Septuagesima
by VP
Posted on Saturday February 15, 2025 at 11:00PM in Tradition
"Septuagesima Time lasts three weeks. The first week is called Septuagesima Week, the second Sexagesima Week, and the third Quinquagesima Week ; names taken from the Sundays beginning each week. 
(...)
The
 number seven is found in numberless places in the Bible, and here the 
holy Church invites us to stop and ponder on this number, and on these 
seasons of the year. Let us go back to the olden times of the fathers of
 the Church. St. Augustine says "there are two seasons, one the time of 
our trials and of our temptation during this life, the other the time of
 our happiness and of our glories in the other life. We celebrate these 
times, the first before Easter, the second after Easter. The season 
before Easter represents the trials of the present life, the season 
after Easter signifies the happiness we will have in heaven. Such is the
 reason we pass the first of these seasons in fasting and in prayer, 
while the second season is consecrated to canticles of joy, and then 
fasting is not allowed." 
The Church, the guardian and the 
interpreter of the Holy Bible, tells us that there are two places 
relating to the two seasons spoken of by St. Augustine. They are Babylon
 and Jerusalem. Babylon is the symbol of this world of sin and of 
temptation, in the midst of which the Christian must pass his time of 
trial ; Jerusalem is the heavenly country where the good Christian rests
 after his trials and his labors of this life. Of these two cities, the 
one worldly, the other heavenly, St. Augustine writes in his immortal 
work, " The City of God." The people of Israel, whose history in the 
Bible is but a grand figure of the history of the human race, were 
exiled from Jerusalem and were held as captives in Babylon. Their 
captivity in Babylon lasted for sixty-six years, and according to the 
great writers on the Liturgy of the Church, the seventy days of fasting 
and of prayer, from Septuagesima Sunday to Easter, recall the captivity of the Jews in Babylon. 
Seven
 is a mystic number.  In six days, God made the world and he rested on 
the seventh day. The most ancient traditions of Christianity tell us 
(...) that the race of man upon the earth is divided into seven great 
epochs. The first dated from the creation of Adam to the Flood, the 
second from Noah to the calling of Abraham, the third from Abraham to 
Moses, the fourth from Moses to David, the fifth from David to the 
captivity in Babylon, the sixth from the captivity to the coming of the 
Savior, and the seventh from the time of our Lord to the end of the 
world. Thus the age of man on the earth is measured by these great 
epochs. During these different times the Lord prepared the race to 
receive their Redeemer, and to come into the Church He established for 
their salvation. In the first epoch, from Adam to Abraham, all justice, 
all goodness, all godliness, which look down from heaven and was planted
 in the heart of man, was driven out by sin. In the second, from Abraham
 to Moses, God called the people of Israel and made of them his chosen 
race, to receive the prophecies relating to His Son. In the third, from 
Moses to David, God commanded the tabernacle to be made, the Rites and 
Services of the Jewish law to be carried out, to prefigure the Services 
of our Church. In the fourth, from David to the Captivity in Babylon, 
the nation of the Jews were ruled by kings, the temple of Solomon stood 
grand and gorgeous, and the world saw the greatest glories of the people
 of God. In the sixth, from the captivity to the days of our Lord, the 
Jewish people were the prey of conquering nations; the Maccabees alone 
could restore in part their departed splendors. In the seventh, from 
Christ to the end of the world, the Church, founded and established by 
our Lord, shines out before the nations called to the faith. Its glories
 are far greater than those of the tabernacle of Moses. The cathedrals 
of Christendom exceed in splendor Solomon's temple. The ceremonies in 
our sanctuaries are more sublime than the most gifted imagination of the
 Jewish priests could fancy. (...)
Thus the number seven is 
deeply planted in the works of the Creator of the universe. Thus for 
seven weeks we bow our heads in prayer and fasting before the coming of 
the glorious day of Easter, and in joy and praise we raise our heads for
 seven weeks during the glorious Paschal time following Easter. The 
seven weeks of sadness for our sins before the passion of our Lord, are 
followed by the seven weeks of happiness following His resurrection. 
Thus after having fasted and prayed like the Savior in the desert, we 
rejoice with Him as we rise from the sackcloth and ashes of Lent. We 
rise with our souls filled with the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit 
imprinted in our souls. This is what the mystic writers on the 
ceremonies of the Church tell us. They say that the seven weeks before 
Easter, and the seven weeks following Easter, are according to the 
mystic number seven, revealed to man from heaven. 
The seven weeks from Septuagesima
 to Easter yearly come and go, while the years of our lives, like the 
waters of the rivers, flow onward to be lost in the vastness of the 
ocean ; thus our years pass rapidly on toward the boundless ocean of 
eternity. The Church, our mother, tells us each year to stop and to 
think of the Babylon of this world in which we live as strangers, exiled
 from our home. She tells us to hang our harps on the willows growing on
 the banks of the Euphrates, like the Jews of old held captives in 
Babylon, and to prepare for our call to our heavenly Jerusalem above, 
which is our home beyond the skies, and whose glories we celebrate 
during the joyful time which follows Easter. She wishes us to sing the 
canticles of joy in her services, and that while we live here, far from 
our home in heaven, yet to keep our thoughts on God while in this world,
 lest attached to earthly things we may be exiled for ever from 
everlasting bliss with him, for our unfaithfulness while here below, 
yet,"How shall we sing the song of the Lord in a strange land?"  
Following thus the inspired Book, the songs and hymns of gladness are 
hushed in the Church Services during this time of penance, signifying 
our exile here below. At other times of the year the heavenly Alleluias 
are often repeated, now they are heard no more, for exiles in the 
Babylon of this world of sin, we are traveling onward toward the 
Jerusalem which is above, for "we are travelers far from the Lord."  
(...)
The
 joyful forty days of the Christmas season have passed. With happiness 
have we celebrated the birth of God on earth. Now the Church enters the 
sad and solemn time when we prepare for the mysteries of the suffering 
and the dying Savior. All around us in the Church are the sombre signs 
of penance. We are entering in amid the three weeks of our baptism of 
penance, that we may well and worthily celebrate the Lord's baptism of 
blood in his sufferings for us on Calvary's cross. We are leaving 
Bethlehem and going to Calvary. We are leaving the infant God in his 
mother's arms, and following his steps to see him fasting in the desert.
 We are leaving him in the manger, and looking for him in Gethsemane. 
The Illuminating Life of the Christmas time has passed, and the 
Preparing Life of the Septuagesima time 
has come. We have seen him in his sweetness as a child; we are going to 
see him in his weakness as a man, fasting in the desert. But we must 
pray God for his light, in order to see his Son as each year the Church 
shows him to us. We must ask for grace to look first into ourselves, and
 see the sins which dim the brightness of our souls and keep us from 
seeing the truths of religion. We must ask the light of God to clearly 
understand how the human race had fallen when our parents sinned by 
eating in the garden, and to realize the deep wickedness of our sins and
 the deeper mercy of God in becoming man to save us from being lost 
forever. 
The Septuagesima 
Season, then, is the time of the year for the deepest thought. In the 
words of a great writer of the eleventh century, the Apostle says, " We 
know that every creature groaneth and travaileth in pain, even till now ;
 and not only it, but ourselves, also, who have the first fruits of the 
spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the 
adoption of the sons of God, the redemption' of our body. ' That 
creature which groans is the soul looking at the corruption of sin which
 weeps to be still subject to the vanities of this world in this exile 
of tears. It is the cry of the Royal Prophet, " Woe is me that my 
sojourning is prolonged." Thus holy David desired the end of his exile 
in this vale of tears. The Apostle who was wrapped up to the third 
heaven says, "I am straightened between two, having a desire to be 
dissolved and to be with Christ."St. Paul wishes to be taken from this 
world of sorrow and to be with Christ. 
Such are the thoughts which the Church brings before her children during this holy time of Septuagesima, that all may be prepared to celebrate well and worthily the holy Season of Lent. "
Source: The Festal Year, Or, The Origin, History, Ceremonies And Meaning Of The Sundays, Seasons, Feasts And Festivals Of The Church During The Year, Explained For The People by Fr. James L. Meagher 1883
 
					