This
feast is celebrated today not only throughout Spain but almost
everywhere in the Catholic world. It owes its origin to the bishops of
the 10th Council of Toledo, in 656.
The prelates of the
Council objected to the ancient custom of celebrating the feast of the
Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin on March 25th, because this joyful
solemnity conflicted with the somber time of the Passion... so they
decreed that henceforth, 8 days before Christmas, a feast with octave in
memory of the Annunciation, and as a preparation for the great
solemnity of the Nativity, would be celebrated in Spain.
After some time, the
Church of Spain felt the need to return to the practice of the Roman
and universal Church where March 25th is a solemnity, a day forever
dedicated to the Annunciation the Blessed Virgin and the Incarnation of
the Son of God; but since it had been the custom in Spain for centuries
to celebrate that feast on December 18th, they decided to retain a
remnant of it. A new feast was thus created under the title of the
Expectation of the Blessed Virgin’s Delivery.
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