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World Council
of Churches
Faith and Order towards
a Common Date for Easter
World Council of Churches/Middle
East
Council of Churches Consultation
Aleppo, Syria
March 5 - 10, 1997
"Christ, our
paschal lamb, has been sacrificed. Let us therefore celebrate
the festival."1 Cor. 5:7-8.
Click to table for reckoning
dates of Easter according to the proposals below.
I. The Issues
Background to this consultation
1. In the 20th century the
churches have rediscovered a deep concern for Christian unity.
They have expressed this in their efforts to find common ground
on theological issues that have long divided them. They have
learned to give common witness in a variety of ways. But despite
this progress towards visible unity, many challenges remain.
One very sensitive issue, with enormous pastoral consequences
for all the Christian faithful, has taken on growing urgency:
the need to find a common date for the celebration of Easter,
the Holy Pascha, the feast of Christ's resurrection. By celebrating
this feast of feasts on different days, the churches give
a divided witness to this fundamental aspect of the apostolic
faith, compromising their credibility and effectiveness in
bringing the Gospel to the world. This is a matter of concern
for all Christians. Indeed, in some parts of the world such
as the Middle East, where several separated Christian communities
constitute a minority in the larger society, this has become
an urgent issue. While there has been some discussion of this
question, it still has not been given the serious attention
that it deserves.
2. While the question of a
common date for Easter/Pascha has been addressed at different
times since the earliest Christian centuries, a renewed discussion
of this issue has arisen in the present century in the churches
of both East and West. It also has emerged in significant
ways in the secular world. The question was put to the wider
Christian world in a 1920 encyclical of the ecumenical patriarchate
of Constantinople and addressed in a 1923 Pan-Orthodox congress,
whose decision to revise their calendar unfortunately led
to several schisms within the Orthodox churches. Around the
same time, discussion was beginning in secular circles especially
in Western Europe concerning the possibility of establishing
a fixed day for Easter, such as the Sunday following the second
Saturday in April, so as to facilitate commercial planning
and public activities. In addition, proposals for introducing
a new fixed calendar were being advanced, for similar utilitarian
reasons. After World War II the context for discussion of
such issues changed in several ways. International secular
initiatives received little support. The churches were especially
opposed to any calendar reform which would break the cycle
of the seven-day week. On the other hand, many churches continued
to express interest in the idea of a common day, whether movable
or fixed, for the celebration of Easter/Pascha. The Orthodox
returned to the paschal question from 1961 onwards, in the
context of preparations for the Great and Holy Council of
the Orthodox Church; the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy
of the Second Vatican Council (1963) gave renewed impetus
in the Roman Catholic Church to discussion of this issue;
and since 1965 the World Council of Churches has taken up
the subject on a number of occasions.
3. In recent years, concrete
steps have been taken in the Middle East, where Christians
of so many traditions live closely together in a largely non-Christian
society. The Middle East Council of Churches has been particularly
active in encouraging and facilitating the celebration of
Easter/Pascha on a common day. Two recent WCC consultations
have taken up this concern. A consultation on "Christian Spirituality
for Our Times" (Iasi, Romania, May 1994) proposed that "a
new initiative be taken towards the common celebration of
Easter." Even more striking are the conclusions reached by
a consultation "Towards Koinonia in Worship" (Ditchingham,
England, August 1994):
Besides the work already done
on baptism, eucharist and ministry, the churches need to address
the renewal of preaching, the recovery of the meaning of Sunday
and the search for a common celebration of Pascha as ecumenical
theological concerns. This last is especially urgent, since
an agreement on a common date for Easter - even an interim
agreement - awaits further ecumenical developments. Such an
agreement, which cannot depend on the idea of a "fixed date
of Easter", should respect the deepest meaning of the Christian
Pascha, and the feelings of Christians throughout the world.
We welcome all initiatives which offer the hope of progress
in this important area." (T.F. Best/D. Heller, eds., So We
Believe, So We Pray: Towards Koinonia in Worship, Faith and
Order Paper No. 171, WCC Publications, Geneva 1995, pp. 9-10.)
In view of the concerns expressed
at these consultations, the Executive Committee of the WCC,
meeting in Bucharest, September 1994, recommended that Unit
I, "especially the Ecclesial Unity/Faith and Order stream
and the Worship and Spirituality stream, give renewed attention
to the subject of the common celebration of Easter, keeping
in mind that in the year 2001, the dates of Easter according
to both Eastern and Western calendars coincide."
4. The present consultation,
meeting in Aleppo, Syria, March 5-10, 1997, comes in response
to this request. Sponsored jointly by Unit I of the WCC and
by the Middle East Council of Churches (MECC), it brings together
representatives of a number of communions which participate
in the annual meeting of the Conference of Secretaries of
Christian World Communions, representatives of the Eastern
and Oriental Orthodox Churches, representatives of the MECC,
and invited experts and staff. Together participants in the
consultation enjoyed the hospitality of the Syrian Orthodox
Archdiocese of Aleppo and experienced first-hand the commitment
to unity of the Chritsian communities of this city. At a meeting
with members of these communities, they listened to a call
for removal of the painful sign of separation which differing
dates for Easter/Pascha constitute. In an atmosphere of prayer
and common study, participants considered the problem of a
common day for the celebration of Easter/Pascha from various
perspectives - theological, historical, liturgical, catechetical
and pastoral. The consultation offers to all the churches
the following observatuins and recommendations.
Christ's resurrection, basis
of our common faith
5. The apostolic faith of the
Church is based on the reality of the resurrection of Christ.
As St. Paul says: "Now if Christ is proclaimed as raised from
the death, how can some of you say there is no resurrection
of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then
Christ has not been raised, and if Christ has not been raised,
then our proclamation has been in vain and your faith is in
vain." (1 Cor. 15:12-14) Viewed as the ultimate victory over
the powers of sin and death, the resurrection of the Lord
is not only an historical event but also the sign of God's
power over all the forces which can keep us from his love
and goodness. It is a victory not only for Christ himself
but also for all those united with him (1 Pet. 1:3f). It is
a victory which marks the beginning of a new era (Jn 20:17).
The resurrection is the ultimate expression of the Father's
gift of reconciliation and unity in Christ through the Spirit.
It is a sign of the unity and reconciliation which God wills
for the entire creation.
6. As the apostles began their
missionary activity, the resurrection was at the heart of
their preaching (1 Cor. 15: 1-17, Acts 2:22-36, 1 Pet 1:3),
and as the evangelists began to record aspects of the Lord's
teachings and ministry, the resurrection comes as the culminating
event in their gospels. In every aspect of her life, the early
Church was first and foremost the community of the resurrection.
Thus the early Church's life of worship focused on God's reconciling
love as manifested in the saving passover of Christ's death
and resurrection. The first day of the week became the preeminent
day of the Christian assembly because it was the day on which
the Lord rose from the dead (Jn 20:1, Acts 20:7). At the same
time, this came to be known as the "eighth day," a day of
new creation and ultimate fulfillment. Each year too, Christians
both remembered and experienced the continuing power of Christ's
passion and resurrection in a single but multifaceted celebration.
This celebration also became the occasion for baptism, in
which Christians shared in Christ's passage from death to
life, dying to sin and rising to new life in him. Therefore
the behavior of Christians was rooted in their relationship
with the risen Lord and reflected the new reality inaugurated
by him (Col. 3:1-11).
Historical background to the
present differences
7. The New Testament indicates
that Christ's death and resurrection were historically associated
with the Jewish passover, but the precise details of this
association are not clear. According to the synoptic gospels,
Jesus' last supper was a passover meal, which would place
his death on the day after passover, while according to John
his death occurred on the day itself, indeed at the very hour,
when the paschal lambs were sacrificed. By the end of the
2nd century some churches celebrated Easter/Pascha on the
day of the Jewish passover, regardless of the day of the week,
while others celebrated it on the following Sunday. By the
4th century, the former practice had been abandoned practically
universally, but differences still remained in the calculation
of the date of Easter/Pascha. The ecumenical council held
at Nicea in 325 AD determined that Easter/Pascha should be
celebrated on the Sunday following the first vernal full moon.
Originally passover was celebrated on the first full moon
after the March equinox, but in the 3rd century the day of
the feast came to be calculated by some Jewish communities
without reference to the equinox, thus causing passover to
be celebrated twice in some solar years. Nicea tried to avoid
this by linking the principles for the dating of Easter/Pascha
to the norms for the calculation of passover during Jesus'
lifetime.
8. While certain differences
in the mechanics of determining the date of Easter/Pascha
remained even after Nicea, which occasionally resulted in
local differences, by the 6th century the mode of calculation
based on the studies of Alexandrian astronomers and scholars
had gained universal acceptance. By the 16th century, however,
the discrepancy between this mode of calculation and the observed
astronomical data was becoming evident. This led to the calendar
change introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582. Since that
time, western Christians have come to calculate the date of
Easter on the basis of this newer Gregorian calendar, while
the eastern churches generally have continued to follow the
older Julian calendar. While calendrical changes in some of
the Orthodox churches in 1923 affected fixed-date feasts,
the calculation of the Easter date remained linked to the
Julian Calendar. Our present differences in calculation of
the date of Easter thus may be ascribed to differences in
the calendars and lunar tables employed rather than to differences
in fundamental theological outlook.
9. In its study of the mechanics
of the paschal calculation, the consultation took note of
the fact that both the current eastern (Julian) and the current
western (Gregorian) calculations diverge in certain respects
from the astronomical data as determined by precise scientific
calculation. As is well known, the Julian calendar at present
diverges from the astronomical by thirteen days; the Gregorian
at present does not diverge significantly, though it will
in the distant future. Less well known is the fact that both
Julian and Gregorian calculations rely upon conventional tables
for determining the lunar cycle. For both modes of calculation,
these tables at times give results that diverge from the astronomical
data.
The continuing relevance of
the Council of Nicea
10. In the course of their
deliberations, the participants in the consultation came to
a deeper appreciation of the continuing relevance of the Council
of Nicea for the present discussion. The decisions of this
council, rooted as they are in scripture and tradition, came
to be regarded as normative for the whole Church.
(a) Despite differences in
the method of calculation, the principles of calculation in
the churches of both East and West are based on the norms
set forth at Nicea. This fact is of great significance. In
the present divided situation, any decision by one church
or group of churches to move away from these norms would only
increase the difficulty of resolving outstanding differences.
(b) The Council of Nicea's
decisions are expressive of the desire for unity. The council's
aim was to establish principles, based upon the scriptural
data concerning the association of the passion and resurrection
of Christ with the passover, which would encourage a single
annual observance of Easter/Pascha by all the churches. By
fostering unity in this way, the council also demonstrated
its concern for the mission of the church in the world. The
council was aware that disunity in such a central matter was
a cause of scandal.
(c) The Nicene norms affirm
the intimate connection between the biblical passover (cf.
especially Exod. 12:18, Lev. 23:5, Num. 28:16, Deut. 16:1-2)
and the Christian celebration of "Christ our paschal lamb"
(1 Cor. 5:7). While the council rejected the principle of
dependence on contemporary Jewish reckoning, it did so on
the grounds that this had changed and become inaccurate, not
because it regarded this connection as unimportant.
(d) In the course of their
discussions the consultation also gained a deeper appreciation
for the wealth of symbolism which the Nicene norms permit.
In the worship of many of the churches, especially in the
biblical readings and hymnography of the paschal season, Christians
are reminded not only of the important link between the passover
and the Christian Easter/Pascha but also of other aspects
of salvation history. For example, they are reminded that
in Christ's resurrection all creation is renewed. Some early
Christian sources thus linked the Genesis account of the seven
days of creation with the week of Christ's passion, death
and resurrection.
(e) The Council of Nicea also
has an enduring lesson for Christians today in its willingness
make use of contemporary science in calculating the date of
Easter. While the council sought to advance the concrete unity
of the churches, it did not itself undertake a detailed regulation
of the Easter calculation. Instead it expected the churches
to employ the most exact science of the day for calculating
the necessary astronomical data (the March equinox and the
full moon).
II. Two recommendations
First recommendation
11. In the estimation of this
consultation, the most likely way to succeed in achieving
a common date for Easter in our own day would be
(a) to maintain the Nicene
norms (that Easter should fall on the Sunday following the
first vernal full moon), and
(b) to calculate the astronomical
data (the vernal equinox and the full moon) by the most accurate
possible scientific means,
(c) using as the basis for
reckoning the meridian of Jerusalem, the place of Christ's
death and resurrection.
12. This recommendation is
made for the following reasons.
In regard to point a:
(i) The Church needs to be
reminded of its origins, including the close link between
the biblical passover and the passion and resurrection of
Jesus Christ - a link that reflects the total flow of salvation
history. In the estimation of this consultation, a fixed date
would obscure and weaken this link by eliminating any reference
to the biblical norms for the calculation of the passover.
(ii) Easter/Pascha has a cosmic
dimension. Through Christ's resurrection, the sun, the moon,
and all the elements are restored to their primordial capacity
for declaring God's glory (Ps. 19:1-2, 148:3). Easter/Pascha
reveals the close link between creation and redemption, as
inseparable aspects of God's revelation. The Nicene principles
for calculating the date of Easter/Pascha, based as they are
on the cycles of sun and moon, reflect this cosmic dimension
much more fully than a fixed-date system.
(iii) In addition to underscoring
many important symbolic aspects of the feast, a movable date
for the observance of Easter/Pascha also indicates in palpable
fashion the dramatic way in which the resurrection breaks
into the comfortable routines of this world. While such a
date may in some respects be less convenient than a fixed
Sunday, it does call attention to a significant theological
point which otherwise might be overlooked.
(iv) An earlier WCC consultation
on the date of Easter/Pascha (Chambésy, 1970) observed,
"In any case the churches should arrive at a solution for
reasons based entirely on the religious meaning of the feast
and for the purpose of Christian unity rather than for the
purpose of satisfying inherently secular interests." The present
consultation wholly concurs with this sentiment.
(v) This recommendation maintains
what, for most churches, is an important aspect of tradition.
Adoption of a fixed Sunday approach would raise difficulties
for many churches and, if introduced unilaterally by one church
or group of churches, might well result in not two but three
different dates for Easter/Pascha in a given year.
In regard to point b:
In recommending calculation
of the astronomical data by the most accurate possible scientific
means (as distinct, for example, from reliance on conventional
cyclical tables or personal observation), the consultation
believes that it is being completely faithful to the spirit
of the Council of Nicea itself, which also was willing to
make use of the best available scientific knowledge. We are
fortunate that experts in astronomy have already provided
these necessary calculations; they are conveniently presented
in Synodica V (Chambésy - Genève, Les Editions
du Centre Orthodoxe, 1981) 133 - 149.
In regard to point c:
Astronomical observations,
of course, depend upon the position on earth which is taken
as the point of reference. This consultation believes that
it is appropriate to employ the meridian of Jerusalem, the
site of Christ's passion and resurrection, as this necessary
point of reference for the calculation of the March equinox
and the subsequent full moon.
13. The recommendation just
stated will have some different implications for the churches
of East and West as they seek a renewed faithfulness to Nicea.
Both will face the need for education of their faithful. For
eastern churches, changes in the actual dating of Easter/Pascha
will be more perceptible than for the western churches. Given
the contexts in which these churches live, this will require
both patience and tact. For western churches, on the other
hand, the challenge may lie in communicating deeper aspects
of the Nicene principles for the calculation of Easter/Pascha,
such as those sketched above, and in acquainting their faithful
with the concerns and insights of the eastern churches.
14. The consultation is well
aware of the particular circumstances of many eastern churches.
In some countries in the Middle East and Eastern Europe, where
the Christian churches have lived with the challenge of other
religions or materialistic ideologies, loyalty to the "old
calendar" has been a symbol of the churches' desire to maintain
their integrity and their freedom from the hostile forces
of this world. Clearly in such situations implementation of
any change in the calculation of Easter/Pascha will have to
proceed carefully and with great pastoral sensitivity.
15. To aid the churches in
their discussion of the above recommendation, the consultation
appends to this report a table of Easter/Pascha dates from
2001 through 2025, based on the astronomical specifications
already indicated. For convenience of reference, the table
also indicates the dates of Easter/Pascha according to the
current Gregorian and Julian reckonings, the astronomically
determined date of the first vernal full moon, i.e., the first
full moon following the March equinox (cf. Exod. 12:18, Lev.
23:5, Num. 28:16, Deut. 16:1-2), and the date of passover
according to current Jewish reckoning.
Second recommendation
16. This consultation also
recommends that the churches now undertake a period of study
and reflection towards the goal of establishing as soon as
possible a common date for Easter/Pascha along the lines set
forth above. In the year 2001 the paschal calculations now
in use by our churches will coincide. Together, Christians
will begin a new century, a new millennium, with new opportunities
to witness to the resurrection of Christ and to proclaim their
joy in his victory over sin, suffering and death. The unity
that will be reflected as Christians celebrate Easter/Past
on the same date will be for many a sign of hope and of witness
to the world. This celebration of Easter/Pascha on the same
date should not be the exception but the rule.
17. The way is now open for
the churches to consider again their current practice for
determining the date of Easter/Pascha. As a first step, in
the interval between 1997 and 2001, this consultation encourages
the churches to take up consideration of the recommendations
here proposed, and, if they find them acceptable in principle,
to explore ways of implementing them according to their own
procedures, in light of their own opportunities, and within
their own contexts. This consultation suggests that during
these years the churches consult with each other on the ways
in which a common date for Easter/Pascha can be implemented.
In this interval also, the present consultation encourages
continuation of existing local and regional initiatives, as
interim measures, for observance of a common Easter/Pascha.
18. As a second step, the consultation
suggests that the year 2001 would also provide a good opportunity
for the churches to review reactions and to assess progress
made towards agreement on this matter. It recommends, therefore,
that the World Council of Churches, in cooperation with its
ecumenical partners and other Christian groups, organize then
a consultation in which this assessment could be reported
and implementation co uld be discussed.
19. It is the sincere hope
of the participants in this consultation that the churches
will give an early and prayerful consideration to the recommendations
made in this report, as a step towards preparing for a united
witness to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Participants:
Dr Bert Beach, U.S.A.
(for the General Conference
of the Seventh-day Adventists)
Metropolitan Damaskinos (Papandreou),
Switzerland
(for the Ecumenical Patriarchate)
Canon John Halliburton, United
Kingdom
(for the Anglican Communion)
Rev. Fayiz Y. Henain, Syria
(for the Evangelical Churches
in the Middle East)
Fr. Datev Mikaelian, Syria
(for the Armenian Orthodox
Church)
Archbishop Boutros Marayati,
Syria (Armenian Catholic Church)
(for the Middle East Council
of Churches)
Ven. Dr. Koenraad Ouwens, Netherlands
(for the Old-Catholic Churches
of the Union of Utrecht)
Msgr. John Radano, Vatican
City
(for the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity)
Mr. Alexander Sologoub, Syria
(for the Patriarchate of Moscow)
Archbishop Dr. Gunnar Weman,
Sweden
(for the Lutheran World Federation)
Metropolitan Elias Yusef, Syria
(for the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate
of Antioch)
Hosts:
Metropolitan Gregorios Yohanna
Ibrahim
(Syrian Orthodox Church of
Antioch)
Mr Razek Syriani
(Syrian Orthodox Church / MECC)
Consultants:
Prof. John H. Erickson, U.S.A.
(Orthodox Church in America)
Rev. Dr. Ronald Kydd, Canada
(Pentecostal Assemblies of
Canada)
WCC Staff:
Fr. Dr. Thomas FitzGerald
(Ecumenical Patriarchate)
Rev. Dr. Dagmar Heller
(Evangelical Church of Germany,
United)
Table for finding Easter/Pascha
dates
Year Easter/Pascha by astronomical
reckoning Easter/Pascha by current Gregorian reckoning Easter/Pascha
by current Julian reckoning Vernal full moon by astronomical
reckoning Passover by current Jewish reckoning
2001 15 April 15 April 15 April
8 April 8 April
2002 31 March 31 March 5 May
28 March 28 March
2003 20 April 20 April 27 April
16 April 17 April
2004 11 April 11 April 11 April
5 April 6 April
2005 27 March 27 March 1 May
25 March 24 April
2006 16 April 16 April 23 April
13 April 13 April
2007 8 April 8 April 8 April
2 April 3 April
2008 23 March 23 March 27 April
21 March 20 April
2009 12 April 12 April 19 April
9 April 9 April
2010 4 April 4 April 4 April
30 March 30 March
2011 24 April 24 April 24 April
18 April 19 April
2012 8 April 8 April 15 April
6 April 7 April
2013 31 March 31 March 5 May
27 March 26 March
2014 20 April 20 April 20 April
15 April 15 April
2015 5 April 5 April 12 April
4 April 4 April
2016 27 March 27 March 1 May
23 March 23 April
2017 16 April 16 April 16 April
11 April 11 April
2018 1 April 1 April 8 April
31 March 31 March
2019 24 March 21 April 28 April
21 March 20 April
2020 12 April 12 April 19 April
8 April 9 April
2021 4 April 4 April 2 May
28 March 28 March
2022 17 April 17 April 24 April
16 April 16 April
2023 9 April 9 April 16 April
6 April 6 April
2024 31 March 31 March 5 May
25 March 23 April
2025 20 April 20 April 20 May
13 April 13 April
[copy right 1998 World Council
of Churches. Remarks to: webeditor@wcc-coe.org]
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