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"… beginning of the Church part of the liturgical year"

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I have not the faintest idea what is meant by the statement, in the lead, that "Trinity Sunday also represents the beginning of the Church part of the liturgical year". I suspect this is some very particular local or denominational concept – certainly not a predominant Western tradition. It is the first Sunday of the second part of Ordinary Time (though not the beginning – the Monday after Pentecost has that honour.) Vilĉjo 23:07, 19 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

For Lutheranism - s. Bach - it's just the opposite: Trinity is the end (!) of the first part of the Liturgical year, the second part being the Sundays after Trinity. It would be nice to reflect that, --Gerda Arendt (talk) 10:40, 15 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]

This is not only a Western tradition

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The Orthodox Churches celebrate Trinity Sunday too, you should update the article to include that.

89.242.145.175 10:34, 3 June 2007 (UTC)It Is Me Here[reply]

OTD

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Per the rules at WP:OTD, this article is going to be omitted from Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/June 19 if the maintenance tags are still up at that time. There are over five weeks to go, so hopefully this will give editors enough lead time to add more references. Thanks. howcheng {chat} 17:07, 5 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

missing from disambiguation page

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If this had been listed on the disambiguation page for "trinity" I would have found it much sooner, instead I had to guess around based on English literature. Not everybody has that background. This is not even listed in the article on the trinity, to which it relates. 71.163.114.49 (talk) 22:38, 11 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Sundays following Trinity

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This line - "The Sundays following Pentecost, until Advent, are numbered from this day" - is not correct for the contemporary Roman Catholic Church. The contemporary RC church numbers Sundays from the Sunday after the Baptism (the end of the Christmas season), starting with "2nd Sunday of OT". I don't know which liturgical churches do what, so I'm not sure how to correct it.--Richardson mcphillips (talk) 13:05, 16 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

All the liturgical churches

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  This article says, under the section "Western Christianity", that Trinity Sunday is commemorated in all the Western liturgical churches, but then names only the Catholic church, Anglicanism, Methodism and Presbyterianism. Would there not be other Christian denominations, such as Lutherans, Baptists or Congregationalists who could be considered "liturgical Churches"?Vorbee (talk) 10:22, 11 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]
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