Question:
why does the date of easter change every year?
princessanneka
2008-03-18 08:25:09 UTC
why does the date of easter change every year?
Thirteen answers:
2008-03-21 12:14:17 UTC
Its because they could not decide when the exact date was so it was decided that it would be celebrated the first sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox. Yes its is complicated lol.



Happy easter
Miss Shoes
2008-03-18 18:43:15 UTC
Easter has always been a movable feast. Until A.D. 325 Easter was celebrated on Friday, Saturday or Sunday in March. The Emperor Constantine decided to try and fix a definitive date, but unfortunately left it in the hands of the bureaucrats, and the Council of Nicaea came up with a very complicated system. Their Easter Rule said that the festival should be celebrated on the first Sunday that occurs after the first full moon, on or after the vernal equinox. To make the date even harder to work out the ecclesiastical full moon often falls on a different day from the astronomical full moon. But Easter will always be between the dates of March 22 and April 25.



I hope this is some help!
frazzle
2008-03-18 17:15:50 UTC
The reason the date of Easter changes every year is that it's linked to the Jewish calendar, which is a lunar one, instead of the regular solar one in common use.



The Christian church has kept Easter linked to the Jewish festival of Passover because, according to the Bible, that's when Jesus's death and resurrection took place -- Good Friday took place on the 14 Nisan in the Biblical Hebrew calendar. (Not "Nissan" -- that's a car!)



How to calculate the right date for Easter was a matter of much discussion and debate as far back as the ancient Roman church. The system we use today was finally settled on by the Western church in the Middle Ages.



They decided that to keep Easter in line with the Jewish Passover, Easter Day should fall on the Sunday after the first full moon on or after 21 March.

You'll sometimes hear it expressed as "the Sunday after the first full moon on or after the day of the spring equinox" but actually the church uses 21 March instead, rather than the equinox (another moveable date; the day in spring when night and day are both 12 hours long.)





I hope my explanation has helped a bit at least.

=D
2008-03-18 15:34:01 UTC
Christmas is a fixed feast day because the Christian Church took over the ancient mid-winter celebrations (Roman Saturnalia etc.)



Easter Sunday is the first Sunday after the first full moon following the vernal equinox.

It is a Spring rite of fertility again adopted by the Christian Church; note the Eastern Orthodox Church and others have different Christmas and Easter dates.

As there are approximately 13 lunar months in a solar year of twelve months you can see why the date for Easter varies.



This is the simplified explanation!



Notice the analogy of re-birth and seeds germinating.
Sim - plicimus
2008-03-18 15:39:41 UTC
Easter is an annual festival observed throughout the Christian world. The date for Easter shifts every year within the Gregorian Calendar. The Gregorian Calendar is the standard international calendar for civil use. In addition, it regulates the ceremonial cycle of the Roman Catholic and Protestant churches. The current Gregorian ecclesiastical rules that determine the date of Easter trace back to 325 CE at the First Council of Nicaea convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine. At that time the Roman world used the Julian Calendar (put in place by Julius Caesar).



The Council decided to keep Easter on a Sunday, the same Sunday throughout the world. To fix incontrovertibly the date for Easter, and to make it determinable indefinitely in advance, the Council constructed special tables to compute the date. These tables were revised in the following few centuries resulting eventually in the tables constructed by the 6th century Abbot of Scythia, Dionysis Exiguus. Nonetheless, different means of calculations continued in use throughout the Christian world.



In 1582 Gregory XIII (Pope of the Roman Catholic Church) completed a reconstruction of the Julian calendar and produced new Easter tables. One major difference between the Julian and Gregorian Calendar is the "leap year rule". See our FAQ on Calendars for a description of the difference. Universal adoption of this Gregorian calendar occurred slowly. By the 1700's, though, most of western Europe had adopted the Gregorian Calendar. The Eastern Christian churches still determine the Easter dates using the older Julian Calendar method.



The usual statement, that Easter Day is the first Sunday after the full moon that occurs next after the vernal equinox, is not a precise statement of the actual ecclesiastical rules. The full moon involved is not the astronomical Full Moon but an ecclesiastical moon (determined from tables) that keeps, more or less, in step with the astronomical Moon.



The ecclesiastical rules are:



* Easter falls on the first Sunday following the first ecclesiastical full moon that occurs on or after the day of the vernal equinox;

* this particular ecclesiastical full moon is the 14th day of a tabular lunation (new moon); and

* the vernal equinox is fixed as March 21.



resulting in that Easter can never occur before March 22 or later than April 25. The Gregorian dates for the ecclesiastical full moon come from the Gregorian tables. Therefore, the civil date of Easter depends upon which tables - Gregorian or pre-Gregorian - are used. The western (Roman Catholic and Protestant) Christian churches use the Gregorian tables; many eastern (Orthodox) Christian churches use the older tables based on the Julian Calendar.



In a congress held in 1923, the eastern churches adopted a modified Gregorian Calendar and decided to set the date of Easter according to the astronomical Full Moon for the meridian of Jerusalem. However, a variety of practices remain among the eastern churches.



There are three major differences between the ecclesiastical system and the astronomical system.



* The times of the ecclesiastical full moons are not necessarily identical to the times of astronomical Full Moons. The ecclesiastical tables did not account for the full complexity of the lunar motion.

* The vernal equinox has a precise astronomical definition determined by the actual apparent motion of the Sun as seen from the Earth. It is the precise time at which the apparent ecliptic longitude of the Sun is zero. (Yes, the Sun's ecliptic longitude, not its declination, is used for the astronomical definition.) This precise time shifts within the civil calendar very slightly from year to year. In the ecclesiastical system the vernal equinox does not shift; it is fixed at March 21 regardless of the actual motion of the Sun.

* The date of Easter is a specific calendar date. Easter starts when that date starts for your local time zone. The vernal equinox occurs at a specific date and time all over the Earth at once.



Inevitably, then, the date of Easter occasionally differs from a date that depends on the astronomical Full Moon and vernal equinox. In some cases this difference may occur in some parts of the world and not in others because two dates separated by the International Date Line are always simultaneously in progress on the Earth.



For example, take the year 1962. In 1962, the astronomical Full Moon occurred on March 21, UT=7h 55m - about six hours after astronomical equinox. The ecclesiastical full moon (taken from the tables), however, occurred on March 20, before the fixed ecclesiastical equinox at March 21. In the astronomical case, the Full Moon followed its equinox; in the ecclesiastical case, it preceded its equinox. Following the rules, Easter, therefore, was not until the Sunday that followed the next ecclesiastical full moon (Wednesday, April 18) making Easter Sunday, April 22.



Similarly, in 1954 the first ecclesiastical full moon after March 21 fell on Saturday, April 17. Thus, Easter was Sunday, April 18. The astronomical equinox also occurred on March 21. The next astronomical Full Moon occurred on April 18 at UT=5h. So in some places in the world Easter was on the same Sunday as the astronomical Full Moon.



The following are dates of Easter from 1980 to 2024:



1980 April 6 1995 April 16 2010 April 4



1981 April 19 1996 April 7 2011 April 24



1982 April 11 1997 March 30 2012 April 8



1983 April 3 1998 April 12 2013 March 31



1984 April 22 1999 April 4 2014 April 20



1985 April 7 2000 April 23 2015 April 5



1986 March 30 2001 April 15 2016 March 27



1987 April 19 2002 March 31 2017 April 16



1988 April 3 2003 April 20 2018 April 1



1989 March 26 2004 April 11 2019 April 21



1990 April 15 2005 March 27 2020 April 12



1991 March 31 2006 April 16 2021 April 4



1992 April 19 2007 April 8 2022 April 17



1993 April 11 2008 March 23 2023 April 9



1994 April 3 2009 April 12 2024 March 31





For other years, there is a date of Easter program in Data Services.

Computing the Date of Easter



The rule is that Easter is the first Sunday after the first ecclesiastical full moon that occurs on or after March 21. The lunar cycles used by the ecclesiastical system are simple to program. The following algorithm will compute the date of Easter in the Gregorian Calendar system.



The algorithm uses the year, y, to give the month, m, and day, d, of Easter. The symbol * means multiply.



Please note the following: This is an integer calculation. All variables are integers and all remainders from division are dropped. For example, 7 divided by 3 is equal to 2 in integer arithmetic.



c = y / 100

n = y - 19 * ( y / 19 )

k = ( c - 17 ) / 25

i = c - c / 4 - ( c - k ) / 3 + 19 * n + 15

i = i - 30 * ( i / 30 )

i = i - ( i / 28 ) * ( 1 - ( i / 28 ) * ( 29 / ( i + 1 ) )

* ( ( 21 - n ) / 11 ) )

j = y + y / 4 + i + 2 - c + c / 4

j = j - 7 * ( j / 7 )

l = i - j

m = 3 + ( l + 40 ) / 44

d = l + 28 - 31 * ( m / 4 )





For example, using the year 2010,

y=2010,

c=2010/100=20,

n=2010 - 19 x (2010/19) = 2010 - 19 x (105) = 15, [see note above regarding integer calculations]

etc. resulting in Easter on April 4, 2010.



The algorithm is due to J.-M. Oudin (1940) and is reprinted in the Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac, ed. P. K. Seidelmann (1992). See Chapter 12, "Calendars", by L. E. Doggett.
BR Tiger fan
2008-03-18 15:31:50 UTC
Easter falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the first day of Spring.
charmed1
2008-03-18 16:04:17 UTC
It has to do with the christians of long ago converting Pagans to their way, so they took pagan ideas, such as the timing and the ideas of the Spring equinox, Ostara, and created their own holiday and called it easter. The day of "Christ's death" is now the day of the colored eggs and rabbit, which were pagan concepts and symbols of fertility.

They base it on or near the spring equinox. Usually the first sunday, of the first full moon after the spring equinox.
crazeygrazey
2008-03-18 15:47:18 UTC
If you want the full SP on this get the book of Common Prayer and follow the Golden Rule to calculate Easter.
elsa
2008-03-18 15:36:00 UTC
It was originally a Pagan holiday created to celebrate the spring equinox, and therfore was set to be after the full moon. The Pagans respect the laws of nature. They acknowledge the spring as a time of rebirth and fertility. It wasn't until the adoption of Christianity that it was related to Jesus.
2008-03-18 15:38:36 UTC
Hi!! Princess. Don't really know the answer to this, but think it has something to do with the astronomy/moon cycle. However it would be helpful if this festival was fixed like Christmas is in December
Hireka
2008-03-18 15:33:53 UTC
cause the date of easter is based on Hebrew Calendar, i thought its' on Nissan 14. the date is counted when the moon is at full phase...
2008-03-21 17:41:13 UTC
Tayke it from Prof.Simplici.

He can explain in a few lines !
Hollywood
2008-03-18 16:20:42 UTC
"Simplicimous"...I don't think your answer was long enough, could you expand on that one?? LOL!


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