A Day of Faith and Reflection in Bannock County
Christians across Pocatello, Chubbuck, and Inkom are gathering today to observe Good Friday, the most solemn day in the Christian calendar. The day marks the Passion and crucifixion of Jesus Christ at Calvary, the moment the Church holds as the sacrifice that redeemed the world. In Bannock County, as in communities across Idaho, the faithful are setting aside the ordinary and entering into the mystery of the cross.
In Pocatello, Catholic and Protestant congregations alike will hold services marking the Lord’s Passion. Idaho State University students are on spring break, and many families are observing the day together.
The Lord’s Passion
Good Friday commemorates the final hours of Christ’s earthly life as recorded in the Gospels. His agony in the Garden of Gethsemane on the night before. His arrest and trial before Pontius Pilate. The scourging at the pillar. The crowning with thorns. The carrying of the cross through the streets of Jerusalem. And the crucifixion itself, at the hill called Golgotha, where Christ was nailed to the cross between two thieves and died at the ninth hour.
For Christians, these are not merely historical events. They are the central act of salvation. The Church teaches that through His suffering and death, Christ took upon Himself the sins of the world and opened the gates of heaven. “Greater love has no one than this,” the Gospel of John reads, “to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”
How Bannock County Observes the Day
In Catholic parishes including Holy Spirit Parish and St. Anthony’s in Pocatello, Good Friday is observed through the ancient Celebration of the Lord’s Passion. The church is bare. The tabernacle stands empty. There is no Mass. Instead, the faithful hear the full Passion narrative from the Gospel of John, come forward to venerate the cross, and receive Holy Communion from the reserved Blessed Sacrament. Many parishes pray the Stations of the Cross, tracing the 14 steps of Christ’s journey to His death and burial.
Protestant congregations across Bannock County hold their own observances. Tenebrae services, where candles are extinguished one by one until the church is in darkness, are common. Many churches offer midday services focused on the seven last words of Christ from the cross. In homes across the county, families observe the day with prayer, fasting, and abstinence from meat.
The Land Between Death and Resurrection
The Portneuf River runs steady through Pocatello, carrying snowmelt from the ranges to the south. On the benches above town, sagebrush is beginning its slow green-up. The Bannock Range still holds snow on its upper slopes. Spring comes later here in Southeast Idaho, and there is something in that patience that fits the day.
Christians have always seen in the turning of seasons a reflection of the Paschal mystery. Good Friday is the winter of the soul. The seed that falls into the ground and dies. The bare wood of the cross. But the promise of Easter is already written in the land. Sunday is coming. The stone will be rolled away. The garden will bloom. In Bannock County, where the rhythms of earth and sky are never far from daily life, this ancient story finds a landscape that speaks its language.
What Comes Next
Tomorrow, Holy Saturday, the Church keeps vigil at the Lord’s tomb. After sundown, the Easter Vigil begins with the lighting of the Paschal candle in the darkness, the most powerful liturgy of the Christian year. On Easter Sunday, April 5, churches across Bannock County will ring with alleluias as Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The fasting ends. The feast begins. And the promise that Good Friday whispered in sorrow, Easter proclaims in joy: death is not the last word.