Monday was the first day following the Feast of the Baptism
of the Lord. As such (by most
reckonings) it was the first day of Ordinary Time. This is the liturgical season that begins
immediately following the Baptism feast and it runs through Shrove Tuesday, or
the day before Ash Wednesday (March 6 in 2019).
The church calls this time after The Epiphany Ordinary
Time. (I addressed those unusual days
between Epiphany and The Baptism in a post dated January 11.) This period gets its name from the way that
we number the days during this time. We
do not designate this stretch ordinary because we label this time as somehow
common or dull. Rather, the church
employs this designation because of the nature of the numbering of these
days. Instead of using cardinal numbers
(one, two, three) it utilizes ordinal numbers (first, second, third). So, we call this coming Sunday, February 20, The Second Sunday After The Epiphany.
Because Ash Wednesday is a moveable feast (an observance
that does not occur on the same date each year), ordinary time will be of
varying duration from year to year. Ash
Wednesday can fall anywhere between February 4 and March 10, though the two
extremes of the range are very rare. The
last time Ash Wednesday was on February 4 was 1818 and will next occur in 2285. The most recent time Ash Wednesday fell on
March 10 was in 1943 and will next occur in 2038. So, the duration of ordinary time is between
four and nine weeks. In the modern
liturgical usage, the first Sunday in Ordinary Time is The Feast of the Baptism
of the Lord and the last Sunday is The Feast of the Transfiguration. Obviously, there are two more days in the season
before Lent begins on Ash Wednesday.
Ordinary time carries with it emphases on mission (begun
with the narrative of the Wise Men visiting the infant Jesus) and spiritual
growth. The liturgical colors of the
season are white (for the feast days) and green (signifying new, eternal and
abundant life) for the rest of the season. The New Revised Common Lectionary (NRCL)
offers gospel texts that reveal the nature of Jesus Christ (in keeping with the
Epiphany theme). The epistle readings
address the topics of spiritual gifts and the character of the church (in an
examination of spiritual growth).
We can be deceived by looking over our shoulders at
Christmas and ahead to Easter so that we think that ordinary time is a “down time,” a respite between
major occurrences where nothing of significance takes place. But it can be an extraordinary time, where
the church addresses some of its most formative ideas.
What a great time.
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