| Great
Lent and Pascha
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One
When Does
Lent Begin?
Christians familiar only with the Christian West may be surprised
to learn that Ash Wednesday and its customs exist only in
the Western church. The Eastern churches have other ways of
counting the days of Lent, and of beginning this Great Fast.
The Roman Catholic
Church counts Holy Week as part of the Lenten Fast, but not
the Sundays
during the Lenten season. Therefore, in about the 8th Century,
it was necessary to add four days to the beginning of Lent
to bring the number of days up to the traditional 40. This
was the origin of Ash Wednesday.
The Eastern Christian
Churches (both Catholic and Orthodox) consider Great and Holy
Week as a separate unit with its own Fasting and Abstinence
requirements, not technically included in the Great Lent.
Lent liturgically concludes on the evening of the 6th Friday
of Great Lent, the vigil of Lazarus Saturday. Although we
do not fast (restrict the amount of food eaten) on Saturdays
and Sundays, we do continue to abstain from certain kinds
of foods on the Weekends of Lent. The Saturdays & Sundays
of the Great Fast are counted in the total of days, thus bringing
the number up to 40, counted from Clean Monday, the first
day of Great Lent.
Great Lent begins
for Byzantine Christians with the Vespers of Clean Monday,
held on Cheesefare Sunday evening: On Cheesefare Sunday, after
Divine Liturgy, we have a great feast with fish, wine, olive
oil, eggs and dairy products, which we will eschew for 40
days. (Meat has already been relinquished the Sunday evening
before, on Meatfare.) After the meal, we gather in the Church
for Forgiveness Vespers, during which the priest begs forgiveness
of his flock. The congregation all ask his, and individually,
each other’s pardon. In this way, we prepare for the
fasting and trials of the Great Lent, Commending ourselves,
and one another, and all our lives to Christ our God. No
external marking is used (cf. Mt 6:16).
This period is known
as The Great Lent or The Great Fast, because there are several
Lents (fast periods) in the Byzantine Calendar. The other
three major Lents are The Apostles Fast [from All Saints Sunday
(the Sunday after Pentecost) until Sts. Peter & Paul (29
June)]; The Fast of the Theotokos [1-14 August]; and The Christmas
Lent [15 Nov - 24 Dec]. In addition, there are also several
small [one day] fast and abstinence periods. Finally, of course,
the beginning of Great Lent depends on the date of Pascha
(Easter).
Why are
There (Sometimes) Differing Dates for Pascha (Easter)?
On calendars for most years one sees two dates on which Christians
celebrate the resurrection of Christ: Western Easter and Orthodox
Pascha. How did this difference occur? In the Apostolic Christian
Churches, there is one formula for determining the date of
the Feast of the Resurrection: Pascha falls on the first Sunday
after the first full moon after the Spring Equinox. At the
first Council of Nicæa (AD 325) this calculation was
accepted by all churches. We no longer have the actual Acta
of the Council, but we know from testimonial evidence that
there was also a discussion about the relationship of this
Christian Feast of Feasts with the Jewish Passover. This had
obviously been a concern from early times: John's Gospel and
the Synoptic Gospels have a slightly different chronology
of the events of the Passion.
The Quartodecimans
(The Fourteeners ) in parts of Syria and Ireland had insisted,
even after the Council, that Pascha must be celebrated directly
on the day of the Jewish Passover, the 14th day of the Hebrew
Month of Nisan. The Irish Church, due to its Eastern origins
and Missionaries, celebrated Pascha on that date until the
Synod of Whitby in AD 664. To forestall such controversies,
the Council of Nicæa had decreed that Pascha could not
fall on Passover. Thus far, all the Apostolic Churches agree
today. But then the problems start.
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