Liturgy Office | Background Calendars

Background – Liturgical Calendars

Christ’s saving work is celebrated in sacred memory by the Church on fixed days throughout the course of the year. Each week on the day called the Lord’s Day the Church commemorates the Lord’s resurrection. Once a year at Easter the Church honours the resurrection of the Lord and his blessed passion with the utmost solemnity. In fact through the yearly cycle the Church unfolds the entire mystery of Christ and keeps the anniversaries of the saints.
GNLY 1

The General Norms for the Liturgical Year and Calendar (GNLY) is the Church document which introduces the Church’s celebration of the liturgical year and how it is celebrated.

Sanctoral Cycle

Through the year the Church commemorates on specific days events in the life of Christ and Our Lady, mysteries of our faith and the lives of saints. These dates are recorded in Calendars.

Solemnities, Feasts and Memorials

As the Church’s liturgy and the liturgical year are primarily celebrations of Christ’s Paschal Mystery the celebrations of the Calendar are given rankings. There are 4 rankings:

Solemnities

§ are Holydays of Obligation in England and Wales

Feasts

§ are Feasts of the Lord and replace the Sunday Liturgy when they fall on a Sunday.

Memorials

All other celebrations are Memorials of which there are two types: Obligatory and Optional

So that the purpose of the liturgical year to unfold the mystery of Christ is not lost the General Norms for the Liturgical Year and Calendar offers a table of liturgical which indicates the order of precedence where two celebrations occur on the same day.

Propers & Commons

Where specific texts are provided for a celebration for Mass (Missal and Lectionary) or the Divine Office these are called Propers. Where no text is provided texts are chosen from the relevant Common (i.e. Common of Martyrs etc.).

Calendars

The Church recognises that a particular celebration can have more significance in one area other another, i.e. St George is a Solemnity in England whereas elsewhere in the world he is an optional memorial. There are, therefore , different degrees of Calendars.

Universal

The Universal Calendar is celebrated by the whole Church. There are pages for each month of the Universal Calendar.

Regional

Some celebrations are celebrated over a whole continent such as the 6 patrons of Europe who are celebrated as feasts within Europe.

National

Each country can have a National Calendar celebrating Saints of national importance. There is a National Calendar for:

Diocesan

Each diocese can have its own Calendar commemorating the diocesan patron(s) and Saints significant to the life of the diocese.

Religious

Each religious order can have its own Calendar commemorating its founder and saints of the order. In a parish belonging to a religious order this calendar would be followed.

Local

Every parish should celebrate as a Solemnity its patronal feast (who it is dedicated to) and the Anniversary of its Dedication

Parishes dedicated to Our Lady, where the title is not in the Calendar, celebrate the patronal feast on August 15 or on another Marian feast which fits in better with the particular title,

The Anniversary is celebrated on:

  • the anniversary of the date of dedication.
  • the nearest Sunday to the dedication where that Sunday either falls in Christmas or Ordinary Time (i.e. not Advent, Lent or Easter).
  • where the date is unknown on the Sunday before the Solemnity of All Saints (November 1).