Because Holy Saturday should not be a day of light and joy. Black Saturday is still a day of mourning and darkness. By anticipating it in the morning, you’ve essentially started Easter by Holy Saturday noontime. That’s a glaring anomaly.
I can tolerate the Easter Vigil as a Vesperal service when it’s actually done in the evening and ends when the sky is dark. However, because it’s a vigil by its nature, it is most properly celebrated as a night service. On this point, the 1955 revision was the correct move.
Dear Porthos,
I think that there are a few advantages to celebrating the Paschal Vigil in the morning, although I do believe that it was originally celebrated in the afternoon. The first is that it allows for the celebration of Paschal Matins and Lauds. Contrary to the beliefs of Bugnini and the others who reformed the rites of Holy Week (and the times), the Paschal Vigil is not an elaborated version of Matins (neither is the Vigil of Pentecost). Also, there is absolutely no reason to believe that the Resurrection happened at Midnight of Pascha, as the Jews reckoned days from sunset to sunset (Vespers to Vespers in the Catholic tradition, hence the practice of First Vespers). In addition, the practice from time immemorial has been to celebrate Vespers during Lent at midday, directly after the celebration of Mass (which took place after None during the Lenten season). So in fact, according to the ancient practice of midday Vespers (which coincides with the recitation of Benedicamus Domino as the dismissal at Mass). So in fact, the Paschal Vigil at the pre-1955 time remains the Vesperal liturgy that it originally was. Personally, I would advocate for some options for the Paschal Vigil as celebrated in the Extraordinary Form:
- The Pian Easter Vigil (along with the Pian Holy Week rites) should be abrogated.
- There should be an option to celebrate the Vigil at both the original time (around 3 pm), as well as the Tridentine time (around 8 am).
Pope Emeritus XVI has said the following about the practice of the Paschal Vigil being celebrated on the morning of Holy Saturday:
“The day on which I was baptized, as I said, was Holy Saturday. At that time [1927], the practice was still that of anticipating Easter Vigil on the morning, after which the gloom of Holy Saturday continued, without the Alleluia. It seems to me that this peculiar paradox, this peculiar anticipation of the light on a dark day, could be almost an image of history in our time. On one hand, there is still the silence of God and of his absence, but, in the Resurrection of Christ, there is already the anticipation of God’s “yes”, and we live based on this anticipation, and, through the silence of God, we feel his words, and, through the darkness of his absence, we foresee his light. The anticipation of the Resurrection amidst a history that goes on is the strength that shows us the path and helps us move forward.”