The announcement of the year’s liturgical calendar is made after the Gospel reading in the Mass of the Epiphany. The Council of Nicaea (AD 325) is said to have formalised the tradition — which was ancient even then — of the Patriarch of Alexandria’s mission to send the date of the Paschal solemnity to other Eastern Patriarchs and to the Roman Pontiff, who was then to inform the metropolitans of the West. The customary proclamation is called the Noveritis after the first word in Latin, and it’s sung to the same tone as the Exsultet in the Easter Vigil, giving a taste of the Easter joy to this publication of the date of Easter.
Know, dear brothers and sisters, that, as we have rejoiced at the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, so by leave of God’s mercy we announce to you also the joy of his Resurrection, who is our Saviour.
On the thirteenth day of February will fall the Sunday of Septuagesima.
On the second day of March will fall Ash Wednesday and the beginning of the fast of the most sacred Lenten season.
On the seventeenth day of April you will celebrate with joy Easter Day, the Paschal feast of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
On the twenty-sixth day of May will be the Ascension of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
On the fifth day of June, the feast of Pentecost.
On the nineteenth day of June, the feast of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ.
On the twenty-seventh day of November, the First Sunday of Advent of Our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen.
I had noticed before the feast of the Epiphany, that the Ascension of Our Lord is celebrated on Thursday 26th May this year and not a Sunday as in previous years.
Saturday 8 January 2022 @ 1:24 pm
The day was changed a surprisingly long time ago — the Bishops moved it back to its proper Thursday with effect from Advent Sunday 2017, along with the Epiphany (which didn’t actually change to its proper day until 2021 because it fell over the weekend in 2018-2020) http://liturgyoffice.org/News/holydays/.
A rather unusual difference this year is that the Nativity of S John the Baptist (June 24) is brought forward to June 23 because it coincides with the Sacred Heart: http://liturgyoffice.org/News/liturgical-calendar-2021-2022/ That’s not included in the text of the announcement though, as it’s not usually moveable.
Saturday 8 January 2022 @ 2:04 pm