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In the Roman Catholic Church, the Good Friday liturgy is composed of three distinct parts: readings and prayers, including the reading of the Passion according to St John; the veneration of the cross; and a general communion service (formerly called the Mass of the Pre-sanctified), involving the reception of pre-consecrated hosts by the priest and faithful.
From the 16th century onward, the Good Friday service took place in the morning; in 1955 Pope Pius XII decreed that it be held in the afternoon or evening. As a result, such traditional afternoon devotions as the Tre Ore (Italian, “three hours”), consisting of sermons, meditations, and prayers centring on the three-hour agony of Christ on the cross, were almost entirely discontinued in the Roman Catholic Church.
Good Friday is a legal holiday in many Christian countries.