Sunday, March 23, 2008

Why Does the Date for Easter Change Each Year?

At church this morning someone asked me why the date for Easter changes each year. After fumbling around for an answer I decided I better look it up so I would know for sure. I knew it had something to do with the moon.The following is one of a few responseS I found on the net. Don't forget CHRIST IS RISEN! - CHRIST IS RISEN INDEED!!

Believe it or not, Easter was not celebrated by the church until the 2nd Century. It was nearly always followed by 50 days focusing on the resurrection. There were two ways the date of Easter was celebrated. In Asia Minor, Christians celebrated Easter on the Jewish Passover, (14th of Nisan in the Jewish calendar) no matter what day of the week. Others used the Sunday after Passover. In 325 A.D., the church declared that Easter was to “be on the Sunday that followed the first full moon after the spring equinox.” That means Easter can be as early as March 22nd and as late as April 25th.

The date for Easter for the Orthodox churches, which still use the Julian calendar, still differs from Western churches, which use the Gregorian calendar. As a result, the Easter date is usually one to four weeks later than in the West.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thanks Mike for "trying" to explain why the Easter date changes every year. I don't understand because if it was a specific date, then "that's the date". What's the problem? We don't know the exact date of Christ's birth, but everyone settled on Dec. 25. Anyway, I need to check my calendar every year to make the adjustments. At lease I don't have any kids in school to content with. Ha