![]() Laetare Sunday is the Church’s way of giving us a “shot in the arm” as we approach the darkness and horror of the days through Good Friday and Holy Saturday. While marriages are now only forbidden on Good Friday and Holy Saturday, Laetare Sunday is still a fitting day for those wishing to be married before Eastertide. But on Laetare Sunday (as well as solemnities and feasts within the season), there’s a temporary halt to these penitential observations! I remember well decking out the altar with pink roses on that day when I was once a parish liturgy director.Īt one time, marriages were generally forbidden during Lent, but Laetare Sunday was often associated as a day when marriages could be celebrated during the penitential season. During Lent, the General Instruction of the Roman Missal forbids flowers adorning the altar. The joy of Easter being around the corner is symbolized in a few other interesting liturgical possibilities. Call it pink - or, more fittingly, rose - this change in color indicates a glimpse of the joy that awaits us at Easter, just before we enter into the somber days of Passiontide. On Laetare Sunday (as similarly with the Third Sunday of Advent’s Gaudete Sunday) the Church expresses hope and joy in the midst of our Lenten fasts and penances. Laetare is the first word - meaning “rejoice” - in the Latin text. ![]() Be joyful, all who were in mourning exalt and be satisfied at her consoling breast.” The day’s theme comes from the entrance antiphon reflecting on Isaiah 66:10-11: “Rejoice, Jerusalem, and all who love her. It’s optional, but I’ve always liked it - when the Church’s sacred ministers wear “pink” on Laetare Sunday - Roman Catholicism’s Fourth Sunday of Lent.
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