These are the colors of the Liturgical Year. In the Catholic Church, each season has a color and each color has a meaning. Here is the guide to the colors of the Liturgical Year and what they mean.
Other liturgical colors not represented on this calendar include rose (Third Sun. of Advent and Fourth Sun. of Lent), black (Masses for the Dead), and gold or silver (permitted in the United States for more solemn occasions).
See the full Liturgical Calendar for more information on all the liturgical celebrations available each day. Sunday, August 31, 2025, is: Ordinary Time Next Sunday >>. In the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (GIRM), which provides universal guidelines for the celebration of the Mass, the Church provides: Diversity of color in the sacred vestments has as its purpose to give more effective expression even outwardly whether to the specific character of the mysteries of faith to be celebrated or to a sense of Christian life's passage through the course.
The liturgical vestments of Catholic priests during religious celebrations and the many sacred vestments used by them, differs according to a range of colours that have a precise symbolic meaning. The colours of liturgical vestments, such as the cope, chasuble, dalmatic and the stole, refer to the liturgical season or the current festive occasion. The Holy Ghost, life eternal, hope Green is the color of rebirth and hope, especially of hope for eternal life.
Green is worn during the liturgical season known today as Ordinary time. Time After Epiphany and Time After Pentecost. The Catholic Church uses five main colors: white, red, green, violet, and rose.
These colors help the faithful connect visually and spiritually with the liturgical calendar. Today the Church celebrates the Memorial of St. Augustine (354-430).
Augustine was born at Tagaste, Africa, and died in Hippo. His father, Patricius, was a pagan; his mother, Monica, a devout. Throughout the year, depending on the liturgical season and type of liturgical feast or celebration, the Catholic Church uses different colors for the priest's vestments, as well as altar linens and other decorations in the church.
Green is the color most often used color during Ordinary Time, symbolizing the gift of life and hope in every day. The Catholic liturgy, rich in symbolism and tradition, uses colors as a powerful form of communication. Through liturgical colors, the Church invites us to enter the various moments of Christ's life, the life of the Church, and each Christian's journey of faith.
Although they may often go unnoticed, liturgical colors speak to us, guide us, and immerse us in the mystery of faith. In this.