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Love Hurts… and So Does History

When we try to determine the exact day that Jesus was crucified, either Friday or Wednesday, we come face to face with an ugly fact about the history of the church.  That ugly history shows the depth of the church’s hatred for the Jews during the first and second centuries, much like the church’s hatred of the Jews today.  Church councils were called to try to determine a uniform date for Easter in order for it not to correspond with the Jewish Passover (the 14th of Nisan), even if they are, in reality, intrinsically tied together.

For example, the Council of Nicaea (325 BC) unanimously ruled that the Easter festival should be celebrated throughout the Christian world on the first Sunday after the full moon following the vernal equinox (March and September); and if the full moon should occur on a Sunday, and thereby coincide with the Passover festival, Easter should be commemorated on the following Sunday.


Some Troubling Questions

Why try so hard to make sure no Christian festival corresponds to its Jewish counterpart, even if by accident?  Antisemitism.  But there’s so much more to this debate.  You have the two sabbaths during the passion week, the rantings of Emperor Constantine, and the ex-communication of the Quartodecimans.

Sound intriguing?   Do you want to know more?  Then keep listening.

Leaving Laodicea | The Survival Manual for the Coming Underground Church

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