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A Liturgical Calendar For the Year 2024. With Links to the Lessons From the Revised Common Lectionary, as modified for use in Episcopal worship
Each year the Secretariat of Divine Worship of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops publishes the Liturgical Calendar for the Dioceses of the United States of America. This calendar lists each day's celebration, rank, liturgical color, citations for the Lectionary for Mass , and Psalter cycle for the Liturgy of the Hours .
Each year, the USCCB Secretariat of Divine Worship publishes the Liturgical Calendar for the Dioceses of the United States of America. This calendar lists each day's celebration, rank, liturgical color, citations for the Lectionary for Mass, and Psalter cycle for the Liturgy of the Hours.
publishes the Liturgical Calendar for the Dioceses of the United States of America. This calendar is used by authors of ordines and other liturgical aids published to foster the celebration of the liturgy in our country. The calendar is based upon the General Roman Calendar, promulgated by Pope Saint Paul VI on
The Church uses the liturgical calendar to teach us to see “Christ in all the Scriptures.” Since I have already referenced it, the feast of Christ the King, the final Sunday of the liturgical year, may serve as a convenient example of this dynamic.
About the Common Lectionary. Calendar of the Church Year. Liturgical Colors. Key (Cycle): A B C. Lesser Feasts & Fasts Revised Common Lectionary. Current Cycle: B (from: 12-03-2023 to 11-30-2024)
Catholic liturgical calendar with links to daily readings and reflections for Mass. Based on the General Roman Calendar with additions from the U.S.C.C.B.
The Liturgical Calendar, also known as the Christian Year or Church Year, encompasses various seasons and festivals that mark the life of Jesus and the foundational events of Christianity. It is celebrated and observed by Catholics, Orthodox Christians, Anglicans, and other liturgical traditions.
The liturgical calendar puts the universal Church—which has been established all over the world—on the same page so that we can celebrate and worship God in unison as the one Body of Christ. It also places heaven and earth on the same clock, so to speak; it unites heaven (our eternal home) with earth (our pilgrimage journey).
The liturgical calendar follows the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. This page describes its key dates, seasons, and colors.