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Again, I need help with RELGION HOMEWORK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2007-01-17 11:43:13 · 5 answers · asked by Addicted To Abercrombie & Fitch 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Also, what are three special events or days within the season?

2007-01-17 11:44:01 · update #1

5 answers

The Church year -- also called the Liturgical Year always starts with the first sunday in Advent. Immediately following is the Christmas Season -- from Dec. 26 through the second Sunday after Christmas.

Starting this year, January 14th became the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time -- even though the calendar does not have a First Sunday in ordinary Time.

Wednesday, February 21st, will usher in the Season of Lent and then the Easter Season (Sunday, April 8th) which goes all the way to Pentecost Sunday (5/27). The Sunday after that is the Feast of the Most Holy Trinity (6/3) and then the Feast of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Jesus (6/10).

Beginning June 27th, we pick up at the 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time....we stay in Ordinary Time until the Feast of Christ the King (11/25) which is always the last Sunday of the Church's year. On average, we have 32-33 Sundays within Ordinary Time.

You can always tell that we're in Ordinary Time because the priest's and deacon's vestments are green as well as the altar cloths.

These season's of the Church are followed by Catholics, Anglicans, Episcopalians, Lutherans, Methodists, Disciples of Christ and other churches. The Liturgical year helps us to better focus and to understand the life of Jesus. In this manner, you don't have pastors re-cycling their favorite little bible passages and/or sermons over and over. It also helps us to better live the Passion by entering into each Season.

A Liturgical Calendar was actually mandated by God in the book of Exodus when he stated the dates to celebrate the various Temple feasts: Passover, Shavuot, Sukkot and others.

2007-01-17 12:00:05 · answer #1 · answered by The Carmelite 6 · 2 0

Dates for what?
.

2007-01-17 19:46:26 · answer #2 · answered by Weird Darryl 6 · 0 0

I might be able to help you if i knew what ordinary time was. I have never heard that term before and i'm in a religion class and have literally been going to church my entire life

2007-01-17 19:47:16 · answer #3 · answered by Mud 3 · 0 0

Peace!
The Carmelite's answer is the right one. That is how the Catholic Church uses the liturgical calendar.
Good luck with your homework.

2007-01-17 20:34:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dr. Boettner then gives us "Some Roman Catholic Heresies And Inventions" and the dates that these alleged "Apostolic" traditions were added to Roman Catholic theology &endash;
* Prayers for the dead, began about A.D. 300
* Making the sign of the cross 300
* Veneration of angels and dead saints, and use of images 375
* The Mass, as a daily celebration 394
* Beginning of the exaltation of Mary, the term "Mother of God" first applied to her by the Council of Ephesus 431
* Priests began to dress differently from laymen 500
* Extreme Unction 526
* The doctrine of Purgatory, established by Gregory I 593
* Latin used in prayer and worship, imposed by Gregory I 600
* Prayer directed to Mary, dead saints and angels, about 600
* Title of pope, or universal bishop, given to Boniface III 607
* Kissing the pope's foot, began with pope Constantine 709
* Worship of the cross, images and relics, authorized in 786
* Holy water, mixed with a pinch of salt and blessed by a priest 850
* Canonization of dead saints, first by pope John XV 995
* The Mass, developed gradually as a sacrifice, attendance made obligatory in the 11th century
* Celibacy of the priesthood, decreed by pope Gregory VII (Hildebrand) 1079
* The Rosary, mechanical praying with beads, invented by Peter the Hermit 1090
* Sale of Indulgences 1190
* Transubstantiation, proclaimed by pope Innocent III 1215
* Auricular Confession of sins to a priest instead of to
God, instituted by pope Innocent III, in Lateran Council 1215
* Bible forbidden to laymen, placed on the Index of Forbidden Books by the Council of Valencia 1229
* Purgatory proclaimed a dogma by Council of Florence 1439
* The doctrine of Seven Sacraments affirmed 1439
* Tradition declared of equal authority with the Bible by the Council of Trent 1545
* Apocryphal books added to the Bible by the Council of Trent 1546
* Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary, proclaimed by pope Pius IX 1854
* Syllabus of Errors, proclaimed by pope Pitts IX, and ratified by the Vatican Council; condemned freedom of religion,conscience, speech, press, and scientific discoveries which are disapproved by the Roman Church; asserted the pope's temporal authority over all civil rulers 1864
* Infallibility of the pope in matters of faith and morals, proclaimed by the Vatican Council 1870
* Public Schools condemned by pope Pius XI 1930
* Assumption of the Virgin Mary (bodily ascension into heaven shortly after her death), proclaimed by pope Pius XII 1950
* Mary proclaimed Mother of the Church, by pope Paul VI 1965

And then Dr. Boettner concludes:
Add to these many others: monks - nuns -monasteries - convents - forty days Lent - holy week - Palm Sunday - Ash Wednesday - All Saints day - Candlemas day - fish day - meat days - incense - holy oil - holy palms - Christopher medals - charms - novenas - and still others.
There you have it - the melancholy evidence of Rome's steadily increasing departure from the simplicity of the Gospel, a departure so radical and far-reaching at the present time (1965) that it has produced a drastically anti-evangelical church. It is clear beyond possibility of doubt that the Roman Catholic religion as now practiced is the outgrowth of centuries of error. Human inventions have been substituted for Bible truth and practice. Intolerance and arrogance have replaced the love and kindness and tolerance that were the distinguishing qualities of the first century Christians, so that now in Roman Catholic countries Protestants and others who are sincere believers in Christ but who do not acknowledge the authority of the pope are subject to all kinds of restrictions and in some cases even forbidden to practice their religion. The distinctive attitude of the present day Roman Church was fixed largely by the Council of Trent (1545-1563), with its more than 100 anathemas or curses pronounced against all who then or in the future would dare to differ with its decisions.

2007-01-17 23:34:40 · answer #5 · answered by Freedom 7 · 0 1

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