Yearly Seasons/Colors
Advent: Includes four Sundays before Christmas and Christmas Eve. The season begins on the Sunday nearest St. Andrew‘s Day, November 30th, and is the beginning of the ecclesiastical year. “Advent” means a coming, a visitation, the coming of our Savior’s birth. This is the first advent. The Second Advent is yet to come. It is during this season that we make preparation for the Nativity. Since it is a time of preparation and penitence the color of purple is used.
Christmastide: This season includes Christmas Day, and one or two Sundays between December 25 and January 6, designated as Sundays after Christmas Day. Since he season of Christmastide is the celebration of the birth of Christ, the color of white is used.
Epiphany: The time frame of this season is four to nine Sundays between January 6, which is Epiphany Day, and the beginning of Lent, which depends upon the date of Easter Day, designated as Sundays after Epiphany Day. This season begins on January 6, in commemoration of the manifestation of our Savior’s birth to the wise men of the East, and continues until Ash Wednesday. The color white is used for Epiphany Day and through one week. Green is used for the remainder of the season to signify the growing Church and the spreading of the gospel.
Shrove Tuesday: the day before Lent begins
Lent: This season begins six Sundays before Easter day. The fifth Sunday is called Passion Sunday and the sixth Sunday is called Palm Sunday. Lent is the revival season of the church. It is a time of penitence and self-denial, and of intensive cultivation of the life of the spirit. It lasts forty days, corresponding to the forty days’ fast at the beginning of Christ’s earthly ministry. It also marks His suffering and death on the cross. The seasonal color is purple. The last two weeks of Lent are called Passiontide. The final week is also called Holy Week
- Ash Wednesday: On Ash Wednesday ashes are placed on foreheads to remind us of our mortality. Dust we are and to dust we shall return, but with God’s grace we can be transformed.
- Palm Sunday: Palm Sunday begins the last week of Lent and commemorates the spreading of palm leaves and cloaks during Jesus’ entrance to Jerusalem.
- Holy/Maundy Thursday: Maundy Thursday commemerates Jesus’ last meal, the Passover meal, with his disciples and first communion ritual. The word Maundy comes for the Latin (man datum) which means command. The command Jesus gave to His disciples was to love one another.
- Good Friday: Good Friday commemorates the suffering and death of Jesus on the cross at Calvary.
Eastertide: This is Easter Day and six other Sundays, of which the last may be called Ascension Sunday. Easter is one of the most holy days of the Church, celebrating the resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The Easter Season runs for fifty days until the Day of Pentecost. It is the most joyous and celebrated season of the Church year. The origin of the English word Easter may have come from the Anglo-Saxon spring goddess “Eastre“. The color of this season is white representing the purity and divinity of our Risen Lord. Flowers, especially lilies, are symbols of Christ’s resurrection.