Lent Morning Prayer
This Lent, the GMO Staff is hosting a weekly time of morning prayer on Wednesdays from 8:30-9am. You can join us in person at the church or on Zoom here. Whether you’re in …


Holy Week 2025
Dates: Palm Sunday (April 13, 2025) – Holy Saturday (April 19, 2025)
Icon: Our Lenten seasonal icon prominently features an Ethiopian cross, designed by Atlas Minor.
“The liturgical year is an adventure in bringing the Christian life to fullness, the heart to alert, the soul to focus…It is the process of slow, sure immersion in the life of Christ that, in the end, claims us, too, as heralds of that life ourselves. ”
Joan Chittister, The Liturgical Year
“For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified.”
(1 Corinthians 2:2)
Dear sisters and brothers, the time of Holy Week is yet again upon us. This is the centerpiece of our annual cycle of worship together and represents the core of our faith: what we believe about God, ourselves, and the world, culminating in the life, death, and resurrection of the messiah Jesus Christ. As such, it is to be treated as holy, “set apart,” from other times within the calendar of our life together. Below you will find a calendar of the week, including in-person prayer services, stations of the cross pilgrimages, daily devotionals, and more.
May we all enter into this week with reverence, sobriety, and joy as we experience anew the love of God shown to us through the passion of Christ.
-Written by Rev. Joel Littlepage
PALM SUNDAY
Sunday, April 13, 9:30 AM
Grace Mosaic
SPRING BBQ
Sunday, April 13, 5 PM
Grace Mosaic
HOLY MONDAY PRAYER
Monday, April 14th, 12-12:30 PM
Grace Mosaic
HOLY TUESDAY PRAYER
Tuesday, April 15, 12-12:30 PM
Grace Mosaic
HOLY WEDNESDAY: STATIONS OF THE CROSS
Wednesday, April 16, 12 PM
Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in America
MAUNDY THURSDAY PRAYER
Thursday, April 17, 12-12:30 PM
Grace Mosaic
MAUNDY THURSDAY
Thursday, April 17, 7 PM
Grace Meridian Hill
GOOD FRIDAY
Friday, April 18, 7 PM
Grace Mosaic
EASTER SUNDAY
Sunday, April 20, 9:30 AM
Grace Mosaic
The Grace Mosaic staff has prepared daily reflections for Holy Week using readings and artwork from the Living Prayer Periodical.

The (Re)Formation Podcast explores spiritual formation into the way of Jesus for the Grace Mosaic community. During Holy Week, we will be releasing daily episodes with a gospel reading and staff devotion to guide your reflection and prayer in anticipation of Resurrection Sunday.
The Daily Prayer Project is a publication ministry of Grace Mosaic that supplies a holistic resource for spiritual formation to thousands across North America and the globe. You can access the Lent Living Prayer Periodical outside the sanctuary on Sunday mornings, or here.
In the Stations of the Cross, Christians all over the globe engage in a profound act of remembrance during Holy Week. Dating back to the early Christian community, this ancient practice is a pilgrimage in the Spirit to the “places” where Jesus suffered for us and our salvation. In the neighborhood that Grace Mosaic calls home—Brookland—we are blessed with a replica of the traditional processional route in Jerusalem, The Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land at 14th & Quincy St. NE! On Wednesday, April 16 at Noon we will gather together in person at the monastery to meditate on the stations together. You can access Grace Mosaic’s Stations of the Cross Booklet here.
The early history of Holy Week, principally the the Triduum(pronounced trij-oo-um)– Latin for “three days” (counted from sundown to sundown), consisting of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday–is complex and varied, from East to West.
The common dominator is the connection to the Jewish feast of Passover (or Pasch, from the Greek verb “to suffer,” which eventually becomes known in English as the “passion”). Even in the writings of Paul, you see a clear connection between Passover of old and the new covenant:
For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Let us therefore celebrate the festival, not with the old leaven, the leaven of malice and evil, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth. (1 Corinthians 5:7–8)
The early foundations of the way we celebrate Holy Week are found within the liturgy of the ancient church of Jerusalem. A pilgrim named Egeria (mostly likely from Spain) came to Jerusalem sometime between the years 381-384 A.D. and kept a very detailed diary of her experience worshipping with the Christians of Jerusalem. She recounted the following testimony:
If I could summarize, I would say that those early Christians saw this week as both the climax and the bedrock of the story of their faith. Many traveled to Jerusalem for this week. We walk and worship in their legacy of faith.
Grace DC is one church made up of a network of local congregations throughout Washington, DC.
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