One quick question: If you're doing a Mass at Midnight and a Mass early in the morning, should you go to sleep in the middle? I would, but I'm afraid I'll lose my momentum...
My typical Christmas schedule: 5:00 PM Vigil Mass, in the Parish Hall, English 7:00 PM EF Mass, in church, with parish choir 10:15 PM change ringing at one of the Episcopal bell towers in downtown Charleston (there is a Midnight Mass, English, I don't play for that one) 8:30 AM Mass, in church, English 11:30 AM EF Mass with another smaller group in downtown Charleston
I do sleep in between. All of the Christmas Eve activity is after a day that usually includes at least 2 emergency organ repair/tuning visits
I don't usually sleep in between. I tend to lose momentum when I do, and I take a while to get back into alertness. I know another one who experiences a similar reaction, but I think it depends on how an individual tends to react to short hours of sleep.
I'm truly blessed! I have an associate music director with whom I divide the services, as well as a volunteer group of musicians who cover one of the Eve services.
All told, we have:
Christmas Eve 3 pm, (associate plays; vocal/instrumental ensemble under her direction)
5 pm (small vocal ensemble/organist),
7 pm (volunteer keyboard player with ad hoc vocalists),
Midnight (full choir)
Christmas Day 9 am, 11 am (cantors/organists).
My associate and I do the Midnight Mass together (she plays, I conduct the choir and play some of the hymns as well), then I am given a guest room in the rectory. I return to the church for 9 AM Christmas Day, then it's on a plane and home to my parents'.
My experience is that there is a natural shift in momentum from Christmas Eve to Christmas Day. The concept of "progressive solemnity" aside, it seems that Christmas Day is always a more introspective liturgical experience than Christmas Midnight. We try to honor the level of solemnity and observe the protocols of the rubrics and the like, but it seems that there is a calm about the liturgy; a quiet reserve. This is unlike the shift from the Easter Vigil to Easter Sunday, where the energy seems to carry over and all of the liturgies seem to demand equal alertness.
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