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Trinity Church
North Patrick St

Dublin, TX 76446
Office 254.445.4833
Vicarage 325.356.2198
Cell 254.842.1228
 
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©2005-08 Trinity Church
Established 1890
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Trinity Sunday

 

The first Sunday after Pentecost, instituted to honor the Most Holy Trinity.  In the early Church no special Office or day was assigned for the Holy Trinity.  When the Arian heresy was spreading the Fathers prepared an Office with canticles, responses, a Preface, and hymns, to be recited on Sundays.  In the Sacramentary of St. Gregory the Great there are prayers and the Preface of the Trinity.  The Micrologies, written during the pontificate of Gregory VII, call the Sunday after Pentecost a Dominica vacans, with no special Office, but add that in some places they recited the Office of the Holy Trinity composed by Bishop Stephen or Liège By other the Office was said on the Sunday before Advent.  Alexander II, not III, refused a petition for a special feast on the plea, that such a feast was not customary in the Roman Church which daily honored the Holy Trinity by the Gloria, Patri, etc., but he did not forbid the celebration where it already existed. John XXII (1316-1334) ordered the feast for the entire Church on the first Sunday after Pentecost. A new Office had been made by the Franciscan John Peckham, Canon of Lyons, later Archbishop of Canterbury (d. 1292). The feast ranked as a double of the second class but was raised to the dignity of a primary of the first class, 24 July 1911, by Pius X (Acta Ap. Sedis, III, 351). The Greeks have no special feast. Since it was after the first great Pentecost that the doctrine of the Trinity was proclaimed to the world, the feast becomingly follows that of Pentecost.