The church liturgical year begins with Advent, which typically starts four Sundays before Christmas, marking the anticipation of Christ's birth. It concludes with the feast of Christ the King, celebrated on the last Sunday before Advent begins again. This cyclical calendar encompasses various seasons, including Christmas, Lent, and Easter, each with its own significance and observances.
The first Sunday of Advent.
church
The liturgical language used by the medieval Christian church was Latin.
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.
In Eastern Orthodoxy, the Church Year or Liturgical Year is referred to as "the Indiction."
There was liturgical workshop in the church. Many people were there many people attending that.
The First Sunday of Advent is liturgical "New Year's Day." The liturgical year re-presents the story of our salvation through Jesus's incarnation, so it begins with the whole Church keeping watch "until the Son of God appear."
Advent
No
Susan J. White has written: 'Art, Architecture, and Liturgical Reform' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Christianity and art, Church architecture, Liturgical Arts, Liturgical Arts Society, Liturgy and architecture
It originated on Holy Thursday - the last supper
The Liturgical Year, with its structure of seasons and feast days, evolved over centuries starting in the early Christian church. It was influenced by both Jewish and Roman calendars and was gradually formalized by various church councils and liturgical reforms. The basic framework of the Liturgical Year was established by the medieval period.