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I know that Easter is on a Sunday every year, but how do they determine what day it is? It falls on different moths each year. I am asking because I was born on Easter Sunday and I recently found out that my birthday does not fall on that day again until 2062.

2007-01-01 17:52:34 · 5 answers · asked by ♥JoJo♥ 2 in Society & Culture Holidays Easter

I'm not stupid and I know to look at a calendar....what I am trying to say is why does it not in the same month each year and a certain day....like Independence day is always July 4th.....and Christmas is always December 25th. Why does it jump around.....does it have to be so many days from the beginning of the year or what.

2007-01-01 17:59:09 · update #1

5 answers

It is the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox.

2007-01-01 17:58:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The first Easter was the Sunday after Passover.

Jesus was executed by the Roman at the request of the Jews. That evening was the beginning of Passover (the Jewish calendar is a lunar calendar which means sun set to sun set is a day. Within three lunar days, God raised Jesus from the dead, Sunday. The Friday to Sunday format.

Rosh Hashanah is the first Jewish new day. Once you know what day Rosh Hashanah is, you can get Passover.

Fifty days after Easter is Pentecost.

In the source, I have given your a page that calculates Rosh Hashanah, Passover, and Easter.

2007-01-01 18:11:32 · answer #2 · answered by J. 7 · 1 0

Easter Sunday is the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Spring Equinox.

2016-05-23 05:19:06 · answer #3 · answered by Melissa 3 · 0 0

It is the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox. It is the first sunday after the goodfriday.Easter falls on the first Sunday following the first ecclesiastical full moon .
In Western Christianity, Easter always falls on a Sunday from March 22 to April 25 inclusive. The following day, Easter Monday, is a legal holiday in many countries with predominantly Christian traditions. In Eastern Christianity, Easter falls between April 4 and May 8 between 1900 and 2100 based on the Gregorian date.

Easter and the holidays that are related to it are moveable feasts, in that they do not fall on a fixed date in the Gregorian or Julian calendars (which follow the motion of the sun and the seasons). Instead, they are based on a lunar calendar similar—but not identical—to the Hebrew Calendar. The precise date of Easter has often been a matter for contention.

At the First Council of Nicaea in 325 it was decided that Easter would be celebrated on the same Sunday throughout the Church, but it is probable that no method was specified by the Council. (No contemporary account of the Council's decisions has survived.) Instead, the matter seems to have been referred to the church of Alexandria, which city had the best reputation for scholarship at the time. The Catholic Epiphanius wrote in the mid-4th Century, "...the emperor...convened a council of 318 bishops...in the city of Nicea...They passed certain ecclesiastical canons at the council besides, and at the same time decreed in regard to the Passover that there must be one unanimous concord on the celebration of God's holy and supremely excellent day. For it was variously observed by people..."(Epiphanius. The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis, Books II and III (Sects 47–80), De Fide). Section VI, Verses 1,1 and 1,3. Translated by Frank Williams. EJ Brill, New York, 1994, pp.471–472).

The practice of those following Alexandria was to celebrate Easter on the first Sunday after the earliest fourteenth day of a lunar month that occurred on or after March 21. While since the Middle Ages this practice has sometimes been more succinctly phrased as Easter is observed on the Sunday after the first full moon on or after the day of the vernal equinox, this does not reflect the actual ecclesiastical rules precisely. The reason for this is that the full moon involved (called the Paschal full moon) is not an astronomical full moon, but an ecclesiastical moon. Determined from tables, it coincides more or less with the astronomical full moon.

The ecclesiastical rules are:

Easter falls on the first Sunday following the first ecclesiastical full moon that occurs on or after March 21 (the day of the ecclesiastical vernal equinox).
This particular ecclesiastical full moon is the 14th day of a tabular lunation (new moon).
The Church of Rome used its own methods to determine Easter until the 6th century, when it may have adopted the Alexandrian method as converted into the Julian calendar by Dionysius Exiguus (certain proof of this does not exist until the ninth century). Most churches in the British Isles used a late third century Roman method to determine Easter until they adopted the Alexandrian method at the Synod of Whitby in 664. Churches in western continental Europe used a late Roman method until the late 8th century during the reign of Charlemagne, when they finally adopted the Alexandrian method. Since western churches now use the Gregorian calendar to calculate the date and Eastern Orthodox churches use the original Julian calendar, their dates are not usually aligned in the present day.

In the United Kingdom, the Easter Act of 1928 set out legislation to allow the date of Easter to be fixed as the first Sunday after the second Saturday in April. However, the legislation was never implemented.

At a summit in Aleppo, Syria, in 1997, the World Council of Churches proposed a reform in the calculation of Easter which would have replaced an equation-based method of calculating Easter with direct astronomical observation; this would have side-stepped the calendar issue and eliminated the difference in date between the Eastern and Western churches. The reform was proposed for implementation starting in 2001, but it was not ultimately adopted by any member body.

Further information: Reform of the date of Easter
A few clergymen of various denominations have advanced the notion of disregarding the moon altogether in determining the date of Easter; proposals include always observing the feast on the second Sunday in April, or always having seven Sundays between the Epiphany and Ash Wednesday, producing the same result except that in leap years Easter could fall on April 7. These suggestions have yet to attract significant support, and their adoption in the future is considered unlikely.


[edit] Computations
Main article: Computus
The calculations for the date of Easter are somewhat complicated. See computus for a discussion covering both the traditional tabular methods and more exclusively mathematical algorithms such as the one developed by mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss.

In the Western Church, Easter has not fallen on the earliest of the 35 possible dates, March 22, since 1818, and will not do so again until 2285. It will, however, fall on March 23, just one day after its earliest possible date, in 2008. Easter last fell on the latest possible date, April 25 in 1943, and will next fall on that date in 2038. However, it will fall on April 24, just one day before this latest possible date, in 2011.

Historically, other forms of determining the holiday's date were also used. For example, Quartodecimanism was the practice of setting the holiday on the 14th day of the Jewish month of Nisan, which is the day of preparation for Passover.

2007-01-01 18:01:39 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

a calendar????

2007-01-01 17:54:23 · answer #5 · answered by young republican 2 · 0 2

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