It is currently the 33rd week of the liturgical year.
Roman Catholic AnswerNo, the Liturgical Year starts four Sundays before Christmas with the season of Advent; which begins the week after the Solemnity of Christ the King-the last Sunday of the Liturgical Year.
Holy Week, ending with Easter, is the holiest time of the liturgical year, with Christ Death and Resurrection being the climax.
Since the liturgical year always begins on the first Sunday of Advent, the length of the liturgical year is always a multiple of a whole week. Most liturgical years are 52 weeks (364 days) long. However, in any year in which Christmas falls on a Monday, as well as any leap year in which Christmas falls on a Tuesday, the liturgical year that ends in early December of one of those years is 53 weeks (371 days) long.
Advent begins the Liturgical year in the Roman Catholic Church
Holy Week is Holy Week all over the world. It is the holiest and most solemn week of the Liturgical Year when the passion and death of Our Lord are remembered.
Easter is the center of the liturgical year.
It is the last Sunday of the liturgical year.Because the liturgical year begins with the First Sunday of Advent, the end of the liturgical year is actually the Saturday after Christ the King.
No, the feast of Pentecost is not the last day of the Liturgical year. The last Sunday of the Liturgical Year is the feast of Christ the King. The last day of the Liturgical year would be the following Saturday.
In Eastern Orthodoxy, the Church Year or Liturgical Year is referred to as "the Indiction."
The first Sunday of Advent is when the new liturgical year is begun
The first Sunday of Advent marks the beginning of the liturgical year.
That's Ordinary Time. The liturgical color is green.