The Liturgical Year is a MESS (I went down a rabbit hole)

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  • Опубліковано 16 вер 2024
  • The liturgical calendar seems simple at first… but it’s not.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 501

  • @Rezkeshdadesh
    @Rezkeshdadesh 2 роки тому +127

    When Easter fell on April 1 a few years ago, I made a monk laugh when I said Thomas doubted Jesus had risen, because he thought it was an April Fools joke.

    • @FrogeniusW.G.
      @FrogeniusW.G. 2 роки тому +2

      Nice one! 😄

    • @reshabriella
      @reshabriella 2 роки тому +2

      Good one!

    • @annakareninacamara6580
      @annakareninacamara6580 Рік тому +6

      too bad I can only steal this joke in a couple hundred years from now XD

    • @sarahisatitagain
      @sarahisatitagain Рік тому +3

      Hahahaha this was brilliant hahaha
      I love light hearted jokes about faith

    • @simondeep
      @simondeep Рік тому +4

      Found this late. But that was a funny year. Like you said Easter was April Fools-and not only that, St Valentines Day was Ash Wednesday haha

  • @marthahawkinson-michau9611
    @marthahawkinson-michau9611 2 роки тому +166

    I’m honestly just nerdy enough to really enjoy this video.
    I didn’t realize just how complicated the liturgical calendar was, but I am very glad that the reforms made more scripture be proclaimed in church.

    • @johncaron4888
      @johncaron4888 2 роки тому +1

      Me too!

    • @carolingian5736
      @carolingian5736 2 роки тому +3

      @YAJUN YUAN That is factually untrue. The Apocalypse of St. John is read at least once that I know of in the pre-1962 missal, that being on the feast of the Assumption.

    • @carolingian5736
      @carolingian5736 2 роки тому +1

      @YAJUN YUAN The table he showed is misleading as it accounts only for Sundays and relies on a very narrow definition of "major feasts".

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 2 роки тому +1

      It would be cool to have an option for a really long mass with even more scripture, kinda like what happened in the old testament. Maybe in the future

    • @nealkriesterer
      @nealkriesterer 8 місяців тому

      ​@sergiowinter5383 It's rare, but mass can be combined with Liturgy of the Hours - this adds three more Psalms to the mass.

  • @allisonsalazar9929
    @allisonsalazar9929 2 роки тому +77

    I’m a catechumen coming into the Church this year and between liturgical calendar and the lectionary cycles, I just hold on tight and go with it. 🤣 thanks Fr. Casey!

    • @marylinramos4300
      @marylinramos4300 2 роки тому +6

      That's awesome!! It's always so nice to see comments like these 😊I often think about how many are leaving the Church. I dont usually think about those that actually want to be a part of it.

    • @cherylhee9762
      @cherylhee9762 2 роки тому +3

      And it's a whole new language 😂 some of these words I've never heard of!

    • @cherylhee9762
      @cherylhee9762 2 роки тому +3

      What? Would you repeat that? Just kidding 😁 WOW you know your stuff!

    • @LostArchivist
      @LostArchivist 2 роки тому +7

      God bless you. Remember, you are entering the beginning of a new life in Christ. There are 2000 years of treasures of the Church to feast upon and a couple millennia more of the Old Covenant if you really like digging up meaning, and learning. Welcome, and remember, mortal sin is the only thing that can tear you from Christ. Be mindful of that and avoid it at all costs. But when you fall, bring it to Christ in the Sacrament of Reconciliation and really lean into repentence and growing in the virtues. That journey is a lifelong one.
      Explore it all, but remember, Christ is truly found in the Most Holy Eucharist, in His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity is there. Christ is God, the Eternal Son of God the Father, in the embrace of the Holy Spirit. The same Christ Who was born in Bethleham, was Baptized in the Jordan, walked in Israel, and died upon the Cross for the sins of all humanity. The same Christ Who rose from the dead, ascended into Heaven and is seated at the right hand of Gof the Father Almighty in Heaven, the same Christ Who shall come to judge all. He is present in the Blessed Sacrament.
      My recommendation, try to contemplate what that really means.
      The One Who created all of nature, all the stars and galaxies in space, all of the animals and plants of Earth, every natural law, the One Who guides all of history and space and time; the One Who made every person and forsaw and to the greatest to least of each of us, made us by and for love of us. The One Who is the pure act of To Be Himself. He is there
      The Creator Who when we messed things up, came down from Heaven and took upon Himself a human form and, became one of us and took upon Himself the sins of the world, and allowed Himself to die. The Eternal God Who defeated death by dying and rising from the dead on the Third Day. The God Who is Justice, Wisdom, Truth, Mercy, Beauty, the God Who is Divine Love. He is in the tabernacle, called down and offering Himself up for us again on the altar.
      He is there in the Most Holy Eucharist. No matter what else may come or go, this is His Church, He is why to stay no matter what.
      But do take these weeks before Easter to consider Who you are going to recieve and the implications of the fact that He wishes to commune with you and feed your soul with Himself. He is real, this is real, don`t be afraid to know that it can be so simply wonderful. Trust Him and love Him and believe He can and desires to lead you to His side for all eternity. There are obstacles and hardships of course, but He makes use even of these for our growth in the journey to Him.
      Sorry I know this is long, but it is summed up in this.
      Remember, The Most Holy Eucharist is Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ Himself.
      God bless you, through the same Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Lord and Savior. Amen.

    • @cherylhee9762
      @cherylhee9762 2 роки тому +1

      @@LostArchivist God bless you ❤️

  • @rayragasa7589
    @rayragasa7589 2 роки тому +40

    And they say learning about the liturgical calendar is boring?! 😂
    Thanks Fr. Casey for dragging us in into this rabbithole. My nerdy Catholic school self is awakened lol

  • @mdruane
    @mdruane 2 роки тому +25

    I did the Ascension Bible in a Year, and I can understand why a lot of the OT was skipped-- mainly repetition. But the historical context and what was happening with the people and such-- it gave me great insight into the New Testament and removed any doubts about Jesus being fulfillment of God's Plan.
    I highly recommend it for getting the most out of the New Testament.

    • @j2muw667
      @j2muw667 2 роки тому

      Same! The insight and extra reinforcement on how Holy the Holy of Holys was- and dedicated priests.. and that God came down to them! And about staying seperate from the pagans because holy people will become ‘lazy’ and start leaning towards pagan ways..
      Some seems extreme (killing a whole population rather than taking a chance on their ways corrupting the Jewish faith)... repetitive- but I figure it’s part of the challenge in building discipline! 🤣😜

  • @thatsnoternie
    @thatsnoternie 2 роки тому +18

    Great breakdown! One thing I’d add is proper feasts and solemnities that make the calendar even different from diocese to diocese and in some cases parish to parish.

  • @elainebrockhaus649
    @elainebrockhaus649 2 роки тому +113

    Take Away: Also read the Bible yourself 😄 Thanks for this fun and informative. (😅) article I will never think of “Ordinary Time” as quite so ordinary!

    • @cassimosher
      @cassimosher 2 роки тому +7

      Hahaha! I was just thinking, "So what I'm hearing is, 'Read your Bible!'"

    • @s.potter4623
      @s.potter4623 2 роки тому

      :D :D

    • @chagoot1024
      @chagoot1024 2 роки тому

      @@cassimosher That's what I was saying. We Catholics CAN read, and don't have to go without if we are still going to the Tridentine Mass.

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 2 роки тому

      I would even say to read different versions of the bible, or the original vulgata in Latin if your Latin is good enough

    • @mariolis
      @mariolis 2 роки тому +2

      And dont forget to get a bible WITH the Deuteurocanonicals because most bibles in English are protestant ones

  • @arlia11
    @arlia11 2 роки тому +15

    "I watched a 12 minute video about a week-long research hole about the Catholic Liturgical Calendar and all I got was this t-shirt" ------- and send that off to the printer! Hahah I love nerdy stuff like this. Keep it coming Father Casey. As a protestant, I always marveled around what we did not cover in church, and the onus was on us to do our own reading to fill in the rest. It's good to see that post-Vatican II held some positive changes in how much of the Old vs New Testaments were read in a mass, and I hope people take advantage of it! Keep going on this type of content, you at least would have me watching to see the results of your research!

  • @loganleroy8622
    @loganleroy8622 2 роки тому +58

    I have to say, I am really conflicted. I honestly think I might want to become Catholic, in large part because of this channel. I just don't know if I'm ready to take that leap. It will not go over well with my family if I make that commitment. Luke 14 and Matthew 10 stick in my mind as I write this, but that doesn't make it any less difficult.

    • @ponypublications
      @ponypublications 2 роки тому +10

      Praying for you friend! 🙏

    • @dianaveronica85
      @dianaveronica85 2 роки тому +11

      Praying for you, while you discern 🙏🙌🙌 !... Also, I would personally say that it is a better choice to "try and fail"😩 than to "never try at all"😣, if you really want to try something. Because, "A saint is not a person who never fails, but a saint is a person who remembers to get up, even after failing every time🤩 !" Remember that we are waiting for you, on the other side, friend ! 💓💞💕 The church(with all it's saints) will be there to catch you, when you take "the leap" 😇

    • @AdJesumPerMariam24
      @AdJesumPerMariam24 2 роки тому +15

      I was in your shoes 14 years ago… it took 3 years of discerning, but 11 years ago I became Catholic and it has been the biggest blessing in my life. My family wasn’t thrilled, but I knew I had to pursue the Truth, and Jesus was calling me into His Church. Some family members still don’t really understand, but their reaction wasn’t as bad as I feared it would be. I have never once regretted my decision. Praying for you, friend!

    • @kragar4
      @kragar4 2 роки тому +9

      Check out the Coming Home Network. They have worked with thousands converting including pastors from multiple denominations that lost jobs because of converting. Blessings on your journey.

    • @andrewpatton5114
      @andrewpatton5114 2 роки тому +1

      Some of the most hardened anti-Catholics have converted because one of their family members converted and dispelled the myths they have been taught.

  • @didoburns
    @didoburns 2 роки тому +20

    As someone who attends the TLM every Sunday and the new Mass most weekdays, I agree the new mass has a wide touch of scripture both old and new testament, but I'm also aware that in the new lectionary especially when the readings are long or contain some hard teachings there are usually shorter options which most times are what is usually read.

    • @harry2654
      @harry2654 2 роки тому +6

      That was one of the reasons my family will no longer attend the new mass under any circumstances.

    • @JSCRocketScientist
      @JSCRocketScientist 2 роки тому +2

      I love the long ones. Same here.

    • @slowroastedmarshmallow9226
      @slowroastedmarshmallow9226 2 роки тому +1

      @@harry2654 I'm w you, Harry... This whole "making sense" of weaponized ambiguity is not a Rabbit Hole, but isa Pied Piper who leads people unto the edge of a Precipice! The Modernist architects of the V2 Sect made this MESS of the MASS on Purpose. Not only is it NOT Catholic, it borders on Sacrilege / Pure Evil! See "Eyewitness: Nun tells story of Modernist Revolution", a Faithful Nun who had the COURAGE in the late 1960's to Remain a Faithful Catholic / become a Traditional Nun (which she is to this day)!NOT follow the Pied Piper of Vw you will like what this holy nun, who must be around 70 years old has to say. I'm sure Fr. Casey came from a "good family", but it isn't enough to be "nice" / going along to get along w Leaders who ARE NOT good examples of Faith (i.e. almost all the Popes since V2)...

    • @lbower2025
      @lbower2025 2 роки тому +5

      The point of the reading at the TLM is to praise God that is why in the old rite during a Deacon's ordination the bishop says " Proclaim the Gospel for the living and the dead" but in the new Mass the readings are for the people.

    • @Darth_Reposter
      @Darth_Reposter 2 роки тому +7

      My Parish has the exact oposite, everytime there is a shorter Readind/Gospel the Priest tells us to read the long one/reads the long Gospel. It's good, we get more of God's Word.

  • @cartoonringo
    @cartoonringo 2 роки тому +8

    ‘The calendar is a mess!!!’
    Tridentine calendar over here leaning back and sipping beer

    • @leylinegoddess
      @leylinegoddess 2 роки тому +1

      actually the tlm presents a less inclusive amount of biblical readings. and is more static. i find the growth of the use of the biblical readings gratifying.

  • @1dancy
    @1dancy 2 роки тому +19

    BTW, thank you Friar Casey for the time you put into this series.

  • @brucejohnson7944
    @brucejohnson7944 2 роки тому +39

    I found this all very interesting. The liturgical calendar from 1970 going forward gives you a lot more of the readings out of The Bible but it does not in any way shape or form take way from the fact good Catholic christians should be doing and that is spending more time with his/her bible. This being lent is an excellent opportunity to get back into The Bible. You will get more than you get from the cycles and you won't have too concerned about missing anything.

    • @lbower2025
      @lbower2025 2 роки тому +2

      You are right we should read the Bible on our own but the point of the reading at the TLM is to praise God that is why in the old rite during a Deacon's ordination the bishop says " Proclaim the Gospel for the living and the dead" but in the new Mass the readings are for the people. So they have two different uses and in the TLM almost every Priest reads the readings in English and Latin so that the people can understand.

    • @brentfisher902
      @brentfisher902 2 роки тому +1

      The main thing here...is stay in school, and read. It's Okay To Be Smart.

  • @themobbit9061
    @themobbit9061 2 роки тому +13

    Kudos for gathering all that info. Interesting the difference between pre-Vatican 2. I wish Catholics were encouraged to read at least 1 gospel in sequence (perhaps in groups) to see the beauty of Jesus’ words and works unfold in its context - instead of in choppy bits.

  • @deonna53223
    @deonna53223 2 роки тому +75

    That's it! You're banned from the internet rabbit holes for the rest of the year! 🤣🤣🤣🤣 I so understand how you go down these rabbit holes. It starts with a small string and you keep pulling and pulling. Lol. This was interesting. Thanks! 😁

    • @TonyFromChicago_
      @TonyFromChicago_ 2 роки тому +1

      Which year?

    • @deonna53223
      @deonna53223 2 роки тому +1

      @@TonyFromChicago_ 🤣🤣🤣🤦‍♀️. Touche. I guess I need to pick one. 🤣🤣

    • @De-Nigma
      @De-Nigma 2 роки тому +4

      Maybe we can make it safer: you’re only allowed down internet rabbit holes during the 9th week in ordinary time. (Seconded though, I didn’t know any of this, and you’re good at presenting it, thanks.)

    • @deonna53223
      @deonna53223 2 роки тому +1

      @@De-NigmaCan we really be sure that's the safest one??? 🤣

  • @rezitatorin
    @rezitatorin 2 роки тому +26

    Another reason why I simply love the Church.

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  2 роки тому +21

      That's why I make videos like this! There's so much to marvel at!

    • @henkaistudio
      @henkaistudio 2 роки тому

      @@BreakingInTheHabit Mary was married to Joseph and she has 6 other children and they are Simon and James and Jude and Jose and two unnamed daughters. She just like us too needed a savior and she grew old and died and she is buried underground and she went into heaven too.

    • @Bicicletasaladas
      @Bicicletasaladas 2 роки тому +2

      ​@@henkaistudio
      Hail Mary, full of Grace
      The Lord is with thee
      Blessed art thou amongst women
      and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, JESUS
      Holy Mary, Mother of God
      Pray for us sinners, now
      and in the hour of our death.
      Amen.
      +++
      Glory be to the Father +
      and to the Son +
      and to the Holy Ghost+
      As it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be
      World without end
      Amen

  • @maryemilysmiley6146
    @maryemilysmiley6146 2 роки тому +4

    My head just exploded. I don't know how we learned the Bible stories pre-Vatican II. Catholic school kids from grade through high school learned the stories by osmosis. They were in our readers and all kinds of material. I had and still have my St. Joseph Sunday missal in Latin and English. I have the current St. Joseph Sunday missal and the two volume week day missals. I have always enjoyed them and still remember quotes from our Baltimore Catechism. For anyone trying to make heads or tails out of the liturgical calendar the St. Joseph Missal gets you where you want to go w excellent summaries of the meaning of the readings. It's great to be a nerd but this is a battle I won't pick. Informative, but I have to put my head back together.🙏✝️😱

  • @CatholicNicklas
    @CatholicNicklas 2 роки тому +5

    Vatican 2 just made it all the more confusing

    • @thischarminghouse
      @thischarminghouse 5 місяців тому

      Out of curiosity, does the pre Vatican 2 calendar still exist? I suppose I can google.

  • @doverbeachcomber
    @doverbeachcomber 2 роки тому +19

    I still maintain that introducing the term “Ordinary Time” was one of the most misguided decisions of all those that followed Vatican II. Yes, I know that “ordinary” was intended in its little-used sense of “ordered” or “organized.” But In everyday English, “ordinary” usually carries a heavy connotation of “unremarkable” and “humdrum.” Not exactly inspiring or energizing! At least with the former terminology, “Sundays after Pentecost”, you had some sense that you were part of the explosion of the Church into the World that began at the first Pentecost and was still going on.

    • @Darth_Reposter
      @Darth_Reposter 2 роки тому +2

      You are right in Portuguese we say "Tempo Comum" and Comum measn Common, Ordinary or simple/abundant. Many people think that Ordinary Time is siply the "remainder" of the callendar, so people fall to the error of thinking Ordinary Time is less important than the "non-Ordinary" Times.

    • @brentfisher902
      @brentfisher902 2 роки тому

      @@Darth_Reposter Want 'ordinary' Well in my mind every day of my life is the same as the last..September 10, 2001. A routine day. No day of the week of the year sticks out from any of the others. (Reason: I am your tax dollars at work. Monday is as happy a day as Saturday when you don't ever have to work a single day in your life and my needs are met 100% of the time)

    • @sergiowinter5383
      @sergiowinter5383 2 роки тому +4

      I think it fits very well. Like in our lives, in the majority of time we are doing the ordinary, which is necessary, just not as flamboyant as the times we go to a party or something unexpected happens, same thing with Jesus doing His ordinary, which wasn't awesome like easter or Christmas but still extraordinary in human history.

  • @patriciagrundy3204
    @patriciagrundy3204 2 роки тому +1

    This explains so well why we do not hear some Scripture messages equally every 3 years. Thank you for all of your time and patience to discover all of these fact and then taking time to share all of this. We are truly blessed with God's Word and Love.

  • @scolley0616
    @scolley0616 2 роки тому +11

    Another "rabbit hole" is the Liturgy of the Hours for Ash Wednesday and the 3 following days. I have gotten, more than once, "What do you mean we use Week 1 Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday and switch to Week 4 on Wednesday and for the rest of the week?"

    • @g_br
      @g_br 17 днів тому

      An other "rabbit hole" is the Liturgy of the Hours for Pentecost Sunday: Week I of the Psaltery. The previous day follows Week III.

  • @JesusIsLove2512
    @JesusIsLove2512 2 роки тому +4

    Praise the Lord Jesus Christ 🙏 Mother Mary Pray For Us 🙏Abba Father Bless us and we Adore You 🙏Holy Spirit Guide us and direct our paths 🙏

  • @dylantemple2509
    @dylantemple2509 2 роки тому +5

    I'd love to see some statistics on who's more biblically literate. Your average Novos Ordo attendee, or a Traditional Catholic.

  • @TeXasDadBod
    @TeXasDadBod 2 роки тому +5

    I need friends like you I’m 35 and try and relate to people but at church people don’t seem to want to be friends my age because they already have some or are busy with kids and cannot understandably just hang out and talk about God . I too have kids and only have a chance to chill out and speak about Jesus when I go visit my cousin and we talk 3-4 hours which upsets our wife’s not because we are glorifying God but because we are not tending to the kids or them which seems to irritate them instead of being happy we have one or two days to have a moment to have these conversations. Here I am a man who has problems with the internet and trying to stay off of it so I am not tempted I also can only get my daily dose of The Bible with a explanation of what I’m reading as fast as I can online . I’m not complaining just trying to find people I can hang with that aren’t about video games drugs or fighting to have these Bible conversations once and a while but also do stuff like Jujitsu lessons go to parks and ride bikes or skateboard with people who love God. I know if I don’t find any I can always spread the news and teach them what I know as a catechized Catholic and then have friends through that avenue but it be cool to do that with likeminded friends . Of course I will mention I have my wife and she is great but even she needs friends other than me as well and ones that don’t pressure her to be “COOL” .

  • @timothysworld1028
    @timothysworld1028 2 роки тому +7

    ❤ I did liturgy planning for parish for over 20 years. I found d this so informational .

  • @theleastofpilgrims3379
    @theleastofpilgrims3379 2 роки тому +3

    Also, by the way, the Ambrosian and Mozarabic Rite lectionaries always had an Old Testament lesson. The main reason why the Latin Rite and its Protestant derivatives traditionally lacked an Old Testament lesson was because this was supposed to be, and still is in the Byzantine Rite, something you hear at Vespers on Saturday Night. Also, if you factor in the Divine Office, the reduced number of lessons during the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Mass is less of an issue. The problem, as pointed out by Fr. Robert Taft SJ, Requiescat in Pace, was always one of parish priests reading the Breviary as a private devotion since about the year 1000, so access to the Divine Office in the Western church outside of cathedrals and certain churches operated by some of the religious orders was limited. The Second Vatican Council did command the universal public celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, and also mandated the continued use of Latin in the Roman Rite, but both of these important decisions subsequently failed to be implemented, which is why I am one of many who feels a reform of the reform is needed, as well as a renewed spirit of tolerance for traditional Latin mass communities.

  • @EugeniaB82
    @EugeniaB82 2 роки тому +8

    Shirt should say, I love my faith & mathematics 🤣
    I’m still doing last year’s Bible in a year podcast w/ Fr Mike Schmitz. I’ll get there eventually 👍🏼

    • @amytarvin2776
      @amytarvin2776 2 роки тому

      Thank you! I kept falling asleep during Leviticus until I just gave up.😕. I am pitiful.

    • @j2muw667
      @j2muw667 2 роки тому

      @@amytarvin2776 - just keep chipping away a chapter at a time! Maybe read it instead of listening?
      Eventually you’ll get through Leviticus and Numbers... I’m on a ‘Bible in a year’ schedule.. I’m about a month behind, and it’s just the end of March!🤣. But I figured it’s better to keep at it to form a habit of reading regularly (I’m not yet at daily) than not reading it at all! I do better reading myself than listening...
      God bless your endeavor!

    • @amytarvin2776
      @amytarvin2776 2 роки тому +1

      @@j2muw667 Thank you for the encouragement! You are right!👍🏻

  • @joelarkin4268
    @joelarkin4268 2 роки тому +2

    Pray for peace in the world. It's the first Day of lent. Fasting penance prayer. Wear the brown scapular. Pray the Rosary everyday.🙏🇮🇪☘️☘️☘️

  • @williamhillyard6688
    @williamhillyard6688 2 роки тому +1

    I love listening to you Father Casey. Thank you for your knowledge and sharing it with us. God Bless You.

  • @johnstack4352
    @johnstack4352 2 роки тому +2

    I use the New Saint Joseph Sunday Missal( I've been using it since the beginning of the Pandemic) and you answered my question of what happened to the 9th Sunday in OT yr C. Thank you
    BTW I would encourage anyone to invest in a Missal,it allows you to be prepared for Mass and more ✌️🙏

  • @mssixty3426
    @mssixty3426 2 роки тому +2

    Just yesterday I was looking through my missal and Catholic calendar trying to figure out what happened with Ordinary Time after Easter . . . Which left me puzzled, so thank you for this explanation!

  • @michaelnewton5873
    @michaelnewton5873 2 роки тому +3

    February 2 is also Candle Mass.

  • @annettebeckett4671
    @annettebeckett4671 2 роки тому +2

    In South Africa..Our Lady of the Flight into Egypt also on a Sunday. She is the Patron Saint of South Africa

  • @andrejosefb.carabeo6577
    @andrejosefb.carabeo6577 2 роки тому +2

    Very informative video Father!
    I hope you could do a second part of this series, this time concerning the saints inserted in the General Roman Calendar and the differences between Solemnities, Feasts and Memorials.

  • @bzar_q
    @bzar_q 2 роки тому +7

    I highly doubt we know more of the Bible today than in times past.
    It’s awkward to criticize the ancient Roman Rite for only covering 1% of the OT and then showing that the Novus Ordo covers 13%… wow. Now I really feel like we have the OT down. The liturgy shouldn’t try to be so many thing at once. If you want a healthy dose of the OT read the Bible. There’s also the daily office which will increase exposure. But honestly, it’s probably a problem that we give the sense that you can really get through the Bible by going to Mass. You can’t. If you want to read the Bible read it.
    I did enjoy the video though. Nice perspective and informative.

  • @jy7383
    @jy7383 2 роки тому +1

    When the Mass changed in 1964 i was in Borneo - i flew back to Singapore, was directed to the Catholic church for daily Mass where an Indian priest was talking English the whole way through. I assumed I was in a protestant church. In Borneo I had sat through two sermons on Sundays --- Chinese and Eban from a Dutch priest --- but the holy sacrifice -- the ONE THING NECESSARY --- was offered exactly as always. It was the same in Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) at Christmas that year --- with a sermon in Shona -- and in Holland on my way home to England --- with a sermon/homily jn Dutch ---- just as the blessed silence of the holy Mass had been when I was at school in Switzerland, when the sermon was in French

  • @leonardab5042
    @leonardab5042 2 роки тому +5

    I LOVE THIS!! This liturgical calendar complexity is one of my favorite aspects of Catholic liturgy. Maybe it would also be awesome if you can elaborate on why certains feasts are on certain dates (I mean, there are already discussions about why Christmas is on 25th Dec, but there are many other feasts with fixed dates).
    Anyhow, always grateful to watch your videos, Fr. Casey! Thank you!

  • @mkcatrona
    @mkcatrona 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks. If I was bored at Mass as a teen, this was often something that I wondered about. The liturgical calendar never really added up to me, but since I was usually thinking about it during a particularly dry homily or a reading I've heard for the nth time, I forgot about it by the time I got home and could google it.

  • @mandyv8524
    @mandyv8524 2 роки тому +4

    At least I know I'm not the only one in the rabbit hole. I was just thinking about it! Honestly, I was firming up Catechism plans and spiraled down too. Thanks for the company down here and the explanations in the video.

  • @josephdiorio4809
    @josephdiorio4809 2 роки тому +2

    In Our Maronite Catholic Church we only have a one year cycle

    • @josephdiorio4809
      @josephdiorio4809 2 роки тому

      @Michael Fox for 50 Years the Maronite Church celebrated Orthodox Easter it wasn’t until we opened Parishes in The United States a Long time ago, then the Patriarch decided to change the Calendar to the Gregorian because of the Maronites in the United States.

  • @moroaica3660
    @moroaica3660 2 роки тому +39

    I'm not even Catholic (pagan, actually) but this is actually fascinating. You guys make the Roman and Greek calendars look simple! lol

  • @Mike-bn7kr
    @Mike-bn7kr 2 роки тому +1

    I was told by many priest in my life we read the full Bible every 3 years. Now you made me qustion the turn being told.

  • @Banman52
    @Banman52 2 роки тому +1

    The Christmas season is the most concise "mess"- Christmas, Jesus in the manger, then Feast of the Holy Family within a week - Jesus is suddenly 12 years old, then The Epiphany, Jesus is back in the manger, then the Baptism of the Lord - Jesus is suddenly, what, 30 years old???

  • @christinashaw1859
    @christinashaw1859 6 місяців тому

    This year, when Advent was only three weeks long, I decided to try out the 6 week long Nativity Fast with our Eastern brothers and sisters! It was definitely a learning experience. 🙂 The idea of only having three weeks to prepare for Christmas caused me a lot of anxiety lol!…I’m actually thinking about looking more into the Ukrainian Catholic rite. It’s neat that we have so many different cultures and ways of worshiping in our Church!

  • @THuff808
    @THuff808 2 роки тому +3

    It was very informative. I never stopped to think of breaking down the readings in this manner. Now I have a little better understanding of how/why we have certain readings. In grade school we always did the daily calendar/weather etc. wish they would have tacked this on with the lessons. Gradually learning about the Liturgical Calendar and Year in this manner, might save a lot of confusion and may even draw us closer to understanding the workings within the Mass. Thank you for your efforts and gift of teaching.

  • @danielewens2330
    @danielewens2330 2 роки тому +4

    This was the nerdiest video I’ve watched at lunch in a long while. Thank you Father Casey! I’m currently wrapping up a masters degree in the Liturgy and I can’t tell you how fascinating I find this. I would agree that the revised calendar and lectionary are some of the most important fruits of the second Vatican council. But as a parish Liturgy Director it certainly makes my job a lot more confusing!

    • @terecaravaca
      @terecaravaca 2 роки тому +1

      He has another nerdy video that I loved. I think it’s called “18 minutes of useless information about the Catholic Church” or something like that. If you like this one, I think you would also like that one

  • @standupstathentes6842
    @standupstathentes6842 Рік тому

    Let's pray for the old and new calendar to find some sort of awesome fusion. Let's goooo!

  • @pirenet
    @pirenet 2 роки тому +5

    I am a huge Liturgy nerd. Well Done Fr Casey!

  • @maryellencook9528
    @maryellencook9528 2 роки тому +4

    Well, at least the Liturgical year is color coded. That helps to keep some of us grounded. 😆😂🤣😄 Of course, as an Episcopalian, things are not quite so complicated, except we have years A,B,C, and D.
    P.S. My late Roman Catholic Father-in-law always carried his pre Vatican 2 misselette, in Latin, to Mass every Sunday that he was alive.❤

    • @robertmclean590
      @robertmclean590 2 роки тому +1

      If you have a Year D in your parish you'd be doing something very odd. Every Anglican province I can think of follows what Fr Casey outlines, with the occasional variation in readings, but essentially it's exactly the same. Indeed the Episcopal Church's official website says, 'The Lectionary in the BCP and other contemporary lectionaries use a three-year cycle, referred to as Years A, B, and C. Year A begins on the First Sunday in Advent in years evenly divisible by three (e.g., 2001). The Daily Office lectionary follows a two-year cycle. Year One begins on the First Sunday in Advent preceding odd-numbered years and Year Two even-numbered years. In the eucharistic lectionary the Gospel According to Matthew is read in Year A, Mark in Year B, and Luke in Year C. The Gospel According to John is used during Lent and Easter, and on some Sundays in Year B, since Mark is shorter than the other gospels'.
      The complexity comes for those people who produce the annual calendars with readings for the year. For those of us in the pews week by week it's pretty easy, we just have to 'read, mark, learn and inwardly digest' the readings, as Archbishop Cranmer put it.

    • @maryellencook9528
      @maryellencook9528 2 роки тому

      @@robertmclean590 I may be thinking of our old EFM module. My parish does follow the BCP. When I started EFM 15 years ago it was using the B.O.B. Big Old Binder, and our common lesson book was years ABCD. My parish prints out the service and readings for all 3 services, so I haven't used a BCP for a few years. It is asy to become complacent, even though this is less confusing for visitors. I apologize for the confusion.

  • @mrbarryfleming
    @mrbarryfleming 2 роки тому +2

    Great video, but my FOMO levels are skyrocketing 🚀, great incentive to fill in the gaps at home, thanks Fr Casey I had no idea how much I was missing out on

  • @joejackson6205
    @joejackson6205 2 роки тому +6

    I figured this out a while back, came to the conclusion, like John Paul the Great, every good Catholic should read the Bible every day.

  • @moirahansen1955
    @moirahansen1955 2 роки тому +1

    Glad I stayed through to the end of this video.. I really wasn't sure where you were going at the beginning. Thank you.

  • @JuanMartinez-xl2oj
    @JuanMartinez-xl2oj 2 роки тому +6

    Great video, now that you've elucidated this point, care to help the layman learn to take up the liturgy of the hours?

    • @christinebutler7630
      @christinebutler7630 2 роки тому +1

      There's a wonderful UA-cam channel called sing the hours. It's easy to follow and may God bless the guy who makes the videos for doing the work of figuring out the calendar. There's lauds and vesper, each day. Still searching for a channel for compline.

    • @JuanMartinez-xl2oj
      @JuanMartinez-xl2oj 2 роки тому +2

      @@christinebutler7630 thanks a ton, I'm going to look that up!

  • @carolynkimberly4021
    @carolynkimberly4021 2 роки тому +5

    Mass is not meant for catechesis. It is meant for offering the one sacrifice acceptable to God for the remission of sin.

    • @BreakingInTheHabit
      @BreakingInTheHabit  2 роки тому +5

      The mass does offer a sacrifice for their mission of sins, but it is also the primary means of catechesis and a visualization. From even ancient times there was an axiom Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi: The law of prayer is the law of faith. In other words the way we pray influences and defines what we believe. Since the early times, prayer has always been the primary means of Catechesis.

    • @Diffman731
      @Diffman731 2 роки тому +4

      @@BreakingInTheHabit yet what you hear at a typical Catholic Mass is "hymns" (more like songs, really) with weak Theology and a sermon with weaker even more watered down Theology which in no way reflects the Theology of what was taught in the "early times."

    • @MrColinwith1L
      @MrColinwith1L 2 роки тому

      @@Diffman731 the problem is the weak theology and the emphasis on sensationalism. Not the liturgy itself.

    • @Diffman731
      @Diffman731 2 роки тому +4

      @@MrColinwith1L tell me more about how songs like "On Eagle's Wings", "Table of Plenty" and many others have sound Theology.

    • @MrColinwith1L
      @MrColinwith1L 2 роки тому +2

      @@Diffman731 on eagles wings is very closely paraphrasing Psalm 91. (If you have ever prayed the breviary for Sunday at Compline you likely would know this). So it is rooted in Scripture, which is revealed sacred doctrine, which is according to St Thomas Aquinas the very object of all theological study, as it is from the wisdom of God.
      Table of plenty is an amalgamation of various biblical verses as well, from various psalms, parts of the book of Proverbs (“wisdom sets her table and invites all to the feast”), the song of Isaiah 12, and most importantly from parts of the Gospels (“your teacher eats with sinners”). Again, one who regularly prays the breviary could easily recognize these verses as from the biblical psalmody. So thus song too is descended from the sacred doctrine of revelation, the object of theological study.
      So please tell me more about what you think is a better material for crafting hymn content? Granted these are hippie-ish and dated. But can we say they have weak theology when they have the revealed wisdom of God as their source material?

  • @ryanrusch3976
    @ryanrusch3976 2 роки тому +7

    Also if you really want interesting calendrical history one of the most interesting facts is that the modern calendar in which everybody uses was created by Gaius Julius Caesar. He created the calendar because as Pontifex Maximus it was his job to dole out special days in order to keep the calendar on time. He didn't do his job due to being at war with the state and therefore hadn't updated the calendar in three years making it around two weeks off. This is important as during the Roman Civil War the opposing general, one Titus Labienus once Caesar's right-hand man, stopped defending the Dalmatian coast as according to the Calendar it was now unfit to sail ships across the strait. However, Caesar knew about the Calendar and therefore was able to make an unopposed landing and eventually win the Roman Civil War. After the Civil War Caesar would sit down with a group of highly intelligent people and remade the calendar to consist of 11 months all consisting of 31 days excecpt for February which was seen as an unlucky month and was therefore made shorter than the rest, and to ensure that a Pontifex Maximus could never mess up his job again he incorporated Leap Year so that the Calendar would never require extra days be added manually.

    • @Laurelin70
      @Laurelin70 2 роки тому +1

      Actually, the calendar we now use is the one reformed by pope Gregorius XIII in 1582.

    • @ryanrusch3976
      @ryanrusch3976 2 роки тому +1

      @@Laurelin70 The only real change Gregory made was to space Leap Years our more effectively. The amount of days each month, February being the shortest month, and the ideas of the leap year all came from Caesar.

  • @ReddBlues
    @ReddBlues Рік тому +1

    I've never seen the circle of fifths as the liturgical calendar before. That's awesome. I really could have benefited from this as a kid.

  • @mikealexander1935
    @mikealexander1935 2 роки тому +2

    When I was a kid I wondered if Easter would ever fall on my birthday (March 24). Later I realized it would not happen in my lifetime. As shown in the figure at 2:12, it was the least likely date from 1600 to 2099.

  • @ryanrusch3976
    @ryanrusch3976 2 роки тому +3

    My favorite time of the year is ordinary time! when I was a kid it was my favorite time because everyone wore green and now its my favorite time of the year because of the funny name.

  • @dianaveronica85
    @dianaveronica85 2 роки тому +5

    This is awesome 😂... I've been trying to learn about liturgical calendars from the internet, but I didn't get much information. Now I may have to rewatch this video a few more times 😂😂

  • @cindyb5065
    @cindyb5065 2 роки тому +1

    This answers a question I planned to pose to our parish priest. We received lectionary workbooks each year. The A, B and C rotation I understood but didn’t see (before now) why they weren’t reused every three years to save money. That would be way too easy a solution.😂

  • @margaretwandel5660
    @margaretwandel5660 2 роки тому +7

    I did not know when I was a kid the Catholic Church only had one liturgical year. That will explain why I had never heard certain Bible passages.

    • @curt8652
      @curt8652 2 роки тому

      That's really more about your own catechisis and home spiritual life.

    • @margaretwandel5660
      @margaretwandel5660 2 роки тому

      @@curt8652 No, it is about how the Catholic Church taught the Bible during mass. At that time, the nuns at religious education classes discouraged people from reading the Bible on their own. Protestants received a much better Bible education and still do. However, Protestants are not taught to revere the sacraments.

    • @curt8652
      @curt8652 2 роки тому

      @Margaret Wandel So that has nothing to do with the Mass, just bad teachers and again, home life. And I was raised prot they have a tepid knowledge at best, just as the average Catholic.

    • @margaretwandel5660
      @margaretwandel5660 2 роки тому

      @@curt8652 If you were raised Protestant than you do not know what the Latin mass was like at that time and how things were taught. According to Fr. Casey there was only one liturgical year while I was growing up. So only a small part of the Bible was taught. With Vatican 2 that changed. That Protestants have doctrinal differences with the Catholic Church does not mean they did not cover the Bible better. Of course, there are a wide variety of Protestant churches who have differing approaches. But when I was growing up generally Protestants read their Bibles while Catholics did not. There were no Catholic Bible study groups at that time.

    • @curt8652
      @curt8652 2 роки тому +1

      @Margaret Wandel You're reasoning is all over the place.
      I do know what the tlm was like then speaking to those around at the time though most were children..as it is now, as I attend regularly and serve it. So yes I know exactly the calendar which was/is never the exact same but close.
      That there wasn't bible studies or people didn't pick up there's had nothing to do with liturgy and was entirely on cultural norms. Vatican 2 didn't change anything...The liturgy was changed after the council, on its recommendations...which were ignored in many cases. Also they might have added more OT but they cut out key things like 1 Corinthians 11:27-29.
      I didn't mention doctrinal differences....not sure why you are? They take out their bibles but for many its a Sunday only event. Broad stokes. Besides having everyone interpret all scripture themselves hasn't exactly been great for Christian unity.

  • @nancydonarm5367
    @nancydonarm5367 2 роки тому +2

    I love it, you are so much fun and I look foward to your talks

  • @cjtaylor1977
    @cjtaylor1977 2 роки тому +1

    I always learn a lot from your channel so thank you.
    I knew about easter but I did not appreciate how complex your religion is in this practice. It makes me think that other religions must have equally mixed calenders. I know some are basd on cycles too and yet seem to shift a lot per calendar year.
    It makes me grateful I don't have to work out this complexity. Well done to any scholars invested in this.

  • @ceewng5042
    @ceewng5042 2 роки тому +3

    I do wonder why belief in the Eucharist has declined so much, and catechesis in general is awful? Genuinely asking, not snarky at all. I go to the TLM (old calendar) and the catechesis/homilies are leagues above anything I heard when going to a NO parish 🤷

  • @jacksonreedsweet2818
    @jacksonreedsweet2818 2 роки тому +1

    The 1962 liturgical calendar is somewhat complex as well. There is no ordinary time, but instead the Sundays after Epiphany and the Sundays after Pentecost. You have between two and six “Sundays after Epiphany” depending on the date of Easter, and then Gesimatide three Sundays before Ash Wednesday (Septagesima, Sexagesima, and Quintagesima). You’re then in Lent, followed by Eastertide, followed by Pentecost and the Sundays after. The last Sunday after Pentecost is always the 24th Sunday, and if the 23rd Sunday falls too early, you do the “resumed Sundays after Epiphany” to fill in the gaps.

    • @curt8652
      @curt8652 2 роки тому +1

      It flows rather well.

  • @StephenGBorja
    @StephenGBorja 2 роки тому

    I started the video, thinking "Liturgical calendar? That's so simple with Year I and II; A, B and C!" And then you continued explaining it which got me confused and then fascinated and then amazed at how intricate and enriching of a mess our liturgical calendar is! Thank you!
    Credits to the Holy Spirit for my finishing the video!

  • @annettebeckett4671
    @annettebeckett4671 2 роки тому +5

    Nope now I can explain Calendar to kids. Everything a catechism lesson. Thanks Fr

  • @Marist_Chanel
    @Marist_Chanel 2 роки тому +2

    As a person who has been attending the Latin Mass for the last 14 years, i agree that we don’t hear as much scripture variety as we do in the New Mass. But I would like to say, that because we have the same reading’s every year, it’s more ingrained in my memory and I’m more familiar with them. Also, the sermons based on these readings and feastday’s change every year, especially if it’s a different priest. It allows me to look at these mysteries and feasts in different ways that help deepen my understanding of them and also allow me to appreciate much more, God’s infinite wisdom.
    Pretty much like the rosary. You meditate so many times on the same mysteries that bit by bit, you’re looking at these mysteries from different angles and realising just how deep these mysteries are. Overtime, a new lightbulb goes off in your head and you’re like “How did i not see that before?” 🤔 Just having the one cycle of readings means it’s more fresh in my mind so to speak.
    Unfortunately I’ve not been able to appreciate the New Mass readings like that. Who knows? Maybe it’s because I don’t follow the New Mass with a missal 🤷‍♂️

    • @leylinegoddess
      @leylinegoddess 2 роки тому +1

      yes i am old enough to say it was engrained in me, but my brain kept saying, that can't be all there is. sooooo i became an historian and studies all the stuff that went along with the standard operating readings. ah what revelation.

  • @claytonknight7825
    @claytonknight7825 2 роки тому +1

    Fr. Casey, thank you very much for making such a wonderful, in-depth, and informative video. I made a liturgical wall calendar for a friend this last year and found out just how much was involved in it. But as someone who is interested in this topic, it is worth pointing out you were not fully correct in your statement that Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday after the full Moon that falls on or after the spring equinox. Rather, Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday after the full Moon that falls on or after the set ecclesiastical equinox, of March 21st.

    In 2019, for example, the astronomical spring equinox was March 20th, along with a full moon the same day. However, because the first full moon following the ecclesiastical equinox was April 19th, Easter was not until April 21st, a full month after the first full moon on or after the astronomical spring equinox. Your calendar is wild, and so remarkably interesting.

  • @doug.jones.88
    @doug.jones.88 2 роки тому

    It can get even more fun in other parts of the world. In some countries of the Middle East, among them Jordan and Egypt, the Christians have collectively decided to celebrate Christmas with the West and Easter with the East. So now there's not only the usual liturgical year cutting and pasting, but also figuring out how to catch up to the rest of the Latin church once Easter passes. In 2018, I had two (Catholic) Holy Weeks back to back, one in Lebanon (Gregorian calendar) and one in Egypt (Julian calendar). I was also living with Jesuits of different Eastern rites that year. For the Maronites, Lent starts on Ash Monday, and the Maronite calendar predominated in the Jesuit house where I was staying. But the priests would also celebrate Melkite and Latin Rite liturgies depending on their native rite. One of the priests celebrated Latin Rite Mass the day after Ash Monday, which you might recognize as Fat Tuesday, a day *before* Lent had even begun in the West. We of course didn't switch back from Lent to Ordinary Time, so I have no idea which Mass he used! Being Catholic is fun!

  • @MrCarls814
    @MrCarls814 2 роки тому +1

    I always enjoy these kinds of videos keep up the good work Father Casey

  • @patthompson8591
    @patthompson8591 2 роки тому +1

    Oh dear! Fr Casey, I'll stick with the simple Julian or Gregorian calendars - no rabbit holes. 😊

  • @BlessedisShe
    @BlessedisShe 2 роки тому

    So interesting! Thank you for sharing!

  • @mattbonner12
    @mattbonner12 2 роки тому +1

    That is pretty interesting. Then if want to go beyond just the mass and include the breviary, there are a lot more things as well including the optional gospel and canticle readings in the back lol.

  • @TCM1231
    @TCM1231 9 місяців тому

    God Bless you Fr.

  • @jeffhedglen
    @jeffhedglen 2 роки тому +1

    This was my fav video of yours. Thanks

  • @thefulgurator
    @thefulgurator 2 роки тому

    this finally explains why there are some readings that come up at mass that i don't ever recall having heard before! i've thought "well surely 3 years ago i heard this and i must just forget". turns out i may have never heard it or it's been 10ish years since i did. phew, i feel better about myself now that i have this knowledge! 😅😇

  • @Sulla2300
    @Sulla2300 11 місяців тому

    Thank you for putting this video together. I learned so much.

  • @lapun47
    @lapun47 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks Father, it's comforting to see I'm not the only one puzzled by (mind-boggled by) the liturgical calendar.

  • @paullydca
    @paullydca 2 роки тому

    THANK YOU!!!!!! This explains so much. I was super confused my the 3 year missal I bought had week 9 listed for this year, but the missal for just this year from my parish did not. This makes sense to me.

  • @hayenon
    @hayenon 2 роки тому +1

    Love it thanks for your research on all this. Wow! God bless you.

  • @supreme87878
    @supreme87878 2 роки тому +1

    TLM calender doesnt have ordinary time. Three weeks before Lent period is not ordinary time, it is pre-lent period liturgical colour: purple.

  • @MrColinwith1L
    @MrColinwith1L 2 роки тому +4

    Its not actually a mess though; it's a response. It's a mess if you are looking for a 365 cycle that never changes. Rather, what we have here centers around the central event of all human history: God became incarnate and died and rose from the dead. He did not give us a 365 day cycle to follow, but did ask us to celebrate his life and passion in the life of the Church within the world's temporal age of cycles of 12 months and 7 days.
    So we do that, but it must always yield to hold sacred the two dates on which we celebrate Christmas and Easter. Everything that happens in the different seasons must gravitationally revolve around these two special holy days. Everything else is on whatever annual calendar day it is celebrated each year, but this often must bow to the higher precedent of memorializing the Lord's life and passion (Sundays and other holy days). If you understand the order of precedence, the whole calendar makes sense, not as a set of confusing cycles, but the necessary and natural rhythm of the Church celebrating the life and passion of Jesus but still within the order of Creation.

  • @echoesoffaith-89
    @echoesoffaith-89 2 роки тому

    I love these videos. Very well done.

  • @ferdinandusheldi7745
    @ferdinandusheldi7745 2 роки тому +4

    Thanks a lot

  • @Laurelin70
    @Laurelin70 2 роки тому

    In Italy we still have some liturgical feast celebrated even if at mid-week: Epiphany (january 6), Assumption of Mary (august 15), All Saints (november 1st) and Immaculate Conception (december 8), plus Christmas and Saint Stephen (december 26). SO we are spared some sundays.

  • @pierreleroy2509
    @pierreleroy2509 2 роки тому +7

    Very interesting video Father. But I’m still skeptical about the superiority of the new lectionary. You have to take in consideration that the lectionary has to be way more condensed in the traditional mass because of latin. If you add a third lecture that would mean reading it in latin and then in vernacular language again, it would make the mass even longer, and the mass is already pretty long in the traditional form (at least 1h30 most of the time). Our missal would also be even thicker, ans it’s already pretty thick. For me, your argument about the percentage of the bible read in the old vs new mass sounds like a war on numbers.
    I think our ancesters had very good and pragmatic reasons to have such and condensed lectionary, and that our church did a great job in 1970. But it’s not a matter of « superiority » of the new rite vs the old rite.
    Greetings from France.

    • @jessicakalapati942
      @jessicakalapati942 2 роки тому

      Thank you :)

    • @doverbeachcomber
      @doverbeachcomber 2 роки тому +1

      The TLM is 90 minutes long only when it is a sung (High) Mass. The Low Mass that was common in my boyhood was typically 30-45 minutes. With many parishes having 5 packed Masses on Sunday mornings back then, it simply couldn’t take any longer than that. We no longer have that “problem,” of course, what with 50 years of plummeting Mass attendance….

  • @carsonianthegreat4672
    @carsonianthegreat4672 2 роки тому +2

    I really like the new post-Vatican II 3-year cycle. But I will admit that I hate that there are two “Ordinary Times.” I wish we had kept the names Epiphanytide, Shrovetide, and Pentecostide.
    Fr. Casey, if you’re ever made Pope or Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship, can you please put these names back into use? Haha. They just sound cooler even if nothing else is change!

  • @thomasdooher7138
    @thomasdooher7138 2 роки тому

    This is the first of your conferences I listened to where I needed a shot after. Geeeeezzz…

  • @TheMinotaurWarrior
    @TheMinotaurWarrior 2 роки тому +1

    Fun fact:
    Leap day is not February 29th, it's February 24th
    A double-length day was added by Augustus as the fifth day before the Calend (start) of March, in order to work around the similarly complicated Roman Pagan holiday schedule. The Gregorian calendar inherited this. Modern secular calendars also inherited it - and changed the way days are popularly referred to, getting rid of "ad/ab" dates, or "since/from" and sticking to consistently counting up from the first day after the start of the month.
    It's like if I said, "Every 208 weeks, there's an extra day between tuesday and wednesday called tudensay" and then everyone switched to calling it "day 1, day 2, day 3..." and thought the leap day was day 8.

  • @fv9859
    @fv9859 2 роки тому

    Fr. Casey, I just love your videos. They feel so refreshing. Warm regards from Brazil.🇧🇷

  • @robertjarman4261
    @robertjarman4261 2 роки тому

    From Russian Orthodox person in Russia sympathetic to Catholics. I tend to use both the Eastern and Western to avoid fasting days.

  • @h00sha
    @h00sha 2 роки тому +3

    This was hilarious!
    And super interesting... thanks Fr. :p

  • @HoldYourBreat4
    @HoldYourBreat4 2 роки тому +1

    Father Casey…. You did this to yourself 😂 have you ever heard the expression “I don’t need to know how the watch works, just tell me what time it is” ..? Love your content 🙏🏻

  • @michaelrome3527
    @michaelrome3527 2 роки тому +1

    God bless you Father for taking the mind numbing time to explain this 😳

  • @karenkushla3975
    @karenkushla3975 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you, Fr. Casey! This was so interesting!

  • @andrewpatton5114
    @andrewpatton5114 2 роки тому +2

    Not "any time in history," but perhaps "any time since the first century." The earliest Christians were pious Jews, who commonly memorized, if not the entire Hebrew Scriptures, at least the entire Torah.

  • @michaelhaywood8262
    @michaelhaywood8262 2 роки тому +1

    Similar happened in the Old Calendar, this allowed for 6 Sundays after Epiphany and 24 after Pentecost, if that was not enough some of the missed Sundays after Epiphany were inserted to fill the gap. Also in the Old Calendar more feasts could supersede Sundays than at present.
    In the New Calendar observant Catholics [who attend on Sundays, Holy Days of Obligation, plus Ash Wednesday and the Triduum get to hear most of the Gospels over 3 years, years A, B and C dedicated to St Matthew, St Mark and St Luke respectively. Johns Gospel is used on the 2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time, on certain Sundays in Advent and Lent [depending on which year it is] during the Triduum and most of the Sundays between Easter and Pentecost. In Year B, because of the brevity of Mark's Gospel certain Sundays use readings from John, notably the important Eucharistic Chapter 6 is read between Weeks 17 and 21 inclusive. Previously our ancestors would just have got to learn some 65-75 passages from the Gospels [52 Sundays plus 8 Holy Days plus Ash Wednesday and Good Friday [later after Pius XII's reforms Maundy Thursday and the Easter Vigil], also taking into account the varying number of Sundays after Epiphany and Pentecost and the feasts which could supersede Sundays.

    • @alhilford2345
      @alhilford2345 2 роки тому

      A person attending every available Mass, every single day for three years will hear 71.5% of the New Testament and 13.5% of the Old Testament.
      Most of the readings will have no relevance to the liturgical year or to the saint whose feast is being celebrated on that particular day.

  • @thedzkydabz3738
    @thedzkydabz3738 2 роки тому +2

    Woah! This is mindblowing as a catholic 😳😳😳

  • @DanielWSonntag
    @DanielWSonntag 2 роки тому +1

    I do the church bulletin so this is helpful! Now I don't feel so bad wondering why it's so confusing sometimes 🤨