Easter Postcards
About Easter
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia, by MultiMedia
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Eastertide, or the Easter Season, begins on
Easter Sunday and continues until
Pentecost in the Christian liturgical calendar, thus spanning a total of
seven weeks. Some denominations — most notably the Roman Catholic Church
and the Anglican churches — formerly included the next two weeks as
well.
Until 1970, the Roman Catholic calendar labelled the Sundays following Easter
Sunday as "Sundays After Easter," the first such Sunday often being called Low
Sunday, the next Sunday the Second Sunday After Easter, the Sunday after that
the Third Sunday After Easter, and so on. The fifth Sunday after Easter was
sometimes called Rogation Sunday, or "the Sunday before the Rogation days." On
the Thursday after the aforementioned Sunday, forty days after Easter Sunday, is
the feast of the Ascension, and the Sunday falling three days after this was
known as the "Sunday After Ascension" and not the "Sixth Sunday After Easter."
Pentecost is the next Sunday, followed by Trinity Sunday, and four days after
the latter, the feast of Corpus Christi. The calendar week (Sunday through
Saturday) beginning on Trinity Sunday was deemed the last week of the Easter
season, which thus encompassed nine weeks.
The new calendar which took effect in 1970 following its earlier approval by
the Second Vatican Council changed the "Sundays after Easter" to "Sundays of
Easter," with Low Sunday becoming the "Second Sunday of Easter," the next Sunday
the "Third Sunday of Easter," etc., with the Sunday after the Ascension being
renamed the "Seventh Sunday of Easter." While Pentecost and Trinity Sunday were
themselves retained, the entire weeks starting with these Sundays were no longer
considered part of the Easter season, instead being reckoned as the first two
weeks within the second installment of Ordinary Time. Concomitantly, red
vestments, which had been authorized for the entire week of Pentecost prior to
the calendar reform, were to henceforth be used on the day of Pentecost only;
similarly, white vestments continued to be used on Trinity Sunday itself, but
the liturgical color became green for both weeks other than the Sundays. In
addition, in the United States only, the feast of Corpus Christi was moved three
days forward, to the Sunday after Trinity Sunday, when it had heretofore been
celebrated on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. Traditional Catholics still
follow the older Catholic liturgical calendar.
When the Anglican churches implemented their own calendar reform effective in
1976, they adopted the same shortened definition of the Easter season as the
Roman Catholic Church had promulgated six years earlier. Some Anglican provinces
continue to label the Sundays between Easter and the Ascension "Sundays After
Easter" rather than "Sundays of Easter"; however, others, such as the Episcopal
Church in the United States of America, use the term "Sundays of Easter".
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