Understanding the Liturgical Colors In the liturgical calendar, the color for each day corresponds to that day's main liturgical celebration, even though Optional Memorials (perhaps with a different color) might be chosen instead. The four main colors shown are. The season from Easter to Pentecost is also called the Great Fifty Days, a tradition inspired by the Jewish season of fifty days between Passover and Shavuot-the feast celebrating the giving of the Torah to Moses.
The liturgical color for this season is celebratory White or Gold. When the season ends on Pentecost Sunday, White is replaced. Liturgical Color Guide: Understanding the Liturgical Seasons and Colors Liturgy is a form of public religious worship within the different denominations of Christianity.
During this public worship, colors are worn to signify different feelings and times of year. How to choose the right colors? 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. In most traditions, the sanctuary cross is draped in color only during Lent (purple), Good Friday (black), and Easter (white). Some churches leave white on the cross through Eastertide, drape the cross in red for Pentecost Sunday, and then leave the cross undraped until the beginning of Lent the next year.
The color of white is most associated with Easter. Eastertide (season) Eastertide begins on Easter Sunday and continues for 50 days, ending on Pentecost. The season's colors are white and gold, celebrating resurrection, royalty and glory.
This is a joyful time in the church year, contrasting the spirit of somberness often associated with Lent. WHITE, the color of Jesus' burial garments, for Christmas, Easter, and other 'feasts' or festival days, as well as marriages and funerals. PURPLE/VIOLET for Advent (or ROYAL BLUE) & Lent (or UNBLEACHED LINEN).
RED is used in Holy Week, the Day of Pentecost, and at ordinations. Epiphany's message of Christ's revelation to the Gentiles along with the season's traditional emphasis on extending Christ's kingdom through missions, calls for the use of green-the color symbolic of growth. The Sundays following Pentecost, observed as "the time of the church," share a somewhat similar theme as that of Epiphany.
The Easter color is used until Pentecost. On Pentecost, the seventh Sunday after Easter, red is used. Ordinary Time Following Pentecost, we again enter ordinary time and return to green.
During this time, there are a few days that get special attention. Trinity Sunday, the Sunday after Pentecost gets white (or gold). Green is a color of growth, used in the Seasons After the Epiphany and After Pentecost, except when special days call for white or red.
Red is a color of fire, symbolizing the Holy Spirit. It is used on the Day of Pentecost and at other times when the work of the Holy Spirit is emphasized.