<http://deacbench.blogspot.com/2009/05/something-in-common-move-toward-one.html>Something
 
in common: the move toward one Easter for all Christians

One of the sharp dividing lines between some 
Christians is when, exactly, to celebrate Easter.

Now, efforts are under way to 
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g-mBPHr0Ya18j7JVrLsOsmHs_NIwD98F8TA80>erase
 
that line:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g-mBPHr0Ya18j7JVrLsOsmHs_NIwD98F8TA80
 


By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER

GENEVA (AP) ­ Christianity's largest ecumenical 
movement expressed hope Thursday that churches 
were moving closer to a common Easter for the 
world's Christians, despite a historical debate nearly as old as the religion.

Catholic and Protestant congregations will 
celebrate their belief in Jesus' resurrection on 
the same day as Orthodox churches in 2010 and 
2011 because of a coincidence in the Julian and 
Gregorian calendars. The common holiday has happened three times this decade.

But the World Council of Churches says consensus 
is emerging that these should not just be occasional occurrences.

At a recent meeting in Lviv, Ukraine, theologians 
representing nearly the breadth of Christianity 
agreed in principle on a strategy for all the 
faithful to continue observing their feast together.

"It's not a problem of principle, of dogma or of 
doctrine," said Juan Michel, spokesman for the 
council, whose 350 Protestant, Orthodox and other 
churches represent more than 560 million 
Christians. It cooperates with the Roman Catholic 
Church, which is not a member.

"It's more of a pastoral issue for some 
churches," said Michel. "There are concerns how 
the faithful will feel if there is a change in 
the traditional way of calculating the date."

The confusion over Easter's historical date arose 
in the early days of Christianity as the faith 
spread and different groups interpreted the four Gospels in different ways.

According to Matthew, Mark and Luke's Gospels, 
the last meal Jesus shared with his disciples was 
the Jewish Passover meal, while John's Gospel 
says that Jesus died on the feast of Passover itself.

Christianity's leading authorities first sought 
to establish a common date in 325 at the Council 
of Nicaea, determining it as the first Sunday 
after the full moon following the spring equinox.

The problem before the advent of modern astronomy 
was calculating the equinox. Orthodox churches 
use March 21 in the Julian calendar, but since 
the 16th century the Western date has been 
derived in the Gregorian calendar. The resulting 
difference can be up to five weeks apart.

The council said theologians from the Vatican and 
various Orthodox and Protestant churches endorsed 
a compromise on May 15 that Easter should be held 
for all Christians using an equinox based on accurate astronomical data.

Under the plan the unified Easter usually falls 
as it would under the Gregorian calendar used by 
Catholics and Protestants, said Dagmar Heller, an 
ecumenical professor in Switzerland heading the 
council's faith and order commission.

In the next 15 years, the only time Western 
churches would have to change Easter is in 2019 
from April 21 to March 24. The bigger adjustment 
would be for the Orthodox Church, which has 
experienced several schisms in its history over the question of dates.

"There are of course some fundamentalist Orthodox 
who say 'The Julian calendar is our tradition and 
it was used in Jesus' lifetime so we cannot 
change,'" Heller said, adding that some Eastern 
theologians might fear more breaks in their 
church as a result of a date change.

"And, of course, it's an issue because the 
astronomical data is closer to the Gregorian 
calendar, which was introduced by a pope," she 
said, referring to Pope Gregory XIII's reform of 
the calendar in 1582. It only slowly replaced the 
calendar named for Julius Caesar, who introduced it in 46 B.C.

Some Orthodox representatives at the meeting 
appeared to back the plan. French Orthodox 
theologian Antoine Arjakovsky acknowledged that 
the astronomy was closer to the Gregorian 
calendar, but noted that Catholic and Protestant 
churches were also compromising by "accepting 
that the date of Easter should be established on 
the basis of a cosmic calendar rather than by a fixed date."

The Vatican was represented in Lviv by the Rev. 
Milan Zust, an official of the Pontifical Council 
for Promoting Christian Unity.

Heller said the proposed Easter calculation would 
be discussed by higher level officials from different denominations.

Christian groups have been trying for a century 
to establish a common Easter. In the 1920s some 
proposed a fixed Sunday as the date, but others 
opposed losing the theological link of the first 
Easter with Passover ­ which Jews still celebrate 
according to a lunar calendar.


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