Easter Sunday Mass at home in the next section). If your local parish isn’t livestreaming the Mass, there are many options available. I asked for resources on Twitter and was flooded with replies!

We always let the kids open their Easter baskets right after getting home from the Vigil Mass so we’ll do the same at home and let each choose a piece of candy before brushing their teeth and heading to bed!

Easter Sunday

Time to celebrate! If you didn’t watch the Vigil Mass, you can watch an Easter Sunday Mass OR have a “dry Mass” at home with Kendra Tierney’s amazing resource.

We all hate that we can’t be together on Easter this year, but at least we can make merry in our own homes. In fact, despite all the darkness, we have to observe the feast. If the right groceries are available we’ll be feasting with ham, mashed potatoes, deviled eggs, green beans, and our traditional Stewart bunny cake.

The kids will probably sneak candy from their Easter baskets all days and we’ll pretend we don’t notice. We’ll try to set up some kind of Easter egg hunt in the backyard and we’ll call extended family to say hello. 

Yes, I know it’s not perfect. This isn’t the Easter any of us wanted. But don’t forget that we are an Easter people and Hallelujah is our song, as Pope St. John Paul II reminded us. Maintaining and observing our religious rituals and traditions will help us get through this difficult Holy Week and remind us that while the whole world feels like it’s stuck in Good Friday, Easter is coming. 

Please share additional ideas in the comments!

And if you’re interested in more of my liturgical living resources, my two books on the Christian Year are 50% off through the end of April with the code EASTER2020!


Related Posts

  • Lent and Easter Children's Picture Books // Carrots for Michaelmas8 Picture Books for Lent and Easter

Filed Under: Catholicism, Christian Year, Easter, Faith & Liturgical Living, Fasting, Feasting, Good Friday, Lent Tagged With: catholic, christian year, domestic church, holy week, liturgical living, quarantine Easter

Comments

  1. Katie says

    April 1, 2020 at 1:34 pm

    I wept as I read this. I’ve known for weeks now that we won’t be able to celebrate Holy Week as usual, but as Holy Week draws closer the grief becomes more and more real.

    These ideas are really great. Thank you! I like the sounds of your bunny cake!

    We may have an Easter sunrise service with our family (the babies can’t stay up late for the vigil yet and are up at the crack of dawn anyway so WHY NOT) and our friends who live close by may coincidentally be having an Easter sunrise walk and pause at the end of our driveway. I’ve also heard of people who are going to do bonfires (though I think in some areas fires may be banned atm).

    We will also be doing Stations of the Cross in our home on Friday and at the end we will make a little tomb out of rocks and decorate it with moss and flowers (On Easter morning the door will be gone!). We also like to have something middle eastern themed for dinner on Thursday (Mujadara? Falafel? lentil kofta?)

    Thanks for all that you do, Haley. Your words have given me such strength and courage on many a day.

    Reply
    • Haley says

      April 1, 2020 at 2:59 pm

      Oh I love those ideas. And Mudjadara is a great idea and I might steal it! Thanks so much, Katie.

      Reply
  2. Bond Strong says

    April 1, 2020 at 7:47 pm

    Love these ideas! I have felt real grief about these changes, but I am throwing myself into planning as a distraction. We are planning a bonfire in the backyard on Easter Sunday to roast peeps and have s’mores after our supper and egg hunt.

    Reply
  3. Kristy says

    April 2, 2020 at 8:10 am

    We have spent the past few Easter dinners with friends, which is lovely, but since we will be home we’re going to do a few things from when the kids were smaller. We’ll build an Empty Tomb Cake. I’ll have to find something other than new shoes to take up most of the space in their Easter baskets to cut down on the candy, but since we usually go to church early, and our service is now streamed a bit later (since there are multiple services), so we can have a special breakfast.

    We’ll (pending getting the groceries we need, which is hit or miss here) have a Passover dinner on Maunday Thursday, instead of some day that fits in the schedule. It is different, and we miss getting out, but we’re trying to find beauty here, as I know you are too.

    Reply
  4. Lacy says

    April 2, 2020 at 9:47 am

    This is an excellent post! I love the idea about hiding the coins and I have actually never heard that. We are totally doing it! Thanks so much for linking. 🙂

    Reply
  5. Robyn says

    April 3, 2020 at 11:15 am

    Thank you for this!

    Reply
  6. Kelli Sanders says

    April 3, 2020 at 12:39 pm

    I love the idea of the sourdough hot cross buns. Do you have a reliable gluten free recipe? I haven’t had much luck with gf sourdough.

    Reply
  7. JS says

    April 6, 2020 at 11:46 am

    St. John Cantius is also livestreaming Tenebrae on Wednesday: https://www.facebook.com/events/210128273765086/

    Reply
  8. GiannaT says

    April 6, 2020 at 1:45 pm

    A couple of other reccomendations for Jesus movies that are well done (not cheesy or overly saccharine) and kid friendly–

    -The Miracle Maker. Beautifully done artistic passion project about the life of Christ done as a collaboration between British actors (including Ralph Finnes as Jesus…he’s not just Voldimort and Rameses any more. He hits it out of the park in this role) and a Russian stop motion animation studio. Wonderful voice acting, gorgeous to look at. One of a very few films that helped me see gospel stories in a new light. The whole thing is free on YouTube.

    – The Chosen. This isn’t a movie but a TV show, the first eight episodes are out with more seasons planned. The acting is surprisingly good, and it’s free to watch on their app (free in the app stores). Another film that helped me see some gospel stories in a new light. The episode on the wedding feast at Cana (ep. 5) is absolutely wonderful, and I was shocked at how great a job the guy who plays Jesus does. The way he plays him is as someone you could actually see wanting to know and be around.

    Reply
  9. Marilyn says

    April 6, 2020 at 5:10 pm

    Thank You for these suggestions. EWTN has many things to watch during Holy Week. Wishing you and yours a Blessed Holy Week and a Joyous Easter. Stay well and safe. God Bless.
    Joan,Marion and Marilyn

    Reply
  10. Evie Schwartzbauer says

    April 9, 2020 at 12:25 pm

    Great suggestions. But why isn’t watching the Passion of Christ on this list?

    (of course, only for those who can stomach it, don’t have little ones at home, etc.)

    Reply

Leave a Reply to JS Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Contact

haley@carrotsformichaelmas.com

Sign Up for My Newsletter!

More ideas about celebrating the liturgical year, free printables, great links I love, and more of the Carrots family in your inbox!



Welcome! I’m Haley Stewart, a bookish mama of four and wife to a beekeeper. Writer, speaker, podcaster, and Catholic convert. Homeschooling, bacon-eating, and bright red lipstick-wearing Jane Austen aficionado. My first book, The Grace of Enough: Pursuing Less and Living More in a Throwaway Culture is available now!

All rights reserved. ©Haley Stewart Unauthorized usage and duplication of text and images without the express permission of Haley and Carrots for Michaelmas is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links to posts may be used as long as clear credit is given to Haley/Carrots for Michaelmas.
Follow on Bloglovin
follow us in feedly

Recent Posts

  • I’ve Moved!
  • Let’s Support Pregnant Moms and Babies!
  • My New Book! Jane Austen’s Genius Guide to Life
  • Let’s go to the UK this summer!
  • Join me in supporting Haitian women!

Archives

Disclosure

Some links found in my posts are affiliate links. If you make a purchase through an affiliate link, I will receive a percentage of the sale at no additional cost to you. Thank you for helping me support my family and keep the lights on here at Carrots! Haley Stewart is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.
Privacy Policy

Copyright Carrots for Michaelmas © 2025 · Design and Development by Santa Clara Design · Log in

 

Loading Comments...