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28 July, 2013 at 11:58 am #330326
Hi there.
Back again.
8)
6 March, 2013 at 1:21 am #330287@mrs_teapot wrote:
That smilie is pretty scary!
Are you trying to frighten the younger posters like Danny?
:?
5 March, 2013 at 10:57 am #408758rebirth
5 March, 2013 at 10:49 am #518612@simplysu wrote:
@sceptical guy wrote:
@jen_jen wrote:
@momentaryloss wrote:
@jen_jen wrote:
Where is everybody? Did you all go and get lives or something?
Or something unfortunately……
Doesn’t sound good… :?
in fact, along with a post from momes on another thread..
sounds pretty bad :(
Hey no biggie. Not cool but worse things happen at sea.
Thanks for noticing.
Life’s what it is – you just get on with it.
8)
4 March, 2013 at 10:56 pm #518175@blossom‘ wrote:
Btw…Easter’s on March 31st this year :)
And as to why they keep moving it about (googled it, although I am Catholic and was taught why at school… :lol: bad memory though, guess I’m a candidate for Alzheimers :wink: ) .Short Answer
At the heart of the matter lies a very simple explanation. The early church fathers wished to keep the observance of Easter in correlation to the Jewish Passover. Because the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ happened after the Passover, they wanted Easter to always be celebrated subsequent to the Passover. And, since the Jewish holiday calendar is based on solar and lunar cycles, each feast day is movable, with dates shifting from year to year. Now, from here the explanation grows more complicated.
The Long Answer
Today in Western Christianity, Easter is always celebrated on the Sunday immediately following the Paschal Full Moon date of the year. I had previously, and somewhat erroneously stated, “Easter is always celebrated on the Sunday immediately following the first full moon after the vernal (spring) equinox.” This statement was true prior to 325 A.D.; however, over the course of history (beginning in 325 A.D. with the Council of Nicea), the Western Church decided to established a more standardized system for determining the date of Easter.In actuality, the date of the Paschal Full Moon is determined from historical tables, and has no correspondence to lunar events.
As astronomers were able to approximate the dates of all the full moons in future years, the Western Christian Church used these calculations to establish a table of Ecclesiastical Full Moon dates. These dates would determine the Holy Days on the Ecclesiastical calendar.
Though modified slightly from its original form, by 1583 A.D. the table for determining the Ecclesiastical Full Moon dates was permanently established and has been used ever since to determine the date of Easter. Thus, according to the Ecclesiastical tables, the Paschal Full Moon is the first Ecclesiastical Full Moon date after March 20 (which happened to be the vernal equinox date in 325 A.D.). So, in Western Christianity, Easter is always celebrated on the Sunday immediately following the Paschal Full Moon.
The Paschal Full Moon can vary as much as two days from the date of the actual full moon, with dates ranging from March 21 to April 18. As a result, Easter dates can range from March 22 through April 25 in Western Christianity.
Eastern vs. Western Easter Dates
Historically, Western churches used the Gregorian Calendar to calculate the date of Easter and Eastern Orthodox churches used the Julian Calendar. This was partly why the dates were seldom the same.Easter and its related holidays do not fall on a fixed date in either the Gregorian or Julian calendars, making them movable holidays. The dates, instead, are based on a lunar calendar very similar to the Hebrew Calendar.
While some Eastern Orthodox Churches not only maintain the date of Easter based on the Julian Calendar which was in use during the First Ecumenical Council of Nicea in 325 A.D., they also use the actual, astronomical full moon and the actual vernal equinox as observed along the meridian of Jerusalem. This complicates the matter, due to the inaccuracy of the Julian calendar, and the 13 days that have accrued since A.D. 325. This means, in order to stay in line with the originally established (325 A.D.) vernal equinox, Orthodox Easter cannot be celebrated before April 3 (present day Gregorian calendar), which was March 21 in A.D. 325.
Additionally, in keeping with the rule established by the First Ecumenical Council of Nicea, the Eastern Orthodox Church adhered to the tradition that Easter must always fall after the Jewish Passover, since the resurrection of Christ happened after the celebration of Passover. Eventually the Orthodox Church came up with an alternative to calculating Easter based on the Gregorian calendar and Passover, and developed a 19-year cycle, as opposed to the Western Church 84-year cycle.
Since the days of early church history, determining the precise date of Easter has been a matter for continued argument. For one, the followers of Christ neglected to record the exact date of Jesus’ resurrection. From then on the matter grew increasingly complex.
There’s more where this came from, if you’re interested.
Wow.
8)
4 March, 2013 at 10:43 pm #518608@jen_jen wrote:
Where is everybody? Did you all go and get lives or something?
Or something unfortunately……
12 February, 2013 at 2:15 pm #516785@sceptical guy wrote:
@momentaryloss wrote:
@kent f OBE wrote:
@toybulldog wrote:
AND you can also dump a partner by means of a Powerpoint presentation these days. 8
Now that is hilarious :lol: I’m always behind the times…I was dumped by text :lol:
Now that’s low.
:(
No!!! I was dumped by text once.
Way to go in this modern age.
I know it happens but it’s still a bit shitty.
12 February, 2013 at 2:14 pm #518021I feel good about popping into JC after a few week’s break, and finding it still as funny, infuriating and downright random as ever.
Aint life grand!
:D :lol: 8)
12 February, 2013 at 2:10 pm #516783@kent f OBE wrote:
@toybulldog wrote:
AND you can also dump a partner by means of a Powerpoint presentation these days. 8
Now that is hilarious :lol: I’m always behind the times…I was dumped by text :lol:
Now that’s low.
:(
12 February, 2013 at 2:03 pm #478285We could do with a spot of old Gaz.
:(
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