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Easter Sunday: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

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Christ’s Resurrection is the most important event to occur in the Christian church.

If we read Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:17, he states, “if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile, and you are still in your sins.”

After He was crucified, died and was buried on Good Friday, He rose from the dead on Sunday, after three days of being in the tomb.

The video above is from The Passion of the Christ, showing a version of the Bible story with Jim Caviezel playing Jesus.

Christians can bring the meaning of the Resurrection into their own lives. It assures the faithful that they too will enjoy eternal life.


2. It’s a Movable Feast

This means that each year, Easter falls on a different date.
Easter has to fall on the Sunday after the Paschal full moon. The first full moon is always on or after March 21.

This results in Easter always being celebrated between March 22 and April 25.

It is determined based on the Jewish feast of Passover, historically. To make it clear, the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America stated:

Our observance of the Resurrection is related to the “Passover of the Jews” in a historical and theological way, but our calculation does not depend on when the modern-day Jews celebrate.

Holy Week, which begins on Palm Sunday, includes Holy Thursday and Good Friday and ends on Easter Sunday.

For Roman Catholics, the 40 days of preparation before Easter, known as Lent, began on Ash Wednesday, and ended on April 17, or Holy Thursday.

However, Christians celebrate the end of Lent on the Saturday before Easter.

Easter also marks the end of the fasting and abstinence the faithful observed in anticipation.

3. The Egg is the Symbol of the Empty Tomb

easter egg decorating, how to dye easter eggs, easter sunday

(Getty)

In keeping with tradition, families use dye to color eggs. For Christians, the egg is a symbol of the Resurrection, since when they are cracked open it symbolizes the empty tomb.
Decorating eggs dates back to the 13th century.

Easter eggs became popular in medieval times when the Church did not allow eating of eggs during Lent. It is said that eggs were stored for 40 days, decorated, and eaten on Easter.

According to a USA Today report, the egg may have origins in pagan rituals celebrating spring.

As far of the Easter bunny goes, it’s said that the Germans brought him to America, but until after the Civil War when Easter caught on, did it come to be part of the celebration.

None of these traditions are in the Bible, but have been started by believers over the years.


4. It’s Named After a Goddess

The English word for Easter derives from the name of an Anglo-Saxon goddess.

Christianity Today claims that although it cannot be proven, they believe Bede, a seventh-century historian from England wrote that Easter’s name came from the goddess Eostre, who was associated with spring and fertility.

In Europe, the name of the Christian holiday can be traced back to a Hebrew term, “pesach.”


Father William Saunders explained
the origin in The Arlington Catholic Herald:

The Greek word pascha is used for the Aramaic form of the Hebrew word pesach, which means Passover. During the first three centuries of the Church, Pasch referred specifically to the celebration of Christ’s passion and death; by the end of the fourth century, it also included the Easter Vigil; and by the end of the fifth century, it referred to Easter itself.


5. Mass Attendance Almost Doubles

easter church, easter mass, easter sunday mass, easter gospel

(Getty)


Church leaders are known to report that attendance can almost double when it comes to Easter.

Seth Normington, pastor at Linden Presbyterian Church in Detroit, told the TC Times that he focuses on being welcoming and encouraging people to come to mass more often instead of reprimanding them for only attending church on major holidays.

Easter Vigil begins between sunset on Holy Saturday and sunrise on Easter Sunday.

All Catholics should receive the Holy Eucharist, Christ’s Body, sometime during the Easter season, which lasts through Pentecost, 50 days after Easter.

The Church urges its parishioners to take part in the Sacrament of Confession before Easter.

Good Friday: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

Good Friday is the holy day before Easter when the faithful remember the death of Jesus. It is a day of reflection marked by fasting and abstinence.

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Top 5 Easter Egg Decorating Ideas

Make Easter egg decorating fun and interesting with these five simple ideas.

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Easter Around the World: All the Pictures You Need to See

Easter is celebrated in amazingly different ways among Christians around the world. Check out some of the coolest pictures of different cultures celebrating.

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