C
chrisb
Guest
What is the deal with the Old Calendar/Julian Calendar?
Pax, Salve, Shalom!
Pax, Salve, Shalom!
Iām sorry but your subtlety in answering my inquiry escapes me.St Matthew 26: 1-5
āAnd it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings, he said unto His disciples, Ye know that after two days is the feast of the Passover, and the Son of Man is betrayed to be crucified. Then assembled together the chief, and the scribes, and the elders of the people, unto the palace of the high priest who was called Caiaphas. And consulted that they might take Jesus by subtlety, and kill him. But they said, āNot on the feast day, lest there be an uproar among the peopleā.
Iām not followingā¦The calculation of Pascha is a separate issue.
Generally when you are reading the Church Fathers you are probably reading a translation into English and most of those were done by British scholars who would tend to translate the Greek/Latin as āEasterā ā a word that finds its origins in pagan tradition. Pascha was the more ancient term. Augustine uses this term frequently, although in general he references Passover as Pascha (a correct usage). However, he also points out that the word āpaschaā means ātransitionā and he specifically uses it in reference to a passing from the old life to the new.Also, I always hear modern Orthodox and even some Byzantine Catholic call Easter āPaschaā but when I am reading the Early Church Fathers ātheyā seem to always use the label āEasterā⦠Is using the label āPaschaā a means to re-unite our Lordās Death and Resurrection with the Celebration of the Jewish Passover?
**FELTAMADT KRISTUZS!:extrahappy: **Iām not followingā¦
I guess what Iām after is for someone to tie in why the Old Calendar calculates Easter with the Jewish Lunar Calendar? Are they ābothā wrong?
Also, I always hear modern Orthodox and even some Byzantine Catholic call Easter āPaschaā but when I am reading the Early Church Fathers ātheyā seem to always use the label āEasterā⦠Is using the label āPaschaā a means to re-unite our Lordās Death and Resurrection with the Celebration of the Jewish Passover?
Interesting, considering the reasoning for fixing Easter as it was at Nicea.**FELTAMADT KRISTUZS!:extrahappy: **
I think it was the 1st Ecumenical Council that decreed that Easter would be the 1st Sunday following the 1st full moon of Spring, hence the reason for the early celebration in the West this year. The full moon was on March 21, the first day of Spring was March 20.
In the Orthodox church Paska cannot come before the Feast of Passover because the Lordās Supper was a Passover Meal.
PASKA is derived from the Hebrew word PESACH which means PASSOVER and is how Jews refer to the Feast.
In the Matins of the Resurrection, one of the verses goes something like this " Blessed Passover, the Lordās Passover, is the Passover from death to Life"
Hope this helps!
Hope this helpsā¦
mark
With regard to the observance of our Easter Celebrations⦠which is āmoreā important for us as Christians⦠to be accurate to the seasonal accurances from the time of Christ or faithful to calculations of our forefathers?
Yes. It is a topic that could be debated indefinitely, I suppose.With regard to the observance of our Easter Celebrations⦠which is āmoreā important for us as Christians⦠to be accurate to the seasonal accurances from the time of Christ or faithful to calculations of our forefathers?
BTW, I know that this is a contentious topic in the East and if I approach it with a lack of sensitivity please let me ask your pardon now but I donāt desire to stir up any animosity.![]()
Yes, for example, St Elias (outside Toronto) is one Eastern Catholic Church that observes the Julian Calendar - and Pascha/Easter according to the āOrthodoxā reckoning:Yes. It is a topic that could be debated indefinitely, I suppose.
The full moon and the equinox are givens for East and West. But I appreciate the fact that the Orthodox Church waits until the Sunday after the Jewish Passover (I believe there are Eastern Catholic Churches that also observe the Julian calendar or the revised Julian calendar).
Blessings,
Mickey
Thank you for your generosity and kindness in sharing your knowledge on the subject.Yes. It is a topic that could be debated indefinitely, I suppose.
The full moon and the equinox are givens for East and West. But I appreciate the fact that the Orthodox Church waits until the Sunday after the Jewish Passover (I believe there are Eastern Catholic Churches that also observe the Julian calendar or the revised Julian calendar).
Blessings,
Mickey
Yes, there are - just as the Finnish Orthodox and some Estonian Orthodox use the western dating methodology, and have already celebrated Paschaā¦Yes. It is a topic that could be debated indefinitely, I suppose.
The full moon and the equinox are givens for East and West. But I appreciate the fact that the Orthodox Church waits until the Sunday after the Jewish Passover (I believe there are Eastern Catholic Churches that also observe the Julian calendar or the revised Julian calendar).
Blessings,
Mickey
Hi Chris,Thank you Charlie!
As I understand it the Orthodox ādoā use the Julian Calendar to determine Easter and, in fact, they are currently āstillā in Great Lent right now! But my question for you is why does the Julian Calendar rightly align our Easter with the Jewish Passover?![]()