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The Liturgical Year |
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The
congregation at Saint Paul follows the liturgical church year both in
the lectionary, (cycles A, B and C) and the main color of the
vestments, altar hangings and seasonal banners and other visual aids.
Starting on November 29 and continuing until the season of Advent 2010.
we begin the year C of the common lectionary. This
cycle is sometimes known as the year of Luke because a majority of
our gospel lessons will come from Luke. He uses the
best literary techniques of his day to proclaim the good news of
salvation. Luke's gospel is structured around specific themes
that are developed in the teachings of Jesus.
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Advent
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- Color:
Blue
- Length:
4 weeks
- Theme:
A time of hope of renewal and the "coming of the Lord."
The
first Sunday in Advent, the sanctuary
will take on a different look. The color blue will be prominent in all
the vestments and banners and there will be a big wreath with blue
candles appearing over the middle of the congregation. The vestments
and banners will have some non-English words on them. Why and what does
it all mean.
Blue is the color of the winter sky after days of overcast, the color
of the immense ocean, the color of the night sky just before dawn. Blue
is the color of the season of Advent showing a confident hope in God’s
future now. While Advent wreaths as something to look at are familiar
to many of us, having it float over the whole congregation with its
greens and candles gives us more of a feeling of being in Advent. As we
walk under it we enter into the season. The circular wreath is a symbol
of the circle of eternity, the circle of return, and hope of renewal.
The long banners on each side of the sanctuary have the words
"Adventus" and "Domini." They are Latin for "the coming" and "of the
Lord." The words "Come Emmanuel"on the altar hanging come from Matthew
1:23. Emmanuel meaning "God is with us."
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Christmas
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- Color:
White
- Length:
12 days
- Theme:
Joy, God-With-Us, Salvation
Christmas
is the time of the year when we once again hear and read the familiar
stories of the birth of Jesus. It is our most widely observed
holiday, even in the secular world.
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Epiphany  |
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- Color:
Green
- Length:
4 to 9 Sundays
- Theme:
Light, Revelation, salvation for the whole world
Epiphany
may be as long as eight weeks or as
few as three depending on what date Easter is celebrated. Epiphany
means "to make known." On Epiphany Sunday and the
following Sunday, celebrating The Baptism of Our Lord the liturgical
color is white and then changes to green until Lent.
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Transfiguration
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- Color:
White
- Length:
1 Sunday
- Theme:
Jesus fulfills promis of the Old Testament, reveals God's glory
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Lent
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- Color:
Purple
- Length:
40 days (excluding Sundays)
- Theme:
Self-reflection, repentance, preparing for the journey to the cross
Lent
is the time to return (the meaning of the word "Lent" is to turn
around, to change direction) to God, to encounter God who makes and
keeps covenants with us. It is a time of preparation for
baptism or for a reaffirmation of our own baptismal covenant.
Lent is a time to return to the basics of faith formation, to ask
ourselves questions about our spiritual relationships.
Purple, the color of this season, represents its penitential nature.
We mark the beginning of this season on Ash Wednesday, when
we
gather to receive an ashen cross on our foreheads (a gesture rooted in
baptism), hear the proclamation to hear anew the ongoing meaning of
baptismal initiation into the Jesus' death and resurrection.
While marked with the ashes of human mortality, we hear God's promise
of forgiveness and taste God's mercy in the bread of life and the cup
of salvation.
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Holy Week  |
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- Color:
Purple,
scarlet and absence of color
- Length:
1 Week
- Theme:
Journey from death into life
Holy
Week, beginning with Palm Sunday, the Sunday before
Easter, and continuing through the week to Maunday Thursday,
celebrating the holy supper Christ gave to the church, through Good
Friday when the church gathers to hear the proclamation of the passion,
to pray for the life of the church and to meditate on the life-giving
cross to Saturday.
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Easter
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- Color:
White
- Length:
50 days
- Theme:
Resurrection, salvation, joy
The
season of Easter begins with the Easter Vigil on Easter Eve.
Easter is understood as the crown of the whole year,
and as such it lasts not for a day or a week, but for seven
weeks. Both white and gold are used for this season.
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Pentecost Sunday
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- Color:
Red
- Length:
1 Sunday
- Theme:
Receiving the power of the Holy Spirit
Pentecost
Sunday, the fiftieth day of Easter, our faith
community gathers to celebrate the ongoing life of the Holy Spirit, who
is its breath, vitality and inspiration. She helps us to
overcome divisions among us and unite us with others all over the world
as brothers and sisters of Christ despite our differences.
Jesus followers, many having fled on the day of his crucifixion,
steadily had become aware of the resurrection of Jesus, and finally
gathered together fifty days afterward. What they experienced
that day was the Spirit of God coming upon them and infusing them with
power. God's Spirit entered Jesus' followers individually and
collectively, raising them to ecstatic heights, enabling them to
continue the ministry that Jesus had begun. The liturgical
color for Pentecost is red, a strong assertive color. Pentecost Sunday
is sometimes called the birthday of the church. We hang a large
many-colored ship in our chancel because it is an ancient symbol of the
church.
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Trinity
Sunday  |
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- Color:
White
- Length:
1 Sunday
- Theme: Theme–The mystery of One God acting in
creation, redemption and
sanctification
Trinity
Sunday, the Sunday after Pentecost, is the day we
celebrate the mystery of God, both transcendent and immanent or both
outside our world and inside our world. We Christians are
baptized in the name of the triune God, making us members of the
Christian church. Now we live as witnesses to God's love for
us and all the world.
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Sundays after
Pentecost  |
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- Color:
Green
- Length:
23 to 28 Sundays
- Theme:
Growth of the Church,discipleship, being the Body of Christ,
the
challenge to carry the Gospel to the world
The
long season after Pentecost is the season of
growth starting in the spring and going into the harvest
season. The liturgical color is green.
This the liturgical season when the gospel readings present a selection
of Jesus' parables, miracles, and teachings. It is the time
when we again explore the many facets of our relationship to God,
through the teachings of Jesus.
In the fall, although we continue the liturgical season of Pentecost,
it does feel like a new season of beginnings. It is
a time when we gather our energies , restarting those programs that may
have taken a summer sabbatical and breathing new life into everything.
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Reformation Sunday  |
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- Color:
Red
- Length:
1 Sunday
- Theme:
A Reformation Church always in need of reforming
Reformation
Sunday, the last Sunday of
October. On this day we are invited as daughters
and sons of the Reformation to celebrate the perennial source
of reform in the church: the word of God
and the sacraments of
forgiveness and new life. The Holy Spirit's reforming and
transforming work continues among us, a Reformation church always in
need of reforming. The liturgical color is red.
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All Saints Sunday
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- Color:
White
- Length:
12 days
- Theme:
We remember and give thanks for all of God's people both the
living and those that have
gone before us
All
Saints Sunday, This is
a time to remember and honor those who before us, lived and died in
Christ. As the liturgical year draws to a close we hear in
our lectionary readings stories of crisis and judgment and parables of
loss and death. But at the same time the liturgy calls us to hear the
promise of Jesus that God is with us in life and in death.
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The
Feast of the Reign of Christ  |
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- Color:
White
- Length:
Final Sunday in the church year
- Theme:
Christ is Ruler of all of creation, preparation for his coming
(leading back into Advent)
The
feast of the Reign of Christ. The
last Sunday of the season is observed as the feast of the Reign of
Christ.
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