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48 I. The Celebration. 1. Names and their Significance. 2. Origin of the Celebration. Testimony of the Ante-Nicene Period (§ 1). Testimony of the Post-Nicene Period (§ 2). Conclusions (¢ 3).

I. The Celebration.-1. Names and Their 6ignificanoe: EASTER, the festival of our Lord's resurrection is, with Christmas, the most joyous festival observed by the Church. The English Easter and the German equivalent Ostern, are derived from the Anglo-Saxon Ostard. or EQstre, the name of the goddess of spring and the dawn (cf. Skeat's Etymological Dictionary ; Bede, De rations temPortcm, xv.). The French peqvzs and the terms used in the other Romance languages are derived from the Hebrew Pesah, " Passover ." In the early Church the term Pascha was used for the festival next preceding Pentecost, whatever it was that that festival commemorated (see PENTECOST). It remains to show whether the term stood only for the festival of the death of Christ, or for both the festivals of the death and resurrection, or for the festival of the resurrection alone. It is certain that if the resurrection of Christ was annually commemorated, the festival of commemoration was called pascha and by no other distinctive term. The word pascha. was at first derived from Gk. paschein, " to suffer " (so Tertullian, adv. Jud.; Irenaeus, Hcrr., iv. 23, etc.). Later the true derivation from the Hebrew pesah was recognized and the meaning diabasis, transitus, " passing over " was given to it (e.g., by Gregory Nazianzen, Sermo xlv., MPL, zxxvi. 636; Augustine, EPist., Iv., MPL, xxxiii. 205). After the year 300 the day of the resurrection was called the " day alone great " by Leo I. (Sermo de resurrections Domini, MPL, liv. 498), " the most royal day of days," by Gregory Nazianzen (MPG, xxxv. 101?); " the festival of festivals," " the happiest of days," and by other designations which show that it was looked upon after that date, if not before, as the most joyous and important festival of the year. John of Damascus has given expression to the devout feelings of the ancient Church in regard to Easter in his resurrection hymn:

RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA Eadfrid Easter EASTER. 3. The Day of Celebration. 4. Rites of Celebration. Prior to 300 A.D. (§ 1). In the Post-Nicene Period and Middle Ages ($ 2). In Modern limes (§ 3). II. The Paschal Controversies. The Quartodecimane of Asia Minor (51). The day of resurrection, earth, tell it out abroad, The Passover of gladness, the pesaover of God.

2. Origin of the Celebration: Two questions present themselves: (1) When did the custom of the yearly commemoration of the resurrection begin? (2) on what day of .the week and what day of the year was the festival celebrated? For the period after the Council of Nica?a (325), the difficulty largely vanishes. The comparatively lengthy statement of Eusebius (Hilt. eccl. V., xxiii. xxv.) does not relieve the difficulty for the anteNicene period, but by its vagueness, growing out of what Eusebius assumes to be known, rather increases the difficulty. If we were in possession of the lost tracts called forth in the third century by the paschal controversies (see below, IL), to which

Documentary Bases and Harmoniatio Calculations (§ 2). Controversy in the Second Century (¢ 3). The Nicene Decision as to Date of Celebration (¢ 4). III. The Easter Cycle.

Eusebius makes reference, all uncertainty might be removed.

The only possible allusion in the New Testament to the observance of a Christian Passover, or festival of the death of Christ, is I Cor. v. 7,

1. Testi- where " Christ our Passover " is said mony to have been sacrificed for us. That of the the Jewish Christians continued to

N ene keep the Jewish festivals is altogether

The next point of approach is through Eusebiue