Monday, August 26, 2013

September 1: Happy New Year!!!!!



Today is a day for a new beginning!  It marks the beginning of our Liturgical year.  Why is it, you may ask, that we begin our church calendar on a different day than we begin our civil New Year? 

History tells us that before our calendar began with the month of January, the world celebrated its New Year on the same day as the Eastern Church!  It was the Roman emperor Julius Caesar who introduced a new method of marking the seasons in 45 B.C. that made January 1 the beginning of the calendar year.   Now, this didn’t mean that the world agreed with him!  Most cultures, in all parts of the world continued to mark the beginning of their yearly cycle with the abundant harvest season.  It simply made sense to the agrarian people of that time to begin the year on September 1.  The Catholic Church held the council of Tours in 567 A.D., and it was at this council that the September New Year date was set, and the Church declared that what tradition already held.  Traditionally, September 1 marked many beginnings in the history of the church.  It was the date that Christ entered the synagogue to begin His public ministry as we see in Luke 4:16-22, the Gospel reading of the day.  Tradition also held that Moses led the Hebrew people into the Promised Land in the month of September, marking the beginning of their new life as God’s chosen people.  The Byzantine Empire also traditionally began their calendar on September 1. To have the liturgical New Year begin on that date as well just made sense.  
In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII realized that the Julian calendar was slightly imperfect and had, as a result, drifted about 10 whole days from its course!  Pope Gregory devised a new, more chronologically correct calendar, called the Gregorian calendar, which proved to be more precise. Still, because he was a Roman and followed the thinking of Julius Caesar, Pope Gregory's new calendar named January first as its beginning date.  This is why the western Catholic Church marks the start of its New Year with the advent season.

It is interesting to note that many western Catholic cultures continued to hold this September New Years date on their civil calendars until well into the 18th century.  Scotland, for example changed its new years day to January 1 in 1600, and England as relatively recently as 1752! 
 
O Lord, Creator of all things,
who by Your authority
have established times and seasons,
bless the beginning of our Church year with
Your goodness; preserve Your people in peace,
and through the intercessions
of the Theotokos, save us. Amen.

                                 Dismissal Hymn, September 1st
 
"Christ our Lord, You who provide the rains
and fruitful seasons, and hear the prayers of those who humbly seek 
accept also our requests about our needs
and concerns and deliver us
from worry, danger and sin.
Your mercies are as abundant as Your works.
Bless all our activities, direct our steps by
Your Holy Spirit, and forgive' our shortcomings.
Lord, bless the year with Your goodness
and make it a year of grace
for all of us. Amen."
                                     Matin Hymn, September 1st

Saturday night is the night to decorate the house with streamers and balloons!  Find the noisemakers and sparkling cider!  Have a special New Year's Eve dinner party and toast the events of the past year, while anticipating the upcoming new one!

It is customary to begin the New Year by composing a list of New Year’s resolutions.  These are things we pledge to ourselves to improve upon during the coming year.  Perhaps this would be a good time to resolve to make some spiritual changes!  Perhaps we could resolve to pray the Jesus Prayer more often throughout the day, to fast from treats once a week for Christ, or to go to confession more often.  Let’s discuss this with our family and make a list of the ways we can improve our spiritual lives during the coming year. 

My own resolution for the upcoming liturgical year is to keep current!  I'll be posting ideas for celebrating the feasts and observing the fasts, and since the new school year starts now too, there will be lesson plans and helpful hand-outs too.  
Happy New Year!!!!!!

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