strange holiday timing
Feb. 21st, 2005 08:09 pmMost years, Pesach and Easter fall within a few days of each other. This makes sense, because the Christian event is understood to have fallen during Pesach. But because Christianity does not follow the Jewish calendar for setting the holiday, and both computations are lunar, when the holidays aren't a few days apart they're about a month apart, with Easter being first. Fine; everyone knows that, pretty much.
The holiday of Purim falls approximately a month before Pesach.
Easter is constrained to fall on a Sunday, but Pesach can fall on "any" day. Well, there are some calendar oddities that actually rule out a couple days (Wednesday and Friday, IIRC), but mostly Pesach is unconstrained.
This year Pesach happens to fall on a Sunday and Easter is early.
What does this all add up to? That the celebration of Purim, a day on which feasting and drinking are commanded, falls on good Friday, a fast day.
I have heard that there are Christian denominations that observe some Jewish practices, like the seventh-day aventists who celebrate the sabbath on Saturday. I wonder if any of them celebrate minor holidays like Purim. If so, I wonder how they will resolve the contradiction this year. For that matter, I wonder how interfaith families address this. (A similar problem arises in the winter, when a Jewish fast day can fall on Christmas.)
The holiday of Purim falls approximately a month before Pesach.
Easter is constrained to fall on a Sunday, but Pesach can fall on "any" day. Well, there are some calendar oddities that actually rule out a couple days (Wednesday and Friday, IIRC), but mostly Pesach is unconstrained.
This year Pesach happens to fall on a Sunday and Easter is early.
What does this all add up to? That the celebration of Purim, a day on which feasting and drinking are commanded, falls on good Friday, a fast day.
I have heard that there are Christian denominations that observe some Jewish practices, like the seventh-day aventists who celebrate the sabbath on Saturday. I wonder if any of them celebrate minor holidays like Purim. If so, I wonder how they will resolve the contradiction this year. For that matter, I wonder how interfaith families address this. (A similar problem arises in the winter, when a Jewish fast day can fall on Christmas.)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-02-22 03:42 pm (UTC)That makes sense. In fact, I now recall that Judaism even has a similar principle: if a fast (other than Yom Kippur) falls on Shabbat, you move the fast to Sunday instead. Yom Kippur trumps even Shabbat (this happened this year), but otherwise you do not fast on Shabbat.
(I know of one fast that moves earlier instead of later: on the day before Pesach, first-born fast. If Pesach is on Sunday (that is, first seder Saturday night), that would mean fasting on Shabbat -- but you don't fast on Shabbat and this fast must occur before Pesach, so it moves to Friday.)
movable fasts
Date: 2005-02-23 02:26 am (UTC)Re: movable fasts
Date: 2005-02-23 02:48 am (UTC)