Saturday, 30 March 2024

Maundy and maun

 At church on the Thursday night before Easter, I was most interested to hear in the homily that the older name for that day is 'Maundy Thursday'. We generally call it 'Holy Thursday'. 

The priest said that the older meaning was that Christ gave us a 'mandate' to love one another and serve each other humbly - as he demonstrated in washing the the feet of his followers. Sure, when I looked around the internet, the same definition popped up.

A Scottish word then occurred to me - maun. When I looked up the meaning, there is was: Maun means must.

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