Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Seven Churches Visitation is an originally Roman Catholic Lenten tradition to visit seven churches on the evening of Holy Thursday. Following the Mass of the Lord's Supper, the Blessed Sacrament is placed on the Altar of Repose in the church for adoration. During the Seven Churches Visitation, the faithful visit several churches ...
In the pre-1992 Methodist liturgy and pre-1970 forms of the Roman Rite, the last two weeks of Lent are known as Passiontide, a period beginning on the Fifth Sunday in Lent, which in the 1962 edition of the Roman Missal is called the First Sunday in Passiontide and in earlier editions Passion Sunday. All statues (and in England paintings as well ...
The keeping of stations ceased entirely during the Avignon papacy, [2] and left their trace only as notations in the Roman Missal. After the Lateran Treaty of 1929 solved the Roman Question, Pope Pius XI and Pius XII encouraged a return to the ancient tradition by attaching indulgences for visiting the station churches of Lent and Easter. [8]
Lent is typically observed by various denominations of Christianity, such as Roman Catholics, Lutherans, Anglicans and more. The word “Lent” comes from the longer Old English word “lencten ...
The use of Lenten veils was uninterrupted in many localities, as in Sicily where the opening of the Lenten curtain during the Easter tradition is an established popular tradition. Also, Lenten shrouds remained a universal use of the Catholic, Lutheran and certain Anglican traditions as a form of visual penance derived from the Lenten veil. [8] [9]
The significance of the Lenten shrouds has been explained in a variety of ways. [7] The French liturgist Prosper Guéranger explained that "the ceremony of veiling the Crucifix, during Passiontide, expresses the humiliation, to which our Saviour subjected himself, of hiding himself when the Jews threatened to stone him, as is related in the Gospel of Passion Sunday".
To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used: {{Liturgical year of the Catholic Church | state = collapsed}} will show the template collapsed, i.e. hidden apart from its title bar. {{Liturgical year of the Catholic Church | state = expanded}} will show the template expanded, i.e. fully visible.
A Lenten calendar or Lent calendar is a special calendar used by Western Christians to count the days of Lent in anticipation of Easter.Lenten calendars traditionally start on Ash Wednesday and conclude on Easter Day.