Easter is a spring festival that celebrates the central event of the Christian faith: the resurrection of Christ three days after his death by crucifixion. {1} Easter is the oldest Christian holiday and the most important day of the church year. All the Christian movable feasts and the entire liturgical year of worship are arranged around Easter.
Easter Sunday is preceded by the season of Lent, a 40-day period of fasting and repentence culminating in Holy Week, and followed by a 50-day Easter Season that stretches from Easter to Pentecost.
Name of Easter
The origins of the word "Easter" are not certain, but probably derive from Estre, an Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring{2}. The German word Ostern has the same derivation, but most other languages follow the Greek term used by the early Christians: pascha, from the Hebrew pesach (Passover).
In Latin, Easter is Festa Paschalia (plural because it is a seven-day feast), which became the basis for the FrenchPâques, the Italian Pasqua, and the Spanish Pascua. Also related are the Scottish Pask, the Dutch Paschen, the Danish Paaske, and the Swedish Pask. {3}
Date of Easter
The method for determining the date of Easter is complex and has been a matter of controversy (see History of Easter, below). Put as simply as possible, the Western churches (Catholic and Protestant) celebrate Easter on the first Sunday following the first full moon after the spring equinox.
But it is actually a bit more complicated than this. The spring equinox is fixed for this purpose as March 21 (in 2004, it actually falls on March 20) and the "full moon" is actually the paschal moon, which is based on 84-year "paschal cycles" established in the sixth century, and rarely corresponds to the astronomical full moon. These complex calculations yield an Easter date of anywhere between March 22 and April 25.
The Eastern churches (Greek, Russian, and other forms of Orthodoxy) use the same calculation, but based on the Julian calendar (on which March 21 is April 3) and a 19-year paschal cycle.
Thus the Orthodox Easter sometimes falls on the same day as the western Easter (it does in 2010 and 2011), but the two celebrations can occur as much as five weeks apart.
In the 20th century, discussions began as to a possible worldwide agreement on a consistent date for the celebration of the central event of Christianity. No resolution has yet been reached. {4}
Recent and upcoming dates {5} for Passover (Judaism), Easter (Western Christianity), and Pascha (Eastern Orthodox Christianity) are:
| Easter | Pascha | |
2008 | April 20 | March 23 | April 27 |
2009 | April 9 | April 12 | April 19 |
2010 | March 30 | April 4 | April 4 |
2011 | April 19 | April 24 | April 24 |
History of Easter and the Easter Controversy
There is evidence that Christians originally celebrated the resurrection of Christ every Sunday, with observances such as Scripture readings, psalms, the Eucharist, and a prohibition against kneeling in prayer. {6} At some point in the first two centuries, however, it became customary to celebrate the resurrection specially on one day each year. Many of the religious observances of this celebration were taken from the Jewish Passover.
The specific day on which the resurrection should be celebrated became a major point of contention within the church. First, should it be on Jewish Passover no matter on what day that falls, or should it always fall on a Sunday? It seems Christians in Asia took the former position, while those everywhere else insisted on the latter. The eminent church fathers Irenaeus and Polycarp were among the Asiatic Christians, and they claimed the authority of St. John the Apostle for their position. Nevertheless, the church majority officially decided that Easter should always be celebrated on a Sunday. Eusebius of Caesarea, our only source on this topic, reports the affair as follows:
A question of no small importance arose at that time [c. 190 AD]. The dioceses of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held that the fourteenth day of the moon, on which day the Jews were commanded to sacrifice the lamb, should always be observed as the feast of the life-giving pasch, contending that the fast ought to end on that day, whatever day of the week it might happen to be. However it was not the custom of the churches in the rest of the world to end it at this point, as they observed the practice, which from Apostolic tradition has prevailed to the present time, of terminating the fast on no other day than on that of the Resurrection of our Saviour. Synods and assemblies of bishops were held on this account, and all with one consent through mutual correspondence drew up an ecclesiastical decree that the mystery of the Resurrection of the Lord should be celebrated on no other day but the Sunday and that we should observe the close of the paschal fast on that day only. {7}
With this issue resolved, the next problem was to determine which Sunday to celebrate the resurrection. The Christians in Syria and Mesopotamia held their festival on the Sunday after the Jewish Passover (which itself varied a great deal), but those in Alexandria and other regions held it on the first Sunday after the spring equinox, without regard to the Passover.
This second issue was decided at the Council of Nicea in 325, which decreed that Easter should be celebrated by all on the same Sunday, which Sunday shall be the first following the paschal moon (and the paschal moon must not precede the spring equinox), and that a particular church should determine the date of Easter and communicate it throughout the empire (probably Alexandria, with their skill in astronomical calculations).
The policy was adopted throughout the empire, but Rome adopted an 84-year lunar cycle for determining the date, whereas Alexandria used a 19-year cycle. {8} Use of these different "paschal cycles" persists to this day and contributes to the disparity between the eastern and western dates of Easter.
Religious Observances on Easter
Common elements found in most Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Protestant religious Easter celebrations include baptisms, the Eucharist, feasting, and greetings of "Christ is risen!" and "He is risen indeed!"
In Roman Catholicism, and some Lutheran and Anglican churches, Easter is celebrated with a vigil that consists of "the blessing of the new fire (a practice introduced during the early Middle Ages); the lighting of the paschal candle; a service of lessons, called the prophecies; followed by the blessing of the font and baptisms and then the mass of Easter." {9} The traditional customs of the Catholic church are described in detail in the onlineCatholic Encyclopedia {10}.
In Orthodox churches, the vigil service is preceded by a procession outside the church. When the procession leaves the church, there are no lights on. The procession conducts a symbolic fruitless search for Christ's body, then joyfully announces, "Christ is risen!" When the procession returns to the church, hundreds of candles and lamps are lit to symbolize the splendor of Christ's resurrection, and the Easter Eucharist is taken. {11}
Protestant observances also include baptism and the Eucharist (or Lord's Supper), and often a sunrise service (to commemorate Mary Magdalene's arrival at the empty tomb "early, while it was still dark") and special hymns and songs.
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Popular Easter Customs
Over the centuries, these religious observances have been supplemented by popular customs, many of were incorporated from springtime fertility celebrations of European and Middle Eastern pagan religion. Rabbits and eggs, for example, are widely-used pagan symbols for fertility. Christians view the Easter eggs as symbols of joy and celebration (as they were forbidden during the fast of Lent) and of new life and resurrection. A common custom is to hide brightly colored eggs for children to find.
Further Resources on Easter
General
- Easter - Catholic Encyclopedia
- Easter Controversy - Catholic Encyclopedia
- Easter - Encyclopaedia Britannica (subscription)
- The Origins of Pascha and Great Week - Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
- Farrell Brown, "Why Does Easter's Date Wander?" Christian History and Biography Newsletter, April 9, 2004.
- Oberammergau Passion Play - an example of a popular Easter activity: a Passion Play recreating the last week of Jesus
Catholic
- Liturgy of the Hours: Lenten and Easter Season
- Mysterium Paschale
- Lent and Easter in the Domestic Church: Activities to Celebrate Catholic Liturgy
- Book of Catholic Customs and Traditions: Enhancing Holidays, Special Occassions & Family Celebrations
"Explores a wealth of customs and traditions celebrated by Catholic families all over the world. The authors have compiled a collection of customs and traditions for every liturgical season - Advent, Christmas, Lent, Easter, and Ordinary Time, as well as an assortment of tips and ideas for making holidays and feast days especially meaningful for your family." - Easter Day Mass, Compact Disc
by Gloria Dei Cantores
Orthodox
- Great Week and Pascha in the Greek Orthodox Church
by Archbishop Alkiviadis C. Calivas - The Origins of Pascha and Great Week - Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America (Official Site)
- Crosses, icons, and other Orthodox religious items are available at ReligiousMall.com, which gives a large percentage of their profits to charity.
Protestant
- The Book of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments and Other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church
Episcopal Liturgy - Leading to Easter: Sermons and Worship Resources
by Stan Purdum, Kirk W. Bruce, and Douglas E. Meyer - Resurrection Promises: Sermons, Worship Resources and Group Discussion Questions for the Easter Season
by Leonard H. Budd, Roger G. Talbott - The Case for Easter
by Lee Stroebel
"Welcoming handshakes and warm greetings are nice, but this Easter give the seekers and once-a-year attendees in your church the life-changing answers to their questions about Christ's resurrection!" -Christianbook.com
References
2. The Venerable Bede, On the Reckoning of Time 1.5 (725 AD).
3. "Easter." Catholic Encyclopedia.
4. "Dating Pascha in the Orthodox Church," Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America; "Easter." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004.
5. Greek Orthodox Calendar; Judaism 101.
6. Justin Martyr, ANF 1.186, c. 160; Tertullian, ANF 3.31, c. 197; Apostolic Constitutions, ANF 7.449, compiled c. 390.
7. Eccelesiastical History of England 5.23, quoted in "Easter Controversy," Catholic Encyclopedia.
8. "Easter." Catholic Encyclopedia.
9. "Easter." Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions.
10. "Easter." Catholic Encyclopedia.
11. "Easter." Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions.
12. "Dates of Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday" and "The Dates of Passover." U.S. Naval Observatory Astronomical Applications Department
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