Liturgical Year: Difference between revisions

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Before the development of the Liturgical Year, there were four times of fasting and prayer [[Ember Days|(Ember Days)]] to break the year into four quarters.
Before the development of the Liturgical Year, there were four times of fasting and prayer [[Ember Days|(Ember Days)]] to break the year into four quarters.
== Key dates for 2012 ==
{| {{Prettytable}}
|-
|align="right"|Jan 8
|Epiphany
|-
|align="right"|Jan 9
|Baptism of the Lord
|-
|align="right"|Feb 22
|Ash Wednesday
|-
|align="right"|Apr 8
|Easter
|-
|align="right"|May 27
|Pentecost
|-
|align="right"|Jun 10
|Corpus Christi
|-
|align="right"|Nov 25
|[[Christ the King]]
|-
|align="right"|Dec 2
|First Sunday of Advent
|}


== Key dates for 2013 ==
== Key dates for 2013 ==

Revision as of 16:44, 2 January 2013

The birth of the Messiah
6-7 weeks.
Following Jesus as a disciple
30-34 weeks.
The death and resurrection of Jesus
14 weeks.

The Liturgical Year also contains Holy Days of Obligation; the number varies by rite and region.

Dynamic Seasons

Before the development of the Liturgical Year, there were four times of fasting and prayer (Ember Days) to break the year into four quarters.

Key dates for 2013

Jan 6 Epiphany
Jan 13 Baptism of the Lord
Feb 11 Clean Monday
Feb 13 Ash Wednesday
Mar 31 Easter
May 19 Pentecost
May 30 Corpus Christi
Nov 24 Christ the King
Dec 1 First Sunday of Advent

Links