What is the Catholic Liturgical Year?
Also
called the Church year or the Christian calendar, the Catholic liturgical
calendar is the cycle of seasons in the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church. The
Church year begins each year with Advent, the season of awaiting Christ’s
coming, and ends with the final Saturday of Ordinary time. Within the standard
calendar year, the Church year starts in early December (or sometimes the end
of November) and goes through the following November.
The
Church year consists of six liturgical seasons: Advent, Christmas, Ordinary
Time after Epiphany, Lent, Easter, and Ordinary Time after Pentecost. Seasons
begin or end based on a movable feast and so some seasons vary in length from
year to year, and vary as to the calendar dates. The following is a brief
overview of the Catholic liturgical seasons: their durations, their purpose and
focus, and the liturgical year colors.
Advent: First Sunday of Advent through December 24th
Advent
begins the Sunday closest to the feast of St. Andrew, which is November 30th.
Therefore Advent always falls sometime between November 28th and
December 3rd, and lasts until the Nativity of the Lord. The season
always has somewhere between 21 and 28 days.
The
Advent season is the time of waiting and preparing for the coming of Jesus.
This refers both to the anniversary celebration of the Incarnation, as well as
the second and final coming for which we are waiting and preparing.
The
liturgical colors of Advent are Purple and Rose, with Rose being used only on
the third Sunday of Advent.
Christmas: December 25th through The Feast of the Baptism of the Lord
The
Christmas season begins with the celebration of the birth of Jesus, Christmas
day, or as a vigil on Christmas Eve. The Feast of Christmas
lasts 12 days, until Epiphany. However, the time from Epiphany until the
Baptism of the Lord is also included in the Christmas season. Traditionally,
Epiphany had been fixed to January 6th, and the Baptism celebrated
on the octave of Epiphany, which was January 13th. In most
countries, the Epiphany is now celebrated on the Sunday closest to January 6th,
and the Baptism celebrated the following Sunday. The Christmas season is a time
of rejoicing in the Incarnation.
The
liturgical color of Christmas is white.
Ordinary Time after the Baptism: Monday after the Feast of the Baptism through Shrove Tuesday
After
the celebration of the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord, Ordinary Time begins.
Ordinary does not mean plain. The name comes from “ordinalis” meaning
"showing order, denoting an order of succession.” It is used in this sense
to refer to the order of the counted weeks. That is to say, it is a season of
counted weeks.
Ordinary
Time after the Baptism focuses on the early life and childhood of Christ, and
then on His public ministry.
The liturgical color
of Ordinary Time is green; however, as in all seasons, other appropriate colors
are worn on particular feast days. (For example, blue is typically worn
for Marian feast days.)
Lent: Ash Wednesday through Holy Saturday
The
season of Lent begins with Ash Wednesday and lasts until the final Saturday
before Easter, Holy Saturday. Lent is a penitential season. It recalls the 40
days Jesus spent in the desert, and the 40 years the Israelites wandered in the
desert. Lent focuses on the events leading up to Christ’s passion, and finally
on the Passion itself.
Lent
is 40 days long. This does not include Sundays, as Sunday is always a day for
rejoicing in the Resurrection. Altogether, it covers 46 calendar days, the 40
days plus the six Sundays.
The
liturgical colors of Lent are violet or purple, traditionally more of a
red-violet color than the deep purple of Advent. Rose may also be used, where
it is the custom, on Laetare Sunday (Fourth Sunday during
Lent). On Passion Sunday (Palm Sunday) and on Good Friday (which has no Mass
but a service remembering Christ’s passion) the color is red. White or violet
is worn on Holy Thursday and Holy Saturday (once again, there is no Mass but
there are other services on Holy Saturday).
Easter: Easter Vigil though Pentecost
The
Easter season begins with the Easter Vigil, which is celebrated after night
falls on the evening before Easter Sunday. The season of Easter is a joyous,
celebratory season. It begins with celebrating Christ’s resurrection and ends
by celebrating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles and other
followers of Jesus. Christ’s ascension into Heaven is celebrated just prior to
Pentecost. The Easter season last 50 days, from Easter Sunday through Pentecost.
The
liturgical colors of Easter are white, for most days, and red for Pentecost.
Ordinary Time after Pentecost: The day after Pentecost through the final day before Advent
(See
the above section on Ordinary Time for the history of the term)
The
second period of Ordinary Time is the longest liturgical season. Ordinary Time
resumes after Pentecost and runs until the final Saturday before Advent. This
period of Ordinary Time focuses on Christ’s reign as King of kings, and on the
age of the Church. This is the age we live in now, which is the time between
the age of the Apostles and the age of Christ’s second and final coming for
which we are ever preparing. The final Sunday in Ordinary Time is the Feast of
Christ the King; the Saturday after this feast is the final day of Ordinary
time.
Again,
the liturgical color of Ordinary Time is green; however, as in all seasons,
other appropriate colors are worn on particular feast days.
Summary Table of
Liturgical Dates
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||||||
2010
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2011
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2012
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2013
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2014
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2015
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2010
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2011
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2012
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2013
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2014
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2015
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Lectionary
(Sunday/Weekday)
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C/II
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A/I
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B/II
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C/1
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A/II
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B/I
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First
Sunday of Advent
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29 November 2009
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28 November 2010
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27 November 2011
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2 December 2012
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1 December 2013
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30 November 2014
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Birth
of the Lord
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25 December
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25 December
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25 December
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25 December
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25 December
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25 December
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Epiphany
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3 January
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2 January
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8 January
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6 January
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5 January
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4 January
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Ash
Wednesday
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17 February
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9 March
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22 February
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13 February
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5 March
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18 February
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Easter
Sunday
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4 April
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24 April
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8 April
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31 March
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20 April
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5 April
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Ascension
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16 May
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5 June
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20 May
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12 May
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1 June
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17 May
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Pentecost
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23 May
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12 June
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27 May
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19 May
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8 June
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24 May
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The
Body and Blood of Christ
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6 June
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26 June
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10 June
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2 June
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22 June
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7 June
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St
Peter & St Paul
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29 June
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29 June
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29 June
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30 June
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29 June
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28 June
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Assumption
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15 August
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14 August
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15 August
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15 August
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15 August
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16 August
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All
Saints
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31 October
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1 November
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1 November
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1 November
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2 November
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1 November
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First
Sunday of Advent
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28 November
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27 November
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2 December
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1 December
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30 November
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29 November
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What is the meaning of the
liturgical colors in the Catholic church?
In the
Roman Rite, since Pius V, colours are five in number, viz.: white, red, green,
violet, and black. Rose colour is employed only on Lætare and Gaudete Sundays.
Blue is prescribed in some dioceses of Spain for the Mass of the Immaculate
Conception.
White is the colour proper to Trinity Sunday, the feasts of Our Lord, except those of His Passion, the feasts of the Blessed Virgin, angels, confessors, virgins and women, who are not martyrs, the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, the chief feast of St. John the Evangelist, the feast of the Chains and of the Chair of St. Peter, the Conversion of St. Paul, All Saints, to consecration of churches and altars, the anniversaries of the election and coronation of the pope and of the election and consecration of bishops; also for the octaves of these feasts and the Offices de tempore from Holy Saturday to the vigil of Pentecost; it is used for votive Masses when the feasts have white, and for the nuptial Mass; also in services in connection with the Blessed Sacrament, at the burial of children, in the administration of baptism, Holy Viaticum, and matrimony.
Red(the color of the Holy Spirit) is used the week of Pentecost, on the feasts of Christ's Passion and His Precious Blood, the Finding and Elevation of the Cross, the feasts of Apostles and martyrs; and in votive Masses of these feasts. It is used on Holy Innocents if the feast occur on Sunday and always on its octave.
Green(a color of hope) is employed in Offices de tempore from the octave of the Epiphany to Septuagesima, and from the octave of Pentecost to Advent, except on ember-days and vigils during that time, and on Sundays occurring within an octave.
White is the colour proper to Trinity Sunday, the feasts of Our Lord, except those of His Passion, the feasts of the Blessed Virgin, angels, confessors, virgins and women, who are not martyrs, the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, the chief feast of St. John the Evangelist, the feast of the Chains and of the Chair of St. Peter, the Conversion of St. Paul, All Saints, to consecration of churches and altars, the anniversaries of the election and coronation of the pope and of the election and consecration of bishops; also for the octaves of these feasts and the Offices de tempore from Holy Saturday to the vigil of Pentecost; it is used for votive Masses when the feasts have white, and for the nuptial Mass; also in services in connection with the Blessed Sacrament, at the burial of children, in the administration of baptism, Holy Viaticum, and matrimony.
Red(the color of the Holy Spirit) is used the week of Pentecost, on the feasts of Christ's Passion and His Precious Blood, the Finding and Elevation of the Cross, the feasts of Apostles and martyrs; and in votive Masses of these feasts. It is used on Holy Innocents if the feast occur on Sunday and always on its octave.
Green(a color of hope) is employed in Offices de tempore from the octave of the Epiphany to Septuagesima, and from the octave of Pentecost to Advent, except on ember-days and vigils during that time, and on Sundays occurring within an octave.
Black is used in offices for the dead, and on Good Friday.
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