The Tools — Liturgical Helpers
Liturgical Helpers
Tools for walking the Christian year, season by season.
The Christian year is the church's older clock — Advent's waiting, Christmas's joy, the fasting of Lent, the silence of Holy Saturday, the fifty days of Easter, the long green of Ordinary Time. A clock the church has kept for nearly its whole life, before there were smartphones, before there were content schedules, before any of this.
Liturgical helpers are tools to keep that clock at home.
What is coming
- An Advent calendar — twenty-four daily readings walking the prophecies of Christ, designed to be printed and pinned to a wall.
- A Lenten reading plan — forty days through one of the Gospels, with a question for each day and a quiet practice for each week.
- A Holy Week table-read — a day-by-day reading guide for families, from Palm Sunday through Holy Saturday.
- An Eastertide gospel walk — fifty days through the resurrection appearances, Acts 1–2, and the formation of the early church.
The liturgical visualization
If you want to see the whole year at once — the seasons, the major feasts, the Scripture each one anchors to, and what CrossAIHub plans to publish in each one — start here:
Across the historic traditions
The calendar we follow respects what is shared across the historic Christian traditions — Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Holy Week, Easter, Pentecost, Ordinary Time, and the universal feast days of Christ and the apostles. Where the Western and Eastern calendars diverge (as they do this year on the date of Easter), we will name both dates and the reasons gently, without picking a side.