Thursday, September 4, 2025, is: Ordinary Time Next Sunday >>. A color chart showing the various colors used in the sanctuary for the seasons of the Christian Church Year, as well as the dates for the current year. Liturgical colors have been used for centuries by worshiping communities in many Christian faith traditions.
Whether your community uses them for digital visual presentations, in artwork, or on paraments and vestments, they bring a beautifully symbolic unification of the Body of Christ in worship. The colors for major festival days and seasons are listed below in order of the Christian Year. 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. 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. Liturgical Color Guide: Understanding the Liturgical Seasons and Colors Liturgy is a form of public religious worship within the different denominations of Christianity. Red symbolizes the color of fire to represent the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost and times when the work of the Holy Spirit is emphasized.
During Holy Week it represents the blood of Christ. Red is also used for ordinations, church anniversaries and civil observances such as Memorial Day and Thanksgiving. 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.
"Liturgical Colors" in Episcopal worship signify our place in the Church Year: WHITE, the color of Jesus' burial garments, for Christmas, Easter, and other 'feasts' or festival days, as well as marriages and funerals. 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.