Christian calendar for 2009
All dates are shown using the Gregorian (Western) calendar. Thursday 1 January
- Circumcision
-
Marks the day when Jesus was circumcised.
- Festival of St Basil the Great
-
St Basil is one of the great fathers of the Orthodox Church.
Sunday 4 January
- Epiphany (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Tuesday 6 January
- Christmas Day (Armenian Orthodox)
-
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at Epiphany, except for Armenians in the Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas on January 19th.
- Theophany
-
Orthodox churches mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
- Epiphany
-
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the infant Jesus.
In the East, where it originated, the Epiphany celebrates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the River Jordan. (Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this separately: see Baptism of the Lord)
Also known as Dia de los Reyes (Three Kings Day).
Wednesday 7 January
- Christmas Day (Orthodox)
-
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result, they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other Christian churches.
Sunday 11 January
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
- First Sunday after Epiphany
-
Epiphany takes place on the 6th of January, but most Christians celebrate it on the first Sunday after that date.
Tuesday 13 January
- St Hilary's Day
-
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of Poitiers.
Sunday 18 January
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (start)
-
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January (regardless of the days of the week involved) were originally chosen because they covered the days between the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul. Some churches and regions use a different week.
Wednesday 21 January
- St Agnes
-
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age of 13.
Sunday 25 January
- St Paul's Day
-
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus.
Wednesday 28 January
- St Thomas Aquinas
-
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students and theologians.
Monday 2 February
- Candlemas
-
This is often called The Presentation of Christ in the Temple and commemorates the day Mary took Jesus to the Temple at Jerusalem to present him to God. Coincides with Groundhog Day (USA)
Wednesday 11 February
- Our Lady of Lourdes
-
Marks the day in 1858 when St Bernadette had her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Saturday 14 February
- St Valentine's Day
-
Now more a secular festival than a religious one. There are at least three different saints named Valentine.
Tuesday 24 February
- Shrove Tuesday
-
Also called Pancake Day and Mardi Gras. The British name of "Pancake Day" comes from the tradition of making pancakes to use up all the food that could not be eaten during Lent.
Wednesday 25 February
- Ash Wednesday
-
The first day of Lent for Western Christian churches. Lent is the season marking the time Jesus spent in the wilderness.
Sunday 1 March
- St David's Day
-
Saint David, or Dewi Sant as he's called in the Welsh language, is the patron saint of Wales.
Monday 2 March
- Clean Monday - Beginning of Lent (Orthodox)
-
The start of the "Great Lent" for Orthodox Christians. This day is called Clean Monday, and occurs seven weeks before the Orthodox Easter
Thursday 5 March
- St Piran's Day
-
Piran is regarded as the patron saint of Cornwall and tin miners. He was born in Ireland. The Cornish flag may have been inspired by the legend that Piran discovered the process for smelting tin: black rock with a white cross of pure metal.
Friday 6 March
- Women's World Day of Prayer
-
This dates from 1887 and is celebrated on the first Friday of March
Tuesday 17 March
- St Patrick's Day
-
St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Thursday 19 March
- St Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Sunday 22 March
- Mothering Sunday
-
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent. Not the same as Mothers' Day in the USA.
Wednesday 25 March
- Annunciation
-
Marks the angel Gabriel's message to the Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the incarnation of Christ. It also celebrates the incarnation itself as the date falls 9 months before Christmas.
Sunday 5 April
- Palm Sunday
-
The sixth and last Sunday of Lent. Marks the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem and the start of Holy Week.
Thursday 9 April
- Maundy Thursday
-
Christians remember Maundy Thursday as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist.
Friday 10 April
- Good Friday
-
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter. It commemorates the execution of Jesus by crucifixion.
Sunday 12 April
- Easter Sunday (Western)
-
Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival. Most years Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter on a different date.
Sunday 19 April
- Easter (Orthodox)
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival
Thursday 23 April
- St George's Day
-
Saint George is the patron saint of England.
Thursday 21 May
- Ascension Day
-
Ascension Day marks the last earthly appearance of Christ after his resurrection. Christians believe Christ ascended into heaven. It is celebrated 40 days after Easter.
Sunday 24 May
- Ascension Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Ascension Day is normally celebrated 40 days after Easter. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Sunday 31 May
- Pentecost - Whitsun
-
The seventh Sunday after Easter, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples and the birth of the Christian Church.
Sunday 7 June
- Trinity Sunday
-
The first Sunday after Pentecost. Christians meditate on the nature of God as "Three in one".
Thursday 11 June
- Corpus Christi
-
Roman Catholic festival celebrating the "real presence of Christ in the Eucharist".
The festival falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday.
Sunday 14 June
- Corpus Christi (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Corpus Christi falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
- All Saints' Day (Orthodox)
-
This day honours all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Western churches celebrate All Saints Day on November 1.
Sunday 28 June
- St Peter's Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Monday 29 June
- St Peter's Day
-
Observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. One of the oldest saints' days.
Wednesday 15 July
- St Swithin's Day
-
Swithin (or Swithun) was a Saxon bishop in the 9th century. Legend has it that the weather on his feast day, 15 July, will determine the weather for the next 40 days.
Thursday 6 August
- Transfiguration
-
Orthodox Christian feast commemorating the sudden emanation of radiance from the person of Jesus that occurred on the mountain.
Saturday 15 August
- Dormition of the Theotokos
-
An Orthodox festival that commemorates the death, resurrection, and glorification of Christ's mother. Dormition means "falling asleep".
- Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
A largely Roman Catholic festival celebrating their belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was taken body and soul into heaven.
Sunday 16 August
- Assumption of Mary (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Tuesday 8 September
- Nativity of the Theotokos
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary
- Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Roman Catholics celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary.
- Feast of the Birth of Mary
-
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches celebrate the birth of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Tuesday 29 September
- Michaelmas/ St Michael's Day
-
A feast day in honour of the archangel Michael. Michael is one of only two angels mentioned by name in the Bible (the other being Gabriel.)
Tuesday 13 October
- St Edward's Day
-
Edward the Confessor was King of England 1042 - 1066. He built Westminster Abbey where there is a shrine to him - and where the saint is also celebrated on January 5 each year, the anniversary of his death.
Saturday 31 October
- Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve)
-
The night before All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day). Its origins date back over 2000 years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. It was celebrated as a Christian festival by the 8th Century.
Sunday 1 November
- All Saints' Day (Hallowmas, All Hallows')
-
All Saints' Day (also known as All Hallows' Day or Hallowmas) is when Anglicans and Roman Catholics honour all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Orthodox churches celebrate it on the first Sunday after Pentecost.
Monday 2 November
- All Souls' Day
-
All Souls' Day is an opportunity for Roman Catholic and Anglo-Catholic churches to commemorate the faithful departed. They remember and pray for the souls of people who are in Purgatory. All Souls' Day is celebrated on 3 November if the 2nd is a Sunday.
Sunday 29 November
- Advent Sunday
-
The beginning of the ecclesiastical year on the Sunday closest to November 30. Advent is the season before Christmas - In Western Christendom, four Sundays are included. In Eastern Christendom, the season is longer and begins in the middle of November
Monday 30 November
- St Andrew's Day
-
Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece and Russia. The flag of Scotland is the Cross of St. Andrew. St Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, was originally a fisherman and became the first Apostle.
Tuesday 8 December
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception
-
Celebrated by Roman Catholics who remember Mary's conception as being without sin, therefore, immaculate.
Sunday 13 December
- St Lucy's Day
-
Saint Lucy's Day or the Feast of St. Lucy is marked by Catholics and Orthodox Christians and also celebrated by members of the Lutheran Church.
Thursday 24 December
- Christmas Eve
-
The day before Christmas Day
Friday 25 December
- Christmas Day
-
The day when Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Saturday 26 December
- St Stephen's Day
-
St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, is celebrated on this day by Roman Catholics. The day is also called the Feast of Stephen.
Christian calendar for 2010
Friday 1 January
- Circumcision
-
Marks the day when Jesus was circumcised.
- Festival of St Basil the Great
-
St Basil is one of the great fathers of the Orthodox Church.
Sunday 3 January
- Epiphany (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Wednesday 6 January
- Christmas Day (Armenian Orthodox)
-
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at Epiphany, except for Armenians in the Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas on January 19th.
- Theophany
-
Orthodox churches mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
- Epiphany
-
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the infant Jesus.
In the East, where it originated, the Epiphany celebrates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the River Jordan. (Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this separately: see Baptism of the Lord)
Also known as Dia de los Reyes (Three Kings Day).
Thursday 7 January
- Christmas Day (Orthodox)
-
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result, they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other Christian churches.
Sunday 10 January
- First Sunday after Epiphany
-
Epiphany takes place on the 6th of January, but most Christians celebrate it on the first Sunday after that date.
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
Wednesday 13 January
- St Hilary's Day
-
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of Poitiers.
Monday 18 January
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (start)
-
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January (regardless of the days of the week involved) were originally chosen because they covered the days between the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul. Some churches and regions use a different week.
Thursday 21 January
- St Agnes
-
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age of 13.
Monday 25 January
- St Paul's Day
-
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus.
Thursday 28 January
- St Thomas Aquinas
-
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students and theologians.
Tuesday 2 February
- Candlemas
-
This is often called The Presentation of Christ in the Temple and commemorates the day Mary took Jesus to the Temple at Jerusalem to present him to God. Coincides with Groundhog Day (USA)
Thursday 11 February
- Our Lady of Lourdes
-
Marks the day in 1858 when St Bernadette had her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Sunday 14 February
- St Valentine's Day
-
Now more a secular festival than a religious one. There are at least three different saints named Valentine.
Monday 15 February
- Clean Monday - Beginning of Lent (Orthodox)
-
The start of the "Great Lent" for Orthodox Christians. This day is called Clean Monday, and occurs seven weeks before the Orthodox Easter
Tuesday 16 February
- Shrove Tuesday
-
Also called Pancake Day and Mardi Gras. The British name of "Pancake Day" comes from the tradition of making pancakes to use up all the food that could not be eaten during Lent.
Wednesday 17 February
- Ash Wednesday
-
The first day of Lent for Western Christian churches. Lent is the season marking the time Jesus spent in the wilderness.
Monday 1 March
- St David's Day
-
Saint David, or Dewi Sant as he's called in the Welsh language, is the patron saint of Wales.
Friday 5 March
- St Piran's Day
-
Piran is regarded as the patron saint of Cornwall and tin miners. He was born in Ireland. The Cornish flag may have been inspired by the legend that Piran discovered the process for smelting tin: black rock with a white cross of pure metal.
- Women's World Day of Prayer
-
This dates from 1887 and is celebrated on the first Friday of March
Sunday 14 March
- Mothering Sunday
-
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent. Not the same as Mothers' Day in the USA.
Wednesday 17 March
- St Patrick's Day
-
St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Friday 19 March
- St Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Thursday 25 March
- Annunciation
-
Marks the angel Gabriel's message to the Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the incarnation of Christ. It also celebrates the incarnation itself as the date falls 9 months before Christmas.
Sunday 28 March
- Palm Sunday
-
The sixth and last Sunday of Lent. Marks the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem and the start of Holy Week.
Thursday 1 April
- Maundy Thursday
-
Christians remember Maundy Thursday as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist.
Friday 2 April
- Good Friday
-
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter. It commemorates the execution of Jesus by crucifixion.
Sunday 4 April
- Easter Sunday (Western)
-
Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival. Most years Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter on a different date.
- Easter (Orthodox)
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival
Friday 23 April
- St George's Day
-
Saint George is the patron saint of England.
Thursday 13 May
- Ascension Day
-
Ascension Day marks the last earthly appearance of Christ after his resurrection. Christians believe Christ ascended into heaven. It is celebrated 40 days after Easter.
Sunday 16 May
- Ascension Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Ascension Day is normally celebrated 40 days after Easter. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Sunday 23 May
- Pentecost - Whitsun
-
The seventh Sunday after Easter, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples and the birth of the Christian Church.
Sunday 30 May
- Trinity Sunday
-
The first Sunday after Pentecost. Christians meditate on the nature of God as "Three in one".
- All Saints' Day (Orthodox)
-
This day honours all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Western churches celebrate All Saints Day on November 1.
Thursday 3 June
- Corpus Christi
-
Roman Catholic festival celebrating the "real presence of Christ in the Eucharist".
The festival falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday.
Sunday 6 June
- Corpus Christi (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Corpus Christi falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Tuesday 29 June
- St Peter's Day
-
Observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. One of the oldest saints' days.
Thursday 15 July
- St Swithin's Day
-
Swithin (or Swithun) was a Saxon bishop in the 9th century. Legend has it that the weather on his feast day, 15 July, will determine the weather for the next 40 days.
Friday 6 August
- Transfiguration
-
Orthodox Christian feast commemorating the sudden emanation of radiance from the person of Jesus that occurred on the mountain.
Sunday 15 August
- Dormition of the Theotokos
-
An Orthodox festival that commemorates the death, resurrection, and glorification of Christ's mother. Dormition means "falling asleep".
- Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
A largely Roman Catholic festival celebrating their belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was taken body and soul into heaven.
Wednesday 8 September
- Nativity of the Theotokos
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary
- Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Roman Catholics celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary.
- Feast of the Birth of Mary
-
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches celebrate the birth of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Wednesday 29 September
- Michaelmas/ St Michael's Day
-
A feast day in honour of the archangel Michael. Michael is one of only two angels mentioned by name in the Bible (the other being Gabriel.)
Wednesday 13 October
- St Edward's Day
-
Edward the Confessor was King of England 1042 - 1066. He built Westminster Abbey where there is a shrine to him - and where the saint is also celebrated on January 5 each year, the anniversary of his death.
Sunday 31 October
- Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve)
-
The night before All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day). Its origins date back over 2000 years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. It was celebrated as a Christian festival by the 8th Century.
- All Saints' Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
The Catholic Church in England and Wales moves this festival to the nearest Sunday if it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Monday 1 November
- All Saints' Day (Hallowmas, All Hallows')
-
All Saints' Day (also known as All Hallows' Day or Hallowmas) is when Anglicans and Roman Catholics honour all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Orthodox churches celebrate it on the first Sunday after Pentecost.
Tuesday 2 November
- All Souls' Day
-
All Souls' Day is an opportunity for Roman Catholic and Anglo-Catholic churches to commemorate the faithful departed. They remember and pray for the souls of people who are in Purgatory. All Souls' Day is celebrated on 3 November if the 2nd is a Sunday.
Sunday 28 November
- Advent Sunday
-
The beginning of the ecclesiastical year on the Sunday closest to November 30. Advent is the season before Christmas - In Western Christendom, four Sundays are included. In Eastern Christendom, the season is longer and begins in the middle of November
Tuesday 30 November
- St Andrew's Day
-
Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece and Russia. The flag of Scotland is the Cross of St. Andrew. St Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, was originally a fisherman and became the first Apostle.
Wednesday 8 December
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception
-
Celebrated by Roman Catholics who remember Mary's conception as being without sin, therefore, immaculate.
Monday 13 December
- St Lucy's Day
-
Saint Lucy's Day or the Feast of St. Lucy is marked by Catholics and Orthodox Christians and also celebrated by members of the Lutheran Church.
Friday 24 December
- Christmas Eve
-
The day before Christmas Day
Saturday 25 December
- Christmas Day
-
The day when Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Sunday 26 December
- St Stephen's Day
-
St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, is celebrated on this day by Roman Catholics. The day is also called the Feast of Stephen.
Christian calendar for 2011
Saturday 1 January
- Circumcision
-
Marks the day when Jesus was circumcised.
- Festival of St Basil the Great
-
St Basil is one of the great fathers of the Orthodox Church.
Thursday 6 January
- Christmas Day (Armenian Orthodox)
-
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at Epiphany, except for Armenians in the Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas on January 19th.
- Theophany
-
Orthodox churches mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
- Epiphany
-
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the infant Jesus.
In the East, where it originated, the Epiphany celebrates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the River Jordan. (Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this separately: see Baptism of the Lord)
Also known as Dia de los Reyes (Three Kings Day).
Friday 7 January
- Christmas Day (Orthodox)
-
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result, they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other Christian churches.
Sunday 9 January
- First Sunday after Epiphany
-
Epiphany takes place on the 6th of January, but most Christians celebrate it on the first Sunday after that date.
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
Thursday 13 January
- St Hilary's Day
-
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of Poitiers.
Tuesday 18 January
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (start)
-
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January (regardless of the days of the week involved) were originally chosen because they covered the days between the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul. Some churches and regions use a different week.
Friday 21 January
- St Agnes
-
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age of 13.
Tuesday 25 January
- St Paul's Day
-
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus.
Friday 28 January
- St Thomas Aquinas
-
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students and theologians.
Wednesday 2 February
- Candlemas
-
This is often called The Presentation of Christ in the Temple and commemorates the day Mary took Jesus to the Temple at Jerusalem to present him to God. Coincides with Groundhog Day (USA)
Friday 11 February
- Our Lady of Lourdes
-
Marks the day in 1858 when St Bernadette had her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Monday 14 February
- St Valentine's Day
-
Now more a secular festival than a religious one. There are at least three different saints named Valentine.
Tuesday 1 March
- St David's Day
-
Saint David, or Dewi Sant as he's called in the Welsh language, is the patron saint of Wales.
Saturday 5 March
- St Piran's Day
-
Piran is regarded as the patron saint of Cornwall and tin miners. He was born in Ireland. The Cornish flag may have been inspired by the legend that Piran discovered the process for smelting tin: black rock with a white cross of pure metal.
Monday 7 March
- Clean Monday - Beginning of Lent (Orthodox)
-
The start of the "Great Lent" for Orthodox Christians. This day is called Clean Monday, and occurs seven weeks before the Orthodox Easter
Tuesday 8 March
- Shrove Tuesday
-
Also called Pancake Day and Mardi Gras. The British name of "Pancake Day" comes from the tradition of making pancakes to use up all the food that could not be eaten during Lent.
Wednesday 9 March
- Ash Wednesday
-
The first day of Lent for Western Christian churches. Lent is the season marking the time Jesus spent in the wilderness.
Thursday 17 March
- St Patrick's Day
-
St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Saturday 19 March
- St Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Friday 25 March
- Annunciation
-
Marks the angel Gabriel's message to the Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the incarnation of Christ. It also celebrates the incarnation itself as the date falls 9 months before Christmas.
Sunday 3 April
- Mothering Sunday
-
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent. Not the same as Mothers' Day in the USA.
Sunday 17 April
- Palm Sunday
-
The sixth and last Sunday of Lent. Marks the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem and the start of Holy Week.
Thursday 21 April
- Maundy Thursday
-
Christians remember Maundy Thursday as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist.
Friday 22 April
- Good Friday
-
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter. It commemorates the execution of Jesus by crucifixion.
Saturday 23 April
- St George's Day
-
Saint George is the patron saint of England.
Sunday 24 April
- Easter Sunday (Western)
-
Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival. Most years Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter on a different date.
- Easter (Orthodox)
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival
Thursday 2 June
- Ascension Day
-
Ascension Day marks the last earthly appearance of Christ after his resurrection. Christians believe Christ ascended into heaven. It is celebrated 40 days after Easter.
Sunday 5 June
- Ascension Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Ascension Day is normally celebrated 40 days after Easter. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Sunday 12 June
- Pentecost - Whitsun
-
The seventh Sunday after Easter, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples and the birth of the Christian Church.
Sunday 19 June
- Trinity Sunday
-
The first Sunday after Pentecost. Christians meditate on the nature of God as "Three in one".
- All Saints' Day (Orthodox)
-
This day honours all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Western churches celebrate All Saints Day on November 1.
Thursday 23 June
- Corpus Christi
-
Roman Catholic festival celebrating the "real presence of Christ in the Eucharist".
The festival falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday.
Sunday 26 June
- Corpus Christi (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Corpus Christi falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Wednesday 29 June
- St Peter's Day
-
Observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. One of the oldest saints' days.
Friday 15 July
- St Swithin's Day
-
Swithin (or Swithun) was a Saxon bishop in the 9th century. Legend has it that the weather on his feast day, 15 July, will determine the weather for the next 40 days.
Saturday 6 August
- Transfiguration
-
Orthodox Christian feast commemorating the sudden emanation of radiance from the person of Jesus that occurred on the mountain.
Monday 15 August
- Dormition of the Theotokos
-
An Orthodox festival that commemorates the death, resurrection, and glorification of Christ's mother. Dormition means "falling asleep".
- Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
A largely Roman Catholic festival celebrating their belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was taken body and soul into heaven.
Thursday 8 September
- Nativity of the Theotokos
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary
- Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Roman Catholics celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary.
- Feast of the Birth of Mary
-
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches celebrate the birth of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Thursday 29 September
- Michaelmas/ St Michael's Day
-
A feast day in honour of the archangel Michael. Michael is one of only two angels mentioned by name in the Bible (the other being Gabriel.)
Thursday 13 October
- St Edward's Day
-
Edward the Confessor was King of England 1042 - 1066. He built Westminster Abbey where there is a shrine to him - and where the saint is also celebrated on January 5 each year, the anniversary of his death.
Monday 31 October
- Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve)
-
The night before All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day). Its origins date back over 2000 years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. It was celebrated as a Christian festival by the 8th Century.
Tuesday 1 November
- All Saints' Day (Hallowmas, All Hallows')
-
All Saints' Day (also known as All Hallows' Day or Hallowmas) is when Anglicans and Roman Catholics honour all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Orthodox churches celebrate it on the first Sunday after Pentecost.
Wednesday 2 November
- All Souls' Day
-
All Souls' Day is an opportunity for Roman Catholic and Anglo-Catholic churches to commemorate the faithful departed. They remember and pray for the souls of people who are in Purgatory. All Souls' Day is celebrated on 3 November if the 2nd is a Sunday.
Sunday 27 November
- Advent Sunday
-
The beginning of the ecclesiastical year on the Sunday closest to November 30. Advent is the season before Christmas - In Western Christendom, four Sundays are included. In Eastern Christendom, the season is longer and begins in the middle of November
Wednesday 30 November
- St Andrew's Day
-
Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece and Russia. The flag of Scotland is the Cross of St. Andrew. St Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, was originally a fisherman and became the first Apostle.
Thursday 8 December
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception
-
Celebrated by Roman Catholics who remember Mary's conception as being without sin, therefore, immaculate.
Tuesday 13 December
- St Lucy's Day
-
Saint Lucy's Day or the Feast of St. Lucy is marked by Catholics and Orthodox Christians and also celebrated by members of the Lutheran Church.
Saturday 24 December
- Christmas Eve
-
The day before Christmas Day
Sunday 25 December
- Christmas Day
-
The day when Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Monday 26 December
- St Stephen's Day
-
St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, is celebrated on this day by Roman Catholics. The day is also called the Feast of Stephen.
Christian calendar for 2012
Sunday 1 January
- Circumcision
-
Marks the day when Jesus was circumcised.
- Festival of St Basil the Great
-
St Basil is one of the great fathers of the Orthodox Church.
Friday 6 January
- Christmas Day (Armenian Orthodox)
-
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at Epiphany, except for Armenians in the Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas on January 19th.
- Theophany
-
Orthodox churches mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
- Epiphany
-
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the infant Jesus.
In the East, where it originated, the Epiphany celebrates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the River Jordan. (Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this separately: see Baptism of the Lord)
Also known as Dia de los Reyes (Three Kings Day).
Saturday 7 January
- Christmas Day (Orthodox)
-
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result, they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other Christian churches.
Sunday 8 January
- First Sunday after Epiphany
-
Epiphany takes place on the 6th of January, but most Christians celebrate it on the first Sunday after that date.
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
Friday 13 January
- St Hilary's Day
-
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of Poitiers.
Wednesday 18 January
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (start)
-
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January (regardless of the days of the week involved) were originally chosen because they covered the days between the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul. Some churches and regions use a different week.
Saturday 21 January
- St Agnes
-
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age of 13.
Wednesday 25 January
- St Paul's Day
-
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus.
Saturday 28 January
- St Thomas Aquinas
-
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students and theologians.
Thursday 2 February
- Candlemas
-
This is often called The Presentation of Christ in the Temple and commemorates the day Mary took Jesus to the Temple at Jerusalem to present him to God. Coincides with Groundhog Day (USA)
Saturday 11 February
- Our Lady of Lourdes
-
Marks the day in 1858 when St Bernadette had her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Tuesday 14 February
- St Valentine's Day
-
Now more a secular festival than a religious one. There are at least three different saints named Valentine.
Tuesday 21 February
- Shrove Tuesday
-
Also called Pancake Day and Mardi Gras. The British name of "Pancake Day" comes from the tradition of making pancakes to use up all the food that could not be eaten during Lent.
Wednesday 22 February
- Ash Wednesday
-
The first day of Lent for Western Christian churches. Lent is the season marking the time Jesus spent in the wilderness.
Monday 27 February
- Clean Monday - Beginning of Lent (Orthodox)
-
The start of the "Great Lent" for Orthodox Christians. This day is called Clean Monday, and occurs seven weeks before the Orthodox Easter
Thursday 1 March
- St David's Day
-
Saint David, or Dewi Sant as he's called in the Welsh language, is the patron saint of Wales.
Monday 5 March
- St Piran's Day
-
Piran is regarded as the patron saint of Cornwall and tin miners. He was born in Ireland. The Cornish flag may have been inspired by the legend that Piran discovered the process for smelting tin: black rock with a white cross of pure metal.
Saturday 17 March
- St Patrick's Day
-
St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Sunday 18 March
- Mothering Sunday
-
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent. Not the same as Mothers' Day in the USA.
Monday 19 March
- St Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Sunday 25 March
- Annunciation
-
Marks the angel Gabriel's message to the Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the incarnation of Christ. It also celebrates the incarnation itself as the date falls 9 months before Christmas.
Sunday 1 April
- Palm Sunday
-
The sixth and last Sunday of Lent. Marks the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem and the start of Holy Week.
Thursday 5 April
- Maundy Thursday
-
Christians remember Maundy Thursday as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist.
Friday 6 April
- Good Friday
-
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter. It commemorates the execution of Jesus by crucifixion.
Sunday 8 April
- Easter Sunday (Western)
-
Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival. Most years Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter on a different date.
Sunday 15 April
- Easter (Orthodox)
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival
Monday 23 April
- St George's Day
-
Saint George is the patron saint of England.
Thursday 17 May
- Ascension Day
-
Ascension Day marks the last earthly appearance of Christ after his resurrection. Christians believe Christ ascended into heaven. It is celebrated 40 days after Easter.
Sunday 20 May
- Ascension Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Ascension Day is normally celebrated 40 days after Easter. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Sunday 27 May
- Pentecost - Whitsun
-
The seventh Sunday after Easter, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples and the birth of the Christian Church.
Sunday 3 June
- Trinity Sunday
-
The first Sunday after Pentecost. Christians meditate on the nature of God as "Three in one".
Thursday 7 June
- Corpus Christi
-
Roman Catholic festival celebrating the "real presence of Christ in the Eucharist".
The festival falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday.
Sunday 10 June
- Corpus Christi (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Corpus Christi falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
- All Saints' Day (Orthodox)
-
This day honours all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Western churches celebrate All Saints Day on November 1.
Friday 29 June
- St Peter's Day
-
Observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. One of the oldest saints' days.
Sunday 15 July
- St Swithin's Day
-
Swithin (or Swithun) was a Saxon bishop in the 9th century. Legend has it that the weather on his feast day, 15 July, will determine the weather for the next 40 days.
Monday 6 August
- Transfiguration
-
Orthodox Christian feast commemorating the sudden emanation of radiance from the person of Jesus that occurred on the mountain.
Wednesday 15 August
- Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
A largely Roman Catholic festival celebrating their belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was taken body and soul into heaven.
- Dormition of the Theotokos
-
An Orthodox festival that commemorates the death, resurrection, and glorification of Christ's mother. Dormition means "falling asleep".
Saturday 8 September
- Nativity of the Theotokos
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary
- Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Roman Catholics celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary.
- Feast of the Birth of Mary
-
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches celebrate the birth of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Saturday 29 September
- Michaelmas/ St Michael's Day
-
A feast day in honour of the archangel Michael. Michael is one of only two angels mentioned by name in the Bible (the other being Gabriel.)
Saturday 13 October
- St Edward's Day
-
Edward the Confessor was King of England 1042 - 1066. He built Westminster Abbey where there is a shrine to him - and where the saint is also celebrated on January 5 each year, the anniversary of his death.
Wednesday 31 October
- Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve)
-
The night before All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day). Its origins date back over 2000 years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. It was celebrated as a Christian festival by the 8th Century.
Thursday 1 November
- All Saints' Day (Hallowmas, All Hallows')
-
All Saints' Day (also known as All Hallows' Day or Hallowmas) is when Anglicans and Roman Catholics honour all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Orthodox churches celebrate it on the first Sunday after Pentecost.
Friday 2 November
- All Souls' Day
-
All Souls' Day is an opportunity for Roman Catholic and Anglo-Catholic churches to commemorate the faithful departed. They remember and pray for the souls of people who are in Purgatory. All Souls' Day is celebrated on 3 November if the 2nd is a Sunday.
Friday 30 November
- St Andrew's Day
-
Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece and Russia. The flag of Scotland is the Cross of St. Andrew. St Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, was originally a fisherman and became the first Apostle.
Sunday 2 December
- Advent Sunday
-
The beginning of the ecclesiastical year on the Sunday closest to November 30. Advent is the season before Christmas - In Western Christendom, four Sundays are included. In Eastern Christendom, the season is longer and begins in the middle of November
Saturday 8 December
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception
-
Celebrated by Roman Catholics who remember Mary's conception as being without sin, therefore, immaculate.
Thursday 13 December
- St Lucy's Day
-
Saint Lucy's Day or the Feast of St. Lucy is marked by Catholics and Orthodox Christians and also celebrated by members of the Lutheran Church.
Monday 24 December
- Christmas Eve
-
The day before Christmas Day
Tuesday 25 December
- Christmas Day
-
The day when Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Wednesday 26 December
- St Stephen's Day
-
St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, is celebrated on this day by Roman Catholics. The day is also called the Feast of Stephen.
Christian calendar for 2013
Tuesday 1 January
- Circumcision
-
Marks the day when Jesus was circumcised.
- Festival of St Basil the Great
-
St Basil is one of the great fathers of the Orthodox Church.
Sunday 6 January
- Epiphany
-
Celebrates the visit of the wise men (the magi) to the infant Jesus.
In the East, where it originated, the Epiphany celebrates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist in the River Jordan. (Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this separately: see Baptism of the Lord)
Also known as Dia de los Reyes (Three Kings Day).
- Christmas Day (Armenian Orthodox)
-
Armenian Christians celebrate Christ's birth at Epiphany, except for Armenians in the Holy Land, who celebrate Christmas on January 19th.
- Theophany
-
Orthodox churches mark the baptism of Jesus on this day.
Monday 7 January
- Christmas Day (Orthodox)
-
Most Orthodox churches use the Julian rather than the Gregorian version of the Western calendar. As a result, they celebrate Christmas 13 days later than other Christian churches.
Sunday 13 January
- St Hilary's Day
-
According to tradition, "St. Hilary's is the coldest day of the year." St. Hilary was a fourth century Bishop of Poitiers.
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
Friday 18 January
- Week of Prayer for Christian Unity (start)
-
First celebrated in 1908. The days of 18-25 January (regardless of the days of the week involved) were originally chosen because they covered the days between the feast of St Peter and the feast of St Paul. Some churches and regions use a different week.
Monday 21 January
- St Agnes
-
Patron saint of girls, martyred at the age of 13.
Friday 25 January
- St Paul's Day
-
Anglicans and Catholics celebrate St Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus.
Monday 28 January
- St Thomas Aquinas
-
Doctor of the Church and patron saint of students and theologians.
Saturday 2 February
- Candlemas
-
This is often called The Presentation of Christ in the Temple and commemorates the day Mary took Jesus to the Temple at Jerusalem to present him to God. Coincides with Groundhog Day (USA)
Monday 11 February
- Our Lady of Lourdes
-
Marks the day in 1858 when St Bernadette had her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Tuesday 12 February
- Shrove Tuesday
-
Also called Pancake Day and Mardi Gras. The British name of "Pancake Day" comes from the tradition of making pancakes to use up all the food that could not be eaten during Lent.
Wednesday 13 February
- Ash Wednesday
-
The first day of Lent for Western Christian churches. Lent is the season marking the time Jesus spent in the wilderness.
Thursday 14 February
- St Valentine's Day
-
Now more a secular festival than a religious one. There are at least three different saints named Valentine.
Friday 1 March
- St David's Day
-
Saint David, or Dewi Sant as he's called in the Welsh language, is the patron saint of Wales.
Tuesday 5 March
- St Piran's Day
-
Piran is regarded as the patron saint of Cornwall and tin miners. He was born in Ireland. The Cornish flag may have been inspired by the legend that Piran discovered the process for smelting tin: black rock with a white cross of pure metal.
Sunday 10 March
- Mothering Sunday
-
Mothering Sunday is the fourth Sunday of Lent. Not the same as Mothers' Day in the USA.
Sunday 17 March
- St Patrick's Day
-
St Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland.
Monday 18 March
- Clean Monday - Beginning of Lent (Orthodox)
-
The start of the "Great Lent" for Orthodox Christians. This day is called Clean Monday, and occurs seven weeks before the Orthodox Easter
Tuesday 19 March
- St Joseph, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Sunday 24 March
- Palm Sunday
-
The sixth and last Sunday of Lent. Marks the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem and the start of Holy Week.
Monday 25 March
- Annunciation
-
Marks the angel Gabriel's message to the Virgin Mary that she would give birth to the incarnation of Christ. It also celebrates the incarnation itself as the date falls 9 months before Christmas.
Thursday 28 March
- Maundy Thursday
-
Christians remember Maundy Thursday as the day of the Last Supper, when Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and established the ceremony known as the Eucharist.
Friday 29 March
- Good Friday
-
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter. It commemorates the execution of Jesus by crucifixion.
Sunday 31 March
- Easter Sunday (Western)
-
Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival. Most years Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter on a different date.
Tuesday 23 April
- St George's Day
-
Saint George is the patron saint of England.
Sunday 5 May
- Easter (Orthodox)
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus Christ - his return from death after the Crucifixion. The most important Christian festival
Thursday 9 May
- Ascension Day
-
Ascension Day marks the last earthly appearance of Christ after his resurrection. Christians believe Christ ascended into heaven. It is celebrated 40 days after Easter.
Sunday 12 May
- Ascension Day (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Ascension Day is normally celebrated 40 days after Easter. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Sunday 19 May
- Pentecost - Whitsun
-
The seventh Sunday after Easter, commemorating the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples and the birth of the Christian Church.
Sunday 26 May
- Trinity Sunday
-
The first Sunday after Pentecost. Christians meditate on the nature of God as "Three in one".
Thursday 30 May
- Corpus Christi
-
Roman Catholic festival celebrating the "real presence of Christ in the Eucharist".
The festival falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday.
Sunday 2 June
- Corpus Christi (Catholic Church in England and Wales)
-
Corpus Christi falls on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. The Catholic Church in England and Wales celebrates it on the following Sunday instead.
Saturday 29 June
- St Peter's Day
-
Observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches. One of the oldest saints' days.
Sunday 30 June
- All Saints' Day (Orthodox)
-
This day honours all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Western churches celebrate All Saints Day on November 1.
Monday 15 July
- St Swithin's Day
-
Swithin (or Swithun) was a Saxon bishop in the 9th century. Legend has it that the weather on his feast day, 15 July, will determine the weather for the next 40 days.
Tuesday 6 August
- Transfiguration
-
Orthodox Christian feast commemorating the sudden emanation of radiance from the person of Jesus that occurred on the mountain.
Thursday 15 August
- Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
A largely Roman Catholic festival celebrating their belief that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was taken body and soul into heaven.
- Dormition of the Theotokos
-
An Orthodox festival that commemorates the death, resurrection, and glorification of Christ's mother. Dormition means "falling asleep".
Sunday 8 September
- Nativity of the Theotokos
-
Orthodox Christians celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary
- Birthday of the Blessed Virgin Mary
-
Roman Catholics celebrate the birth of the Virgin Mary.
- Feast of the Birth of Mary
-
Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches celebrate the birth of Mary, mother of Jesus.
Sunday 29 September
- Michaelmas/ St Michael's Day
-
A feast day in honour of the archangel Michael. Michael is one of only two angels mentioned by name in the Bible (the other being Gabriel.)
Sunday 13 October
- St Edward's Day
-
Edward the Confessor was King of England 1042 - 1066. He built Westminster Abbey where there is a shrine to him - and where the saint is also celebrated on January 5 each year, the anniversary of his death.
Thursday 31 October
- Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve)
-
The night before All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day). Its origins date back over 2000 years to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. It was celebrated as a Christian festival by the 8th Century.
Friday 1 November
- All Saints' Day (Hallowmas, All Hallows')
-
All Saints' Day (also known as All Hallows' Day or Hallowmas) is when Anglicans and Roman Catholics honour all saints, known and unknown, of the Christian church. Orthodox churches celebrate it on the first Sunday after Pentecost.
Saturday 2 November
- All Souls' Day
-
All Souls' Day is an opportunity for Roman Catholic and Anglo-Catholic churches to commemorate the faithful departed. They remember and pray for the souls of people who are in Purgatory. All Souls' Day is celebrated on 3 November if the 2nd is a Sunday.
Saturday 30 November
- St Andrew's Day
-
Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece and Russia. The flag of Scotland is the Cross of St. Andrew. St Andrew, the brother of Simon Peter, was originally a fisherman and became the first Apostle.
Sunday 1 December
- Advent Sunday
-
The beginning of the ecclesiastical year on the Sunday closest to November 30. Advent is the season before Christmas - In Western Christendom, four Sundays are included. In Eastern Christendom, the season is longer and begins in the middle of November
Sunday 8 December
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception
-
Celebrated by Roman Catholics who remember Mary's conception as being without sin, therefore, immaculate.
Friday 13 December
- St Lucy's Day
-
Saint Lucy's Day or the Feast of St. Lucy is marked by Catholics and Orthodox Christians and also celebrated by members of the Lutheran Church.
Tuesday 24 December
- Christmas Eve
-
The day before Christmas Day
Wednesday 25 December
- Christmas Day
-
The day when Western Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
Thursday 26 December
- St Stephen's Day
-
St Stephen, the first Christian martyr, is celebrated on this day by Roman Catholics. The day is also called the Feast of Stephen.
Christian calendar for 2014
Sunday 12 January
- Baptism of the Lord
-
Commemorates the baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Occurs on the first Sunday after Epiphany.
Catholics and Episcopalians celebrate this holy day, but Eastern Christianity celebrates the baptism of Jesus at Epiphany.
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