Answer:
The feast of Christ the King falls on the last Sunday before Advent, which is also the last Sunday in the liturgical year. It is celebrated by focusing in worship on the "Kingship" of Christ. What does it mean that Christ is sovereign in all creation, in the church and in the lives of believers?
This year, 2011, the feast of Christ the King falls on Sunday, November 20.
The feast of Christ the King ends the liturgical year.
No. The Feast of Christ the King is the last Sunday in Ordinary Time.
The last Sunday of the liturgical year in the Catholic Church is known as the Feast of Christ the King. It falls between 20 and 26 of November, depending on the year. On the old Church calendar, the feast of Christ the King fell on the last Sunday of October, leaving the last Sunday in the liturgical year to be marked by the 24th - 28th Sunday after Pentecost, depending on how late Easter had happened that year.
Christ the King is the final Sunday of the Liturgical Year.
The royal family had a feast to celebrate the king's birthday.
Solemnity of Christ the King
Christ the King
The last Sunday of the liturgical year is known as the feast day of Christ the King.
The feast of Christ the King. The following Sunday starts Advent and a new liturgical year begins
The feast of Christ the King is the last Sunday of the year.
Most don't. We believe that the annual feasts were in effect until the time that Jesus died on the Christ. These feasts were "types" or symbols, and Christ is the real thing. (Colossians 2:13-17.) We believe we will celebrate the "real" Feast of Tabernacles with Jesus when He comes again to take us home with Him.