Liturgical feast


Feast day - in the Catholic liturgy the festive day of the liturgical year is less significant than the celebration, but greater than the memory.

Celebrations of the liturgical feast are included within the limits of the day. The exception is the Lord's Day (ie, in honor of Christ), whose celebration falls on the Sunday of the Ordinary or Christmas period. Then the celebration is celebrated as a celebration and begins in the evening of the day preceding the so-called. And vespers or vigil.

Holidays have their own form of Mass. In sacred liturgy, there are usually only two Bible readings and the credo is omitted, but the glory is refused.

The celebration of the feast is preceded by the liturgical celebrations, the Holy Week, the fasts of the fast, the Advent and the Easter, the ashes, the octaves of Easter, the remembrance of all the faithful of the dead. In these cases holidays in a given year are ignored at all.

The day of celebration celebrates a date or a liturgical calendar (→ mobile holidays).

Holidays are divided into general (celebrated throughout the Church) or their own (celebrated locally).

During celebrations, celebrations are generally not possible (unless otherwise decided by the Ordinary) and funeral (except funeral).

Celebration of the feast by the people is not required by law. Bibliography

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