Adventures in Haymarsh

Month: February 2025 (Page 1 of 2)

Colors

What do the different liturgical colors mean?

Have you ever wondered why priests wear certain colors for each liturgical season? Find out here.We associate different colors with different holidays. For instance, Christmas colors are red and green, while Halloween colors are black and orange. Likewise, the Church uses colors to symbolize particular liturgical seasons. The four main colors are green, violet, red, and white, but priests also wear rose on the Third Sunday of Advent and the Fourth Sunday of Lent and black for funeral Masses. We are now in Ordinary Time, so priests are wearing green. Priests wear green for much of the year; this color represents hope and perseverance, which we ought to practice all year round. Clergy wear purple during Advent and Lent. This color symbolizes the virtues we practice during these two important seasons: penance, waiting, and mourning.4-4-Lenten-Purple-Cloth3-300x300During the Christmas and Easter Seasons, priests wear white, the color for joy and purity. White also represents the Resurrection. This color’s symbolism is also why brides wear white on their wedding day: to represent their purity and joy. Red is worn on Palm Sunday, Good Friday, and Pentecost. Red is the color for Christ’s Passion and for martyrdom. On Pentecost Sunday, the Apostles went out into the world to proclaim the Good News, and most of them were martyred for their faith, which is one of the reasons why clergy wear red that day. Red also symbolizes the fire of the Holy Spirit for Pentecost and the Sacrament of Confirmation. On the Third Sunday of Advent and on the Fourth Sunday of Lent, priests wear a shade of pink called rose, representing joy and hope, as we anticipate the approach of Christmas and Easter. For funerals, the priest often wears black to represent death and mourning—and to remind the congregation to pray for the soul of the person who has died. Each liturgical color has significant meaning and helps us set our minds on the season we are currently in. During this Ordinary Time, we should follow the theme of this season and listen for the messages of hope and perseverance in the daily readings.

Source: Good Catholic

Success

It’s awesome to see a young horsewoman succeed in her goals. Grandpa helped her start her team and now she just keeps amazing us!

Video by Kourtnee.
Our 6 year old is coming along.🎵🎶🎵

-41 throws curve balls

Different bus, different bus driver and two hours late today, Grandpa’s gauge had -41, poor livestock! We got everything bedded yesterday. Stay warm and keep your chin up, summer is supposed to come Sunday, nearly 50 above!

Indoor baseball practice.
Quote of the Day
“You will not see anyone who is truly striving after his spiritual advancement who is not given to spiritual reading.”— St. Athanasius of Alexandria

https://kissthegroundmovie.com/#watchonnetflix

Worth Watching

https://www.angel.com/watch/the-lunatic-farmer/episode/bb53c1d5-67f7-4d21-968f-1838888334a4

Quote of the Day”If I am distracted, Holy Communion helps me to become recollected. If opportunities are offered by each day to offend my God, I arm myself anew each day for the combat by the reception of the Eucharist. If I am in special need of light and prudence in order to discharge my burdensome duties, I draw nigh to my Savior and seek counsel and light from him.”— St. Thomas More

Pep Band🎺

From the Catholic Company::::

Who was the real St. Valentine? Remember, today isn’t Valentine’s Day—it’s Saint Valentine’s Day.You have to wonder whether St. Valentine and St. Patrick commiserate in Heaven about their feast days being somewhat obscured by their popular celebrations. Treating your sweetheart to a nice dinner or a box of chocolates on this day is certainly a nice thing to do. However, as a part of your celebrations, be sure to call to mind Saint Valentine, whose real story is usually forgotten on his feast day. We actually don’t know a lot for sure about this saint. He was either a Roman priest or a bishop in central Italy who was martyred in the 3rd century. His remains are buried along the Via Flaminia in Rome.The connection between him and romantic love is also a bit uncertain. One legend says that he secretly married Christian couples, a grave offense according to the persecuting government. Some versions say that this favor was done particularly for Roman soldiers, who were not allowed to marry since—the government thought—this would make them unwilling to risk their lives in war. The customs we associate with St. Valentine’s Day are traceable to the Middle Ages. Based on the tradition that birds began to pair on St. Valentine’s Day, lovers exchanged letters and tokens of affection on this day. We see references to these customs in literature from 14th- and 15th-century France and England. Whatever the veracity of the legends surrounding the life of St. Valentine, we know that this holy priest existed, and that he died for his faith during a time of bitter persecution. His very status as a martyr makes him an apt patron for love: he and his fellow-martyrs illustrate to us, through their sufferings, the depth of their love for Christ, Who is Love Himself. As you enjoy your day with your sweetheart, remember the love of St. Valentine, which gave him the courage to suffer everything for the sake of his Beloved—and made him a saint. Not all of us are called to prove our love by physical martyrdom, but we can live out the vocation to love by sacrificing ourselves in smaller, though still powerful, ways—that is what love is about! 
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