Messiah Lutheran Church and School

Seasons of the Church

8154 Atlee Road

Mechanicsville, VA 23111

(804) 746-7134

office@mlcas.org

Advent

Christmas Epiphany Lent Easter Pentecost

Holy Trinity Sunday

Sundays after Pentecost

Christ the King

Reformation Sunday

All Saints' Sunday

Return to Home Page

THE LUTHERAN CALENDAR
SUNDAYS AND PRINCIPAL FESTIVALS
(Liturgical colors are provided to the right of the entry for the day)

Advent

First Sunday in Advent - Blue
Second Sunday in Advent - Blue
Third Sunday in Advent - Blue
Fourth Sunday in Advent - Blue

Christmas

The Nativity of Our Lord - White
      Christmas Eve
      Christmas Day
First Sunday of Christmas - White
Second Sunday of Christmas - White

Epiphany of Our Lord - White

Time after Epiphany

Baptism of Our Lord - White
      First Sunday after Epiphany
Sundays after Epiphany - Green
Transfiguration of Our Lord - White
      Last Sunday after Epiphany

Lent

Ash Wednesday - Purple
First Sunday in Lent - Purple
Second Sunday in Lent - Purple
Third Sunday in Lent - Purple
Fourth Sunday in Lent - Purple
Fifth Sunday in Lent - Purple
Sunday of the Passion - Scarlet/Purple
      Palm Sunday
Monday in Holy Week - Scarlet/Purple
Tuesday in Holy Week - Scarlet/Purple
Wednesday in Holy Week - Scarlet/Purple

The Three Days

Maundy Thursday - Scarlet/White
Good Friday
Saturday in Holy Week
Resurrection of Our Lord - White/Gold
      Vigil of Easter
      Easter Day

Easter

Resurrection of Our Lord - White/Gold
Second Sunday of Easter-- White
Third Sunday of Easter - White
Fourth Sunday of Easter - White
Fifth Sunday of Easter - White
Sixth Sunday of Easter - White
The Ascension of Our Lord - White
Seventh Sunday of Easter - White
Pentecost - Red
      Vigil of Pentecost
      Day of Pentecost

Time after Pentecost

The Holy Trinity - White
First Sunday after Pentecost
Sundays after Pentecost-- Green
Christ the King - White
Last Sunday after Pentecost

Top of Page

Advent

The color is blue.


The season of Advent consists of the four Sundays before Christmas Day (December 25th) and the days in between.

The Church Year (which is designed to tell the story of our salvation through Jesus Christ annually begins with the season called Advent which means "coming to."  The theme of coming looks toward 1) Bethlehem and the coming of Christ to the world  as a baby in the manger and toward 2) the Second Coming of Christ, the consummation of all the promises of God.  Blue suggests hope, which is a primary theme of Advent. (In some traditions, purple was used to mark the season of Advent.)

The traditional names of the Sundays in Advent are translated from Latin to English:  Hope, Peace, Joy and Love, in that order.

An Advent Wreath (or Advent Log) with four candles helps count down the time until the arrival of the Christ.  There are several traditions of the color of the candles.  One is that all four candles are white.  Another tradition has all the candles the color blue.  And older tradition has three purple candles and one pink one.  The pink one is lit on the third Sunday and is connected with the Joy Sunday (Jubilate Sunday).

 

Top of Page

Christmas

The color is white.

Christmas is both a major festival day in the life of the Church marking the birth of Jesus Christ into the world - the Incarnation of God, as well as a season.  As a season, Christmas goes from December 25th until the eve of Epiphany (which is January 6th).  The Christmas season lasts twelve days. 

Christmas Eve has become more popular for worship attendance because of the association with the night and the stars and the visits of the shepherds to the manger. 

The name of Christmas came from celebrating the Mass of Christ to recognize the incarnation.

Themes of Christmas include gladness, light, joy.  One of the strong traditions of Christmas is gift giving like that of the Wise Men.  The greatest gift of all is the gift of Jesus who was born into the world for the purpose of reconciling us all to God.  Therefore, Christmas is appropriately celebrated with the remembrance of the sacrifice that Jesus made on the cross for the redemption of the world.

Top of Page

Epiphany

The color is green

 

For the festival of Epiphany on January 6th, for the second Sunday of Epiphany and for Transfiguration (the last Sunday of Epiphany). Green is the color of the Sundays between the beginning and end of the season. 

Epiphany means the manifestation of God in the world.  Epiphany serves as a bridge between Jesus' birth and his passion.  From the visits of the Magi to the baptism of Jesus, the first miracle at Cana and culminating in the Transfiguration (a really big show!), the themes of Epiphany give us a glimpse of Jesus in modest and splendid circumstances.

Top of Page

Lent

The color is purple.
Purple suggests somberness and solemnity.


Lent is the 40 day season that begins on Ash Wednesday and concludes on Holy Saturday (excluding Sundays which are observed as feast days celebrating the resurrection).  Lent originally meant spring (lengthening of days).  It is the time before Easter to reflect upon our baptism and the death and resurrection of Jesus.

An alternate color for Ash Wednesday can be black, suggesting the ashes to which all living things return.  Our destiny with God is a gift, not a birthright.

The Sunday before Easter is observed as Passion Sunday or Palm Sunday.

On Passion Sunday the color changes to red/scarlet, which is the color of blood.  The sacrifice of Christ and the shedding of his blood results in victory, not defeat.  With this emphasis, the color of Holy Week remains red through Maundy Thursday.

Alternately, white may be used for Palm Sunday, emphasizing the arrival of the King.  White may also be used for Maundy Thursday, emphasizing the Lord's Supper (as opposed to the passion to follow).

Good Friday uses no paraments indicating the humiliation of Jesus.  Alternately black paraments may be used.  It is the most passion-filled day of the church year, marking Christ's death.

Observing Lent prepares us to celebrate Easter more fully through 1) repentance from personal inadequacies and shortcomings, 2) penitential practices like fasting and self-denial which help us understand the sacrifice of Christ for us, 3) resolution to live a life more in alliance with Christ, and 4) participation in additional acts of devotion, worship and service to renew and strengthen conviction of faith.

Top of Page

Easter

The color is white (with some gold).


Easter is the queen of all the seasons. It lasts not for a day or for a week, but for a week of weeks (7 weeks).  Easter is a continuous celebration of the resurrection which marks the defeat of sin, death and evil by Risen Lord Jesus. 

Easter is the most important festival of the church year.  Without it, there would be no gospel salvation and no other festivals.

Easter is associated with the Jewish Passover historically and the lunar calendar.  Therefore, the festival of Easter varies from year to year.  Briefly, it is celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox; if the full moon occurs upon a Sunday, Easter Day is the Sunday after.. (Passover is associated with the spring full moon as well.)  So Easter occurs on the first, second or third Sunday in April each year (and once in a while in March).

 

Easter Dates from 2008 to 2019

2008 March 23

2009 April 12

2010 April 4

2011 April 24

2012 April 8

2013 March 31

2014 April 20

2015 April 5

2016 March 27

2017 April 16

2018 April 1

2019 April 21

 

Top of Page

Pentecost

The color is red.


Pentecost is the culmination of the resurrection.  Jesus promised to send his Holy Spirit to inspire and empower the life of the church - which is the body of the Risen Christ in the world.  Pentecost was the 50th day of Easter.  It coincided with a Jewish harvest festival called the Feast of the Tabernacles which explains why Jews from all over the then-known world were in Jerusalem, celebrating one of the three major festivals.

Pentecost has been called the birthday of the church.  On that day the Holy Spirit descended on believers and inspired more than 3,000 to join the community of believers in Jesus Christ.

 

Top of Page

Holy Trinity Sunday

The color is white.
 

This is the Sunday that celebrates not an event in the life of Jesus but a revelation of God that Jesus gave us which is a Mystery.  We can know the one true God in three distinctively personal ways:  as Father-Creator; as Son-Redeemer; as Holy Spirit-Sanctifier.  We do not have three Gods, but one.  The ancient creeds of the Church (Apostles', Nicene and Athanasian Creeds) give witness to this central truth of the Christian experience.  As believers in the revelation of God in Jesus, we see the God experience through Christ's eyes.  Three-in-one is a mystery more than a doctrine for believers in Christ.

 

Top of Page

Sundays after Pentecost

The color is green.


This is the longest season of the church encompassing half the year.  The theme is growth in faith through the examination of the teachings and activities in Jesus life and in the life of the faith community (the Church).   Growth in the Spirit as the Risen Christ is formed in the people describes the theme for this season.

Top of Page

Christ the King

The color is white


This is the last Sunday of the church year and celebrates the Lordship of Christ over all creation and all eternity.  Jesus is the beginning and the end, the alpha and omega, and everything for believers.

Top of Page

Reformation Sunday

The color is red.


The Reformation was a powerful renewal movement in the life of the church in the early sixteenth century resembling the Pentecost of the early church.  God's Holy Spirit is always active in renewal and reform of the hearts of believers and the life of the church.  The historical reformation resulted in the Lutheran expression of Christian life as well as many other Protestant religious expressions.  On this day we do not celebrate schism, but renewal and hope. 

Reformation Day is October 31st.  Martin Luther, a priest in the Roman Catholic Church and a professor of theology at the University of Wittenburg wrote 95 Theses (statements) and posted them on October 31, 1517 to give notice of his intent to debate these issues on the following day, November 1 - All Saints' Day - a tradition of the University at that time.

Historical events and the power of the Holy Spirit converged in a way that resulted in the formation of the Lutheran Confessions by 1530 and the Lutheran movement within God's holy church in the world.

Reformation Sunday is observed on Reformation Day or the Sunday closest to it in October each year.

Top of Page

All Saints' Sunday

The color is white.


This Sunday remembers the life and faith of believers throughout the life of the church, especially those who have claimed the promise of their baptism, namely eternal life with God. 

All Saints' Day is November 1st each year.  All Saints' Sunday is celebrated on that day or the closest Sunday to it in November.

Top of Page