No
it is called the church's calendar
They symbolize the different times of the liturgical calendar.
There are nine rites in the Catholic Church, eight of which are not the Latin (Roman) Rite, and most of those eight rites are Eastern: Byzantine, Armenian, Chaldean, Coptic, Ethiopic, Malabar, Maronite, and Syrian. Each of them has their own proper liturgical calendar.
Liturgical CalendarThe liturgical calendar is used by the Church and it starts with the first Sunday of Advent, when we begin to prepare for the birth of Christ. Then comes the Christmas season followed by ordinary time, then Lent, which celebrates the 40 days when Christ was fasting in the desert. Then is Easter, when Jesus rose from the dead. Next comes another ordinary time, shorter than the first. After that there is Advent and the whole cylce starts over.
No. He was simply removed from the liturgical calendar since we know so little about him.
Adventist Church of Promise was created in 1932.
There may be an unofficial Adventist church in Wenzhou, however there is no official church listed in the official Adventist church directory
To the best of my knowledge there is no such thing as a "day of grace" in the Roman Liturgical Calendar for the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church.
The Romanian Orthodox Church mainly follows the liturgical practice of the Greek Orthodox Church, rather than the Russian Orthodox Church, such as the use of the new calendar.
It lays out the liturgical year indicates periods such as Lent, Easter, Advent, Christmas, and also special days and feasts for saints.
As with everything else, its primary cause is God, it's efficient cause was the Catholic Church and its hierarchy, the Pope and the Bishops.
Michael Moreton has written: 'Made fully perfect' -- subject(s): Lord's Supper, Anglican Communion 'Theological principle in the calendar & lectionary' -- subject(s): Church calendar, Church of England, Church of England. Liturgical Commission, Lectionaries