Ordinary Time is the longest season in the Church’s year. Usually
comprising thirty-three weeks, it is divided into two sections; one short and
the other very long. The weeks between the Christmas and Lenten seasons are the
shorter part of Ordinary Time while the weeks between Trinity Sunday and the
Advent season form the long stretch. The word ‘ordinary’ comes from the word
ordinal which means ‘counted’. Each week is known by a number, e.g. the 20th
Sunday after Trinity. The use of the term Ordinary Time in our liturgical
calendar distinguishes it from the other seasons—Advent, Christmas, Lent and
Easter—which focus on particular aspects of Christ’s life: his birth,
suffering, death and resurrection. Ordinary Time celebrates Jesus’ teaching and
ministry. It gives us time to reflect on how we live as Christians. We have these
weeks to examine and ‘order’ our lives
while we focus on a particular Gospel, in a three-year cycle, and to enter it
deeply.
Year A – The Gospel of Matthew
Year B – The Gospel of Mark
Year C – The Gospel of Luke
GREEN, the colour of Ordinary Time, tells us much about its significance in the Church’s life. It is the rich colour of growth and new life. Ordinary Time deserves to be lived extraordinarily - in the depths of our own hearts, in our families and in the worshipping community. It is important for us to immerse ourselves deeply in the spirituality of Ordinary Time because it contains the essence of who we are in the ‘everyday existence’ of our Christian lives.