Christ the King
Pentecost Sunday is considered the birthday of the Church.
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.
The feast of Christ the King, instituted by pope Pius XI in his encyclical Quas Primas.
The feast of the Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ is popularly known as "Easter Sunday". It is a movable feast, meaning Easter call fall on any Sunday between March 22 and April 25th in the Roman rite (other Eastern rites have a different range) as the feast follows a lunar calendar.
In the UK and Ireland, Mothering Sunday (also know as "Mothers' Day") is celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent, exactly three weeks before Easter Sunday. As Easter Sunday is a moveable feast, Mother's day is celebrated on a different date each year. It was originally the Sunday that you returned to the Church where you had been baptised: your Mother Church. It is also a Sunday celebrated in honour of the Virgin Mary.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe feast of the Transfiguration is celebrated on August 6th each year. It is also in the Gospel of the second Sunday of Lent, if memory serves.
The Annunciation is the feast celebrated on March 25.
Pentacost Sunday is considered as the birthday of the Church.
It is called the "Sunday in the Octave of Christmas" and the Feast of the Holy Family is usually celebrated on that day.
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?
The Baptism of the Lord is celebrated on the feast: the Solemnity of the Epiphany, usually celebrated in the Roman church on 6th of January.
The answer is Pentecost.Forty days after Easter, Catholics celebrate the Ascension of Jesus into heaven, where, they believe, he reigns with his Father. Then, ten days later, they keep the feast of Pentecost - their own transformation of the Jewish feast that honors the divine gift of the Torah.