#Holy Wednesday
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The Stations you don't know
Lost to us by time or place can be some of the most interesting devotional treasures. As a teenager I was made aware of the Stations of the Cross for the first time though I cannot recall praying them with any regularity until well into my twenties. Now as I approach my thirtieth birthday, I am a little embarrassed to admit that rarely do two to three weeks go by when I don’t pray the Stations of the Cross. I am talking about outside the season of Lent when they are traditionally prayed socially: I can’t get enough of them! Perhaps it’s that awkward preteen in me who liked pop punk music expressing himself anew.
To return to humility: I think this devotion of mine was greatly assisted by a small pamphlet called “Cross Wise: A Pocket Way of the Cross”. This reading material contains all the Station of the Cross with a brief reflection and three interjecting prayers along the way. This version of the traditional “Via Crucis” also provides the traditional prayer before each station:
“We adore you, O Christ, and we praise you, because by your Holy Cross you have redeemed the World.”
As well as the traditional prayer after each station:
“Father, not my Will but yours be done.”
Don’t ask me how I first found this pamphlet. As best I can ascertain it has a copyright year of 1989 and the official Catholic Church seal of approval in latin known as the “Imprimatur” administered by the Monsignor Maurice Byrne of the Archdiocese of St. Louis. I discovered a stock of these pamphlets in the Parish of my Youth during a recent visit. Perhaps this was where I first found this devotional tool?
The Stations of the Cross are the ultimate devotion of humility if you ask me. They are also uplifting in a way that I can’t quite put into words, so I won’t be attempting to here. They are a school in meditation because they require you to open your heart to what God might be telling you, and then go deeper. Without such an open heart these Stations can seem plainly morbid. We’re talking about Jesus Christ’s death here so that comes with the territory to a degree.
However, the very nature of devotion itself is also instructive with this. When we open our heart to the divine unexpected, not seeking to conquer an idea with our mind’s comprehension as we moderns so eagerly prefer to do, then these Stations become the very epicenter of Christ’s saving work. The charming tradition of adding a fifteenth station for the Resurrection really completes that arc.
But chances are if you’re reading this you already have some passing familiarity with the Stations of the Cross. You’re reading this far for the Stations you didn’t know as the clickbait title so successfully lured you! You want something different. Well this year I have uncovered two sets of other “Stations” related to Holy Week that may intrigue you or even enter into your devotional practice in some way.
Last Year was my first Holy Week back in the city of my birth: Rochester, New York. My wife and I are attending her childhood Parish, so we get a lot more Church time with my in-laws. Hold your jokes, this is truly a blessing. For two years straight we have participated in a Christmas pageant I can only describe as adorable.
Last year on Holy Thursday my father-in-law and I attempted to visit other Churches displaying the Blessed Sacrament for Adoration. It is an old tradition on that particular night to travel to Seven Churches where the Blessed Sacrament is so adored. Holy Thursday matters so much for us Catholics because its when we commemorate the Last Supper and, ergo, the institution of the Sacrament of Communion (the Blessed Sacrament) by Jesus Christ. If there is any day of the whole Church year for Adoration of the Sacrament, it’s the night of Holy Thursday.
Indeed, the Mass of Holy Thursday doesn’t end. It is merely the beginning of the shortest liturgical season on the Catholic calendar: Triduum. Technically Holy Thursday begins one long liturgy that doesn’t end until Easter Vigil the following Saturday. The Seven Churches Visitation is in some respect then the way some choose to honor this sacred moment as Good Friday beckons in the morning. I don’t know where this tradition originates from, but I faintly remember a retreat starting that night in my Youth Group back in High School. We called it “Passion Immersion”.
I said my father-in-law and I attempted to visit other Churches that night because we failed to do so. We only looked at the three Churches of our Parish and discovered there was no such Adoration taking place. This year I decided to prepare and found a dozen Churches within a short driving distance that we will venture out to come Thursday night. Along the way of this research, I discovered the Stations these Seven Visitations are supposed to represent: the Seven Movements of Jesus between the end of the Last Supper and the Crucifixion. Here they are:
Jesus prays in the Garden of Gethsemane.
Jesus arrested, bound, and taken before Annas.
Jesus taken before the High Priest, Caiaphas.
Jesus taken before Pontius Pilate the first time.
Jesus taken before Herod.
Jesus taken before Pontius Pilate the second time.
Jesus is given his Crown of Thorns and condemned to Crucifixion.
In a way, these are the Seven Stations preceding the Stations of the Cross. That’s a total of 21 stations, 22 if you count the Resurrection! Color me positively bedazzled upon learning this. You might also notice there is a lot of Jesus being paraded around in this sequence, twice getting thrown in front of Pontius Pilate who found the whole experience distressing at worse and bothersome at best.
That parading around lends itself to Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. We Catholics believe that little consecrated host is Jesus after all so parading him out on Holy Thursday in the interim before Good Friday feels appropriate with these Stations. Adding on the physical act of traveling to Seven different Churches really makes it feel like a pilgrimage, not unlike how the 14 Stations of the Cross developed from pilgrimages to the Holy Land where it actually happened.
But before we wrap this up, I have a parting gift for you: yet more Stations I was not aware of before this trip around the Liturgical calendar! These Seven Stations, we’ll say four because you’re probably familiar with at least three of these, are what each Day of Holy Week might be focused on in one’s devotional practice:
Palm Sunday: Jesus Triumphant entry into Jerusalem.
Holy Monday: Judas scorns Mary of Bethany for anointing Jesus’ feet.
Holy Tuesday: Jesus announces the impending betrayal of one of the twelve and Peter’s denial of him later.
Holy Wednesday: Jesus confirms Judas’ betrayal.
Holy Thursday: The Last Supper when Jesus institutes Holy Communion and the Priesthood.
Good Friday: The Passion and Death of Jesus Christ.
Holy Saturday: Jesus harrows Hell and defeats death.
Easter: the Resurrection.
I will assume Palm Sunday, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter are probably not unfamiliar to you. These aren’t Stations as much as they are devotions for each day since Holy Tuesday and Holy Wednesday’s devotions occurred on Holy Thursday with the Last Supper. Nonetheless, there is spiritual depth here I discovered this year.
Judas taking issue with expensive nard being used to anoint Jesus’ feet instead of being sold to support the ministry is a bit of foreshadowing if you will. But consider how Jesus’ response, a call for Judas and the others to treasure him while he is still with them, speaks to a right reverence we so desperately need nowadays. We often miss the true holiness of an event or thing because we are assessing bare value and not the deeper blessing at work. This is not a bad way to re-evaluate our own personal relationship with Jesus.
Jesus announcing his betrayal in the middle of the meal sending his Apostles into a drama seems unhelpful. Yet Jesus is calling all his Apostles therein to a more sincere self-knowledge as they are about to lose him. That’s not to mention they would all be thinking Jesus knew who the betrayer was and included him nonetheless. Frankly, I can’t help but think of contentious family meals around the holidays at this juncture. Jesus shares a meal with his betrayer, can we not share a meal with those who betray our worldviews?
Peter, our favorite overzealous hothead, pledging his loyalty to Jesus in this panic only to be told he would in fact deny Jesus three times, is flatly poetic. Nobody is above betraying their most intimate relationships and values. We all betray Jesus and we all might be great leaders and advocates for his Gospel nonetheless!
Jesus confirming Judas’ betrayal is difficult for me to process to be honest. This likely refers to Matthew 26:25 when Jesus, once again in the midst of the panic he has just induced, answers Judas’ insistence he is not the betrayer by responding: “You have said so.” What are we to make of that cryptic, non-committal response? Here’s a clue: Jesus will later respond to Pontius Pilate with a very similar retort: “You say so” (Matthew 27:11). This is after Pilate asks Jesus if he is King of the Jews in a clear attempt to trap him in bogus charges against the Roman State.
It’s as if the Gospel is telling us that when we are insistent on our bad faith assertions, if not outright lies, we force Jesus into something that some theologians will tell you Jesus is not even capable of due to his divine nature: biting sarcasm. When we lie to Jesus we wound the relationship. We sin. Coming from Jesus I cannot imagine how sarcasm would not rend the heart asunder.
Lastly, skipping ahead to Holy Saturday we find Jesus’ harrowing Hell itself between Good Friday and Easter. Don’t think of this as some kind of battle, he’s God and the fight was already won on the Cross, think of this as Jesus leaving no sheep behind. Before his saving act there was a waiting room for the righteous. Heaven wasn’t open quite yet, but there were some folks who were worthy of entering nonetheless. This harrowing of Hell is Jesus going into the most miserable of all waiting rooms and retrieving his beloved sheep.
And with that we arrive at Easter, the greatest celebration Christianity has to offer. If I haven’t bored you to death with journaling my favorite devotions or sermonizing obscure Holy Week devotions, then I hope I have given you some spiritual food for this special week we find ourselves in. It’s amazing what we discover can spiritual feed us if we open our hearts to be filled with something anew.
Jesus awaits there for us.
#Jesus#Holy Week#Holy Monday#Palm Sunday#Holy Tuesday#Holy Wednesday#Holy Thursday#Good Friday#Holy Saturday#Easter#catholicism#catholic
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“Six days before the Passover celebration began, Jesus arrived in Bethany, the home of Lazarus—the man he had raised from the dead. A dinner was prepared in Jesus’ honor. Martha served, and Lazarus was among those who ate with him. Then Mary took a twelve-ounce jar of expensive perfume made from essence of nard, and she anointed Jesus’ feet with it, wiping his feet with her hair. The house was filled with the fragrance. But Judas Iscariot, the disciple who would soon betray him, said, “That perfume was worth a year’s wages. It should have been sold and the money given to the poor.” Not that he cared for the poor—he was a thief, and since he was in charge of the disciples’ money, he often stole some for himself. Jesus replied, “Leave her alone. She did this in preparation for my burial. You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me.” —John 12:1-9 (NLT)
“But Jesus, aware of this, replied, “Why criticize this woman for doing such a good thing to me? You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me. She has poured this perfume on me to prepare my body for burial. I tell you the truth, wherever the Good News is preached throughout the world, this woman’s deed will be remembered and discussed.” —Matthew 26:10-13 (NLT)
“When she poured this perfume on my body, she did it to prepare me for burial. Truly I tell you, wherever this gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.” —Matthew 26:12-13 (NIV)
“Easter Explained: An 8-Day Guide to Celebrating Holy Week.” A Devotional By Spoken Gospel - Day 4: “Holy Wednesday”:
“For the last 1,600 years, Christians around the world remember the last days of Jesus' life during Holy Week. Today is Holy Wednesday. Holy Wednesday remembers the day when both faithful Mary and treacherous Judas prepare Jesus to die.
After an increasingly public string of challenges to both Rome and the temple system, the religious elite believe that Jesus is a threat to their kingdom and religion (John 11:48). If Jesus is not killed, they believe Rome will come, take what little power they have left, and destroy their temple (John 11:50; Matthew 26:3-4). Believing it's better for one man to die than for a whole nation to be lost, the religious elite make their final plans to kill Jesus.
Meanwhile, a woman named Mary takes a jar of perfume valued at 300 pieces of silver (or a year's salary), cracks it open, pours it over Jesus' head and feet, and rubs it into his skin with her hair (John 12:3). It's not only lavish but socially awkward and humiliating. Horrified, Judas speaks up for the disciples. He calls Mary's display wasteful and argues the perfume should have been sold and spent on the poor (John 12:4-5; Matthew 26:8-9). But Jesus quiets Judas and tells the disciples Mary is doing the right thing. He says: 'You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me' (Matthew 26:11).
Jesus isn't dismissing care for the poor with this statement, he's highlighting the value of what he has come to do. Like the religious elite have said, the only way to save God's people is if he is killed. Mary understands that Jesus must die, so she embalms him in advance. To her, it's no 'waste' to offer her most precious possession if it prepares Jesus for the burial that will save God's people (Matthew 26:12). But Judas realizes Jesus is no longer useful to him. So he sneaks away and tells the religious elite he will betray Jesus for a tenth of what Mary poured out (Matthew 26:14-15).
Strangely, everyone in this story is preparing for Jesus to die. The religious elite offer a bribe to more easily capture Jesus. Judas betrays Jesus for another month's expenses. And Mary prepares him to be laid in a tomb. Even more strangely, everybody believes Jesus must die in order to save them. Judas thought Jesus' death would save his financial status. The religious elite thought Jesus' death would prevent Rome from breathing more heavily down their necks.
But Holy Wednesday is good news because Jesus announces that his death will save God's people not from Rome or poverty, but from death itself (John 11:51-52). Mary had just seen Jesus raise her brother from the dead (John 11:43-44). She hopes that if Jesus dies, then all God's people can be saved from death. Jesus is worth her most precious possession because Jesus has the power to give eternal life to all who ask.
So I pray that on this Holy Wednesday you will accept that Jesus must die in order to save his people from death forever.”
#john 12:1-9#matthew 26:10-13#matthew 26:12-13#easter#holy wednesday#bible#christian blog#god#belief in god#faith in god#jesus#belief in jesus#faith in jesus#bible verses#bible truths#bible scriptures#bible quotes#bible study#christian devotionals#christian life#christian faith#christian living#christian encouragement#christian inspiration#christianity#christian quotes#spoken group#encouragement#keep the faith#make him known
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Holy Week Day 4: Spy Wednesday
In John 12:1-8 we’re told that Mary anointed Jesus with a very expensive oil, we also learn that Judas criticized her action, but was reprimanded by Jesus. Later, Judas went to chief priests and made a deal with them in order to betray Jesus (Matthew 26:14-16).
The Bible records a single reprimand to Judas and then his betrayal. Opposite to him we have Peter, who wasn’t only rebuked by Jesus, but also by Apostle Paul (Galatians 2), however his reaction was totally opposite to Judas’ (2 Peter 3:14-16).
Proverbs 9:8 says “Do not correct a scoffer, lest he hate you; Rebuke a wise man, and he will love you.” How do you react when you’re rebuked? I must confess that my reaction is not always good, but I know I’m the one at fault. Judas was rebuked by Jesus and ended up betraying Him and then killing himself, Peter was also rebuked by Jesus, but he ended up as one of the most importants Apostles. Whose exemple do you want to follow?
#bible#christianity#religion#holy week#spy wednesday#holy wednesday#judas#peter#criticism#rebuke#humility
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Haven't seen you in quite a while I was down the hold, just passing time. Last time we met it was a low-lit room We were as close together as a bride and groom. We ate the food, we drank the wine Everybody having a good time
Except you, you were talking about the end of the world. I took the money, I spiked your drink You miss too much these days if you stop to think. You led me on with those innocent eyes And you know I love the element of surprise. In the garden I was playing the tart I kissed your lips and broke your heart.
You, you were acting like it was the end of the world. In my dream, I was drowning my sorrows But my sorrows they'd learned to swim Surrounding me, going down on me Spilling over the brim Waves of regret and waves of joy. I reached out for the one I tried to destroy.
You, you said you'd wait
till the end of the world
#holy wednesday#spy wednesday#put in this DVD one Saturday that I was grounded and home alone#track one beautiful day fine whatever#track two elevation fine whatever#track three#this#completely blew my mind#bono's willingness to make a fool of himself on stage#man
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Take a Stand
April 5, 2023 – Holy Wednesday Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040523.cfm) Worse than their disobedience – for eating the forbidden fruit, Adam & Eve commit the sin of not taking responsibility for their actions. When God asked them why they disobeyed Him, they blame not themselves but rather each other & the snake. Simply put, they don’t own up their promise…
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Made with pencil colors and pens at March 28 of 2024.
#Lent#Lent Calendar#Path Across The Desert#Lent 2024#Lent Calendar 2024#Path Across The Desert 2024#Holy Week#Holy Wednesday#Jesus Christ
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Spy Wednesday
Aloha kākou. Today is “Pōʻakolu Hemolele” or “Holy Wednesday.” During Easter Holy Week this day is also known as Spy Wednesday, to commemorate the treachery of Judas Iscariot, who made a bargain with the high priests to betray Jesus for thirty silver pieces. An act of betrayal where Jesus said to Judas at the Last Supper, “Satan entered into him.” Jesus then said to Judas, “What you are going to…
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#Bible#Christianity#Easter#Faith#Holy Wednesday#Holy Week#Judas#MAGA#Marxist Democrats#Religion#Spying#Transgender#Tyranny
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Betrayal
Today is Holy Wednesday, also known in the historic Church as Spy Wednesday, Good Wednesday, or Great Wednesday.
For centuries this has been the day that Christians commemorate Judas' conspiring with the Sanhedrin to betray Jesus and turn him over to them to be arrested.
In John's Gospel, it seems that Judas' betrayal is connected to his being a dishonest, shifty person, who kept the money for the group but skimmed off of it for his own gain.
This claim is not corroborated in any of the other Gospel accounts. In fact, in Luke's Gospel, the narrator declares that "Satan entered Judas," who agreed with the Sanhedrin to betray Jesus for money.
Interestingly, the first-century Christian text The Gospel of Judas paints him as a hero of sorts--the only disciple who was willing to take on the impossible task of initiating the Passion of Jesus by what appeared to be a betrayal.
The first-century Christians who adhered to The Gospel of Judas believed that when Jesus said to Judas "Do you have to do." at The Last Supper, he was giving him his marching orders.
As fascinating as it is to read, The Gospel of Judas did not reflect the majority view of the events of Holy Week, nor did it reflect the view of Judas held by most first-century Christians.
But maybe it was picking up on something interesting and meaningful. Let me explain...
Like most of us, Judas was neither all bad nor all good. His open betrayal of Jesus may have been based on his own frustrations with Jesus regarding revolution, and an armed rebellion.
He could have been trying to force Jesus' hand, as well, which some scholars over the years have surmised. Or it's entirely possible that he was simply jealous and angry over his less-than role in the group, as opposed to Peter, James, and John.
Whatever his motivation, Judas did what he did, and later repented of it in dramatic fashion, throwing the money he was given back at the very leaders who recruited him, and then committing suicide--according to some of the Gospel accounts.
Think about this, though. Along with the other disciples, Judas participated fully in the life they led following Jesus. The disciples performed miracles, according to the text. They preached, taught, and witnessed all that Jesus did.
Judas would have done all these things. At one point he was filled with promise, enthusiasm, and probably hope as well. But something changed within him, and he did the unthinkable.
I often think about the story of Judas when I begin to ponder my own life of faith.
Sometimes what starts with the best of intentions can turn into betrayal when I feel as though my life of following Jesus isn't paying off as I think it should.
It's all too easy to betray our values, character, and even all the things we say we believe when it feels like our world isn't as it should be. We want to force God's hand, or simply wrest control away from God to get what we want.
This is why we see far too many Christians conflating politics with religion, blurring the lines between the kingdom of God and the kingdoms of this world, putting their faith and trust in anything but Jesus.
Judas' story is a cautionary tale for us, and on this Holy Wednesday, we get the chance to reflect on all the ways we have handed Jesus over to be crucified and to repent of them.
We get the chance to return to our former promise, enthusiasm, and hope.
May it be so and may the grace and peace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you now and always. Amen.
#presbymusings#dailydevotion#leonbloder#dailydevo#christian living#dailydevotional#faith#leon bloder#spiritualgrowth#spirituality#judas iscariot#Holy Week#Holy Wednesday
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Wednesday of Holy Week (John 13:21-32)
There’s a lot that’s out of our control. Yet, we always have the choice of self-control concerning our words and actions. Things like kindness, empathy, and love are within our ability to choose.
The Lord’s Supper, by Rubem Zevallos Técnica After saying this Jesus was troubled in spirit and declared, “Very truly, I tell you, one of you will betray me.” The disciples looked at one another, uncertain of whom he was speaking. One of his disciples—the one whom Jesus loved—was reclining close to his heart; Simon Peter therefore motioned to him to ask Jesus of whom he was speaking. So while…
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#betrayal#choices#christ&039;s disciples#christian discipleship#christian life#christianity#decision making#god&039;s glory#god&039;s grace#god&039;s love#gospel of john#holy wednesday#holy week#jesus christ#john 13#judas iscariot#last supper#lent#satan#self-awareness#self-control#the lord&039;s table#the table#troubled
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HOLY WEDNESDAY AKA SPY WEDNESDAY (Miercoles Santo): Matthew 26:14-16
Then one of the twelve, whose name was Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and said: "What will you give me if I deliver him over to you?"
And they paid him thirty pieces of silver. And from that moment he sought an opportunity to betray him.
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"How much will you give me?" "Ten pieces of silver!" "You don't think I know what Jesus is worth to you? Fifty pieces of silver!" "Fifteen! Thirty!" "Done!"
#random stuff#catholic#holy week#holy wednesday#spy wednesday#miercoles santo#nest entertainment#animated stories from the new testament
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Reflexiones Semana Santa en el año 2023 Santos de Espíritu
Reflections Holy Week in the year 2023 Saints of the Spirit Lunes Santo / Holy Monday ALEJANDRA FUENTES Columnista – Escritora, Autora Directora Continental CentroAmérica Si no reflexionamos sobre el pasado, no podremos comprender la necesidad de evolucionar en el futuro. If we do not reflect on the past, we will not be able to understand the need to evolve in the future. Un reflejo de la…
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#2023#Alejandra Fuentes Ceo ADF ENTERPRISES of Florida U.S.A.#DIOS#Directora Continental CentroAmérica#HOLY FRIDAY#HOLY MONDAY#HOLY THURSDAY#HOLY TUESDAY#HOLY WEDNESDAY#JESUSCRISTO#lomasleido#MIAMI#MUNDO#REFLECTIONS#REFLECTIONS FOR HOLY WEEK#RESURRECTION SUNDAY#SANTOS DE ESPIRITU#SATURDAY OF GLORY#USA
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What a beautiful picture! Blessings to you, this Holy Wednesday, every Wednesday and every other day of the week. Amen! 🙏🕊️🙌
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HE SAID THE THING!!
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Knowing and believing the person we love
April 5, 2023 – Wednesday of the Holy Week Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/040523.cfm) Judas sold his friend and teacher. The Gospel recounts to us that one of Jesus’ close friends sold him to the chief priests. Why would Judas do that to the person who only showed kindness and generosity to him and to the people? Judas though, was chosen to be one of the…
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he's so annoying
#house#house md#james wilson#lisa cuddy#robert sean leonard#rsl#lisa edelstein#s03e23#wilson dummy#lisa is so gorgeous holy#and its wilson wednesday!
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I always like to hope your little drabbles might be inspired by your sweetie podcast guy 👀
Oh they kinda are inspired by him these days 👀
One for the Road
Eddie Munson x fem!reader
Warnings: NSFW, 18+ ONLY, a whole lot of oral (f receiving)
“I like this shirt,” Eddie mumbles against your jaw, his fingers playing at the hem of your massive thrifted t shirt. You’re standing in the dappled morning sunlight warming his shitty little apartment kitchen. His hands roam your body with an urgency that belies the way he’d fucked you onto his messy sheets just thirty minutes prior.
“The day I got it I also got a Hellraiser t shirt. Huge. With a big picture of Pinhead on the chest,” you say proudly, smoothing a hand over said chest to indicate where the horror icon’s face would be. Eddie hones in on that one detail, of course, and cups your breasts through your shirt with a groan.
“Oh yeah? If it was that big did you cut the shirt up?”
You shake your head.
“No. I left it big and oversized. You know. Sexy,” you joke. Eddie nods slowly, still focusing all his attention on your tits through this particular shirt.
“Sexy. Oh yeah,” he mutters, completely distracted. He lifts the shirt slightly to reveal the feminine pair of boxers you’ve put on for your drive home. “These are fucking cute.”
“You think?” you ask, wiggling your hips cheekily.
“Yeah, I think,” mumbles against your neck before sucking on your earlobe. You go to say something else but his hand is now sliding under the waistband of your boxers. Within seconds he’s inside your panties and playing with the slick that’s gathered there.
“Eddieeee, I have to go,” you try to argue, but it turns into a gasping whine. Eddie ignores you. Or at least, he ignores your argument. He latches onto one of your nipples through your shirt and looks up at you pointedly to watch your face while he slides two fingers deep inside you. “Oh fuck…”
You don’t know how it happens. You really don’t. One minute you’d had your bag on your shoulder and you were half out the door, and in the next minute Eddie was sliding down to his knees, pushing you up against the wall at the entrance to his apartment. He pulls down your boxers and underwear before you can protest about your lateness any further, and he hooks your leg up over his shoulder before you can do more than grasp at his hair.
“Are you serious? I - oh god.”
Eddie’s mouth is on you and you should be aware of the fact that you’re moaning wantonly right by the door that leads to an inner hallway where all of his neighbors can probably hear you as they set out on their day.
Your bag starts slipping off your shoulder and the lights start flickering - he’d pushed you against the wall where the light switch is, so each time you move you find yourself clicking it on and off with your back.
“Eddie - oh. Eddie!” you try to call his attention to the awkward placement through your laughs and gasps, but he only seems vaguely annoyed by the distraction. He manhandles you over the the kitchen island and you grip at the counter, unsure what he has planned until he gets on his knees from behind you, gripping your hips and pulling your legs back apart so he can get to you with his mouth again.
“Holy fuck…” you yelp, completely overwhelmed by the stimulation. Eddie shoves two fingers deep inside of you again, thrusting and building up momentum until you find yourself forced up onto tiptoes.
You clutch at the counter and do your best to take the force of his thrusting - it feels so fucking good when he curves his fingers just like that - but you’re so overwhelmed you finally have to say something.
“Eddie. You’re making my legs shake! I can’t…” you pant.
You’re not sure what you expected him to do, but either way you’re surprised when he clambers to his feet and grabs you into his arms. Insecure and completely unused to being lifted, you let out a scream, but you’re only in the air long enough for him to deposit you onto one of the stools by the kitchen counter.
“This better for your legs?” Eddie asks, kissing your thighs while he spreads them and settles back on his knees between them.
“Yeah, I guess - Eddie!” you cry out at the feeling of his mouth on you yet again. His lips suction around your clit and he sucks. Hard. Your leg hooks over his shoulder again and your fingers thread through his hair pulling tightly as you hold on for dear life.
You don’t even have time to warn him. Your orgasm hits you like a freight train. You spasm around the fingers he’d some how managed to get back deep inside you at one point, and he laps you up as you rock your hips into his face. Thighs press into his ears while you ride out the feeling.
By the time your breathing has finally returned to normal, Eddie has already gotten up from the floor and started assembling your clothes and bag from where they’d been strewn about.
“You’re gonna be late for work, huh baby?” he asks, with the biggest shit eating grin on his face. A massive erection stands proud in his boxers and you laugh in spite of yourself, fully breathless.
“What the fuck was that, Munson?”
He leans forward to give you a kiss
“That was one for the road.”
~*~
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Thanks for reading, please comment and reblog to let me know what you think!
#I’m being silly - this one is 100% inspired by my Wednesday morning#he shocked the fuck out of me#it was fan fic behavior I was like sir what is this holy shit#eddie munson smut#eddie munson x reader#Eddie Munson thots#eddie munson x fem!reader
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