- Septuagesima
Septuagesima (in full, Septuagesima Sunday), an observance dropped from the calendar as revised by the Second Vatican Council but still in use in the traditional calendars, is the name given to the third from the last
Sunday beforeLent in the Catholic and Anglican churches. The Lutheran Church Year continues using the name. The term is sometimes applied to the period of theliturgical year which begins on this day and lasts throughShrove Tuesday (with the following day beingAsh Wednesday , whenLent begins). This period is also known as "the Pre-Lenten season" or "Shrovetide". The next two Sundays are labelledSexagesima andQuinquagesima , the latter sometimes also called "Shrove Sunday." The earliest Septuagesima Sunday can occur isJanuary 18 (Easter falling onMarch 22 in nonleap year) and the latest isFebruary 22 (Easter falling onApril 25 in leap year).Origins of the term
"Septuagesima" comes from the
Latin word for "seventieth," with "Sexagesima" and "Quinquagesima" equalling "sixtieth" and "fiftieth" respectively. They are patterned after the Latin word for the season of Lent, "Quadragesima," which means "fortieth" because Lent is forty days long (not counting the Sundays, which are all considered little Easters). Because a week is only seven days long, not ten, and since even then only six of those days might be counted if the pattern of "Quadragesima" is followed, "Septuagesima," "Sexagesima," and "Quinquagesima," obviously don't literally correspond to the periods of time they imply. Some have theorized, however, that Septuagesima may have been added to theliturgical calendar to commemorate the Babylonian Captivity, which lasted 70 years (there is evidence that some earlyChristian s beganfasting 70 days beforeEaster , but whether that custom originated from this is not entirely clear). It is interesting, however, that just about 70 days (68 actually) is the minimum number of days between the octave day of the Epiphany onJanuary 14 and Easter, implying that a season just about 70 days long can always fit between the two.Devotional and liturgical practices
The 17-day period beginning on Septuagesima Sunday was intended to be observed as a preparation for the season of
Lent , which is itself a period of spiritual preparation (forEaster ). In many countries, however, Septuagesima Sunday still marks the traditional start of thecarnival season, culminating onShrove Tuesday , more commonly known asMardi Gras .In the pre-1970
Roman Catholic liturgy, the "Alleluia" ceases to be said during the liturgy, effective at Compline on the Saturday before Septuagesima Sunday, not to be sung again untilEaster . Likewise, violetvestments are worn, except on feasts, from Septuagesima Sunday until Holy Thursday. As during Advent and Lent, the Gloria and Te Deum are no longer said on Sundays. The readings at Matins for this week are the first few chapters ofGenesis , telling of the creation of the world, of Adam and Eve, the fall of man and resulting expulsion from theGarden of Eden , and the story of Cain and Abel. In the following weeks before and during Lent, the readings continue to Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Moses. TheGospel reading for Septuagesima week is the parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (Matthew 20:1-16).Liturgical reforms
With the liturgical reforms adopted after the
Second Vatican Council , Septuagesima, Sexagesima and Quinquagesima Sundays were dropped and the period encompassing them became part ofOrdinary Time , and because of this, the use of violet vestments and omission of "Alleluia" in the liturgy do not start until Ash Wednesday. This took effect in 1970 in the Catholic Church and six years later theAnglican Churches. In the Anglican Churches these Sundays are now known as the three "Sundays before Lent."Vestiges of the season
A version of the season still does exist in the
Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar, and is known as "Triódion" (although it is only 15 days long and not 17 since the Eastern OrthodoxLent commences on a Monday instead of a Wednesday).Traditionalist Catholics continue to celebrate this season both atMass and in the Office.ee also
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Ordinary Time
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