The Roman Calendar for Ordinary TimeMary Pierre Ellenbracht, C.P.P.S., received a doctorate in Liturgical Latin from Nijmegen. She currently teaches liturgy at Cardinal Glennon College and works with the Liturgical Commission of the St. Louis Diocese.doi:10.1080/04580638009410094Ellenbracht...
DishesSoupsVegetablesWineLibraryAdvent AlphabetBook Review, AdultBook Review, Children’sReading and DiscussionLiturgical Calendar01 January Feasts02 February Feasts03 March Feasts04 April Feasts05 May Feasts06 June Feasts07 July Feasts08 August Feasts09 September Feasts10 October Feasts11 November Feasts12...
Christians sometimes think of Ordinary Time as a kind of liturgical leftover. We celebrate the great cycle of the Passion, from Ash Wednesday through Lent and Easter and on to Pentecost. And we celebrate the great cycle of the Incarnation, from Advent through Christmas to Epiphany. Ordinary Tim...
And this isn’t just true for special seasons like Christmas and Easter. It’s true too, perhaps especially true, for the season we call Ordinary Time. Each year the church calendar sets aside more than thirty weeks for what it calls “Ordinary Time”, a season within which we are suppos...
Death is not something we like to think about at Christmas. I mean, Christmas is a time of celebration! We don’t want to celebrate death. In more liturgical settings, death might fit with the concept of Advent, but as Baptists, even if we mark the weeks of Advent, we would rather ...