What is the story and meaning of Maundy Thursday? 
             
              The Thursday of Holy Week is known as “Maundy Thursday,” 
              referring to the Latin word for commandment, mandatum. 
               In these last days of his 
              life, Jesus both states and enacts his new commandment, that we 
              love one another as he has loved us. To show the disciples what 
              he means, he washes their feet. These feet would 
              have been dusty, cracked, lined. A servant would normally have taken 
              a basin and washed the feet of guests arriving for a meal. 
            Jesus, 
              whom the disciples know as teacher and friend, healer and leader, 
              abandons all of those roles and kneels before each disciple, washing 
              feet. It is scandalous. Peter, for one, cannot bear it. He says 
              to Jesus, “You will never wash my feet.” (John. 13:9) 
              Jesus leads him to see that this washing of one another is a way 
              of revealing divine tenderness in common, human need. All of us 
              need to have our feet washed. All of us need to wash another.  
            On 
              this night in which he is betrayed by Judas, Jesus also has a last 
              meal with his disciples. He shares bread and wine with them, saying 
              “Do this in remembrance of me.” A 
              washing and a meal—both shared in common, both offered by 
              Jesus as signs of the love that will not let us go, of the divine 
              life embodied in him. 
            —Mary 
              Earle  
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