Passion Sunday

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Choir-pew with altar in background. The altar cross is enshrouded in red for Passion Week.
Choir-pew with altar in background. The altar cross is enshrouded in red for Passion Week.
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Passion Sunday is a term sometimes used to denote the fifth Sunday of Lent in the Western Christian liturgical calendar. In the Roman Catholic Church, since 1970, when the new church calendar initiated by the Second Vatican Council went into effect, the term has been applied to the following Sunday, until then officially called Palm Sunday. The new meaning does not appear to have caught on with most laypersons within either polity, however, the majority of whom continue to use "Palm Sunday" to refer to the Sunday before Easter. In Traditional Catholic and Prayer Book Anglican circles, "Passion Sunday" continues to refer to the fifth Sunday in Lent; Passion Sunday is sometimes called "First Sunday of Passion Time" (Passiontide), with the Second Sunday being Palm Sunday.

Under the traditional calendar, Passion Sunday is also known as Judica Sunday, after that day's Introit: "Judica me, Deus" ("Judge me, O Lord") from Psalm 42 (43). This alternate name originates from the fact that after Passion Sunday, the Judica Psalm was not said again until Easter.

Passion Sunday was called Black Sunday in Germany, because of the old practice of veiling the crucifixes and statues in the church on that day. (However, purple veils came to be used for such covers in the pre-Novus Ordo Missae rite.)

When the term Passion Sunday is applied to the fifth Sunday of Lent, it marks the start of a two-week sub-season often referred to as Passiontide (and the formal name for it in the Roman Catholic calendar was actually the First Sunday of the Passion, in Latin Tempus Passionis). In those Anglican churches which chose to follow the Sarum Rite, crimson vestments and hangings are pressed into service on this day - replacing the Lenten array (unbleached muslin cloth) - and vestments remained crimson through Holy Saturday. Since Passion Sunday has no longer widely been used to mean the fifth Sunday of Lent, crimson has more often been worn during the last week before Easter only. The entire week beginning with the fifth Sunday of Lent was often called Passion Week prior to the calendar reform, which officially transferred that term to the following week; yet, as in the case of Palm Sunday, most Roman Catholic and Protestant laity alike continue to refer to the last week before Easter by its original name: Holy Week; indeed, this is the term employed in the Sacramentary and Lectionary of the Catholic Church.

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.

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