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  1. Detailed study of Triduum liturgies; planning, practicalities, relation to Christian Initiation • the culmination of the entire liturgical year • one single celebration from Mass of Lord's Supper to Easter Day • no other sacraments celebrated from Good Friday until the Vigil: Church is caught up in once-a-year dying/rising of Christ made ...

  2. Oct 9, 2021 · Major Seasons of the Liturgical Year Different Traditions within Christianity There are many variations for Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, and Independent Christians. In early Christianity, feasts gradually developed around important events in the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus.

  3. liturgy traditionally includes “the Washing of the feet” and is followed by a Eucharistic procession and a period of veneration of the Blessed Sacrament. Good Friday: commemorates the Passion, Death, and Burial of Jesus; a special non-Eucharistic liturgy focuses on the Johannine Passion, the Veneration of the Cross,

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  4. cg.catholic.edu.au · wp-content · uploadsThe Liturgical Year

    The Scriptures take us through the Liturgical Year on a three year cycle. The Church designates readings to be used for each day on a three year cycle. We have Liturgical Years A, B and C. We look at Jesus and our own lives through the Gospel of Matthew (Cycle A), Mark (Cycle B) and Luke (Cycle C).

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  5. Sunday in the New Testament: Sunday is the heart of the Christian year. It is the original feast day, the basis and the center of the liturgical year (Liturgy constitution, no. 106). The first generation of Christians chose the first day of the week (our Sunday) as the Lord's day, and in this way, made it the foundation of the

  6. The Liturgical Year begins on the first Sunday of Advent, which usually occurs around the beginning of December or the end of November, and ends on the feast of Christ the King.

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  8. irp.cdn-website.com · 29553ee8 · filesThe Liturgical Year:

    A Brief History and Explanation of the Liturgical Year The Church calendar has always revolved around the celebration of Easter and the mystery of the Redemption. Easter was the first an-nual feast celebrated by the early Christians and the only feast the Church celebrated for the first three hundred years. The feast of Christmas was recorded

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