Tis_Bearself
Patron
So yesterday (Aug 6) was the Feast of the Transfiguration and it raised a few questions in my mind:
- Given that the Church celebrates Transfiguration Sunday on second Sunday of Lent as preparation for Christ’s Passion and Resurrection, why do we keep this other feast of the Transfiguration in August as well? What is the point of having two of them? It seems reasonable to celebrate Transfiguration during Lent because the event itself was to prepare three of the Apostles for Christ’s upcoming passion, death and resurrection. It seems rather out of place in August, not to mention repetitive.
- I understand the Anglicans and Lutherans celebrate Transfiguration Sunday on the “last Sunday of Epiphany” which means the last Sunday before Lent begins. I’ve read some explanation for this online saying that in a “lectionary-based church” like Anglicans and Lutherans, that just happens to be where the Transfiguration reading falls. Which makes no sense because Catholics also use a Lectionary and have the Transfiguration on a different Sunday, actually in Lent. Plus it’s my understanding that Anglican and Lutheran lectionaries were based on the Roman Catholic lectionary. So why do the Anglicans and Lutherans have the Transfiguration Sunday prior to Lent while Catholics have it within Lent?
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