To: sionnsar
I'd not heard of "Trinitytide" before. Of course, we're still Episcopalian and some of the Anglican terminology has been shunted aside. What do you call the "season" between Pentecost and Advent?
8,321 posted on
11/23/2005 4:15:00 PM PST by
Alice au Wonderland
(Viper-Tongued Sister of the King, Mother Superior, Purveyor of Prurience, Caustic Court Castigator)
To: Alice au Wonderland
We call it "Ordinary Time" in the Catholic Church, but there used to be a separate season of Pentecost, and some other bits and pieces during the middle of the year.
8,326 posted on
11/23/2005 4:18:03 PM PST by
Tax-chick
(Advent starts November 27 ... have you dusted yet?)
To: Alice au Wonderland
I'd not heard of "Trinitytide" before. Of course, we're still Episcopalian and some of the Anglican terminology has been shunted aside. What do you call the "season" between Pentecost and Advent? Trinity: color green.
Our province is more high-church than I grew up in and so I've had to learn more of the traditional terminology. "Trinitytide" instead of "Trinity season," for example.
"Thurible" instead of "incense pot" (which we never used anyway). I got to be "Thurifer" recently, but as we have parishioners who can't take much incense I didn't go wild with it.
8,369 posted on
11/23/2005 4:40:41 PM PST by
sionnsar
(†trad-anglican.faithweb.com† || (To Libs:) You are failing to celebrate MY diversity! || Iran Azad)
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