msmemory_archive (
msmemory_archive) wrote2007-04-03 02:17 pm
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I've groused here before about the Christian bias of the Order of the Eastern Star. I wish I'd planned ahead and announced that I wouldn't be at tonight's big Installation of New Officers because it's a religious holiday for my in-laws (who are extremely non-observant, only "culturally Jewish," but could have been used behind their backs to make a point).
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Sunset on the first day after the first full moon after the vernal equinox.
:)
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Thank you for playing, "Guess the Holidays". Your answer "first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the March equinox" is not a winner. Please buy more Kosher-for-passover coke and play again when you find another cultural sensitivity question on the inside of the bottlecap.
I was curious about the fact that this is the wrong answer, and looked it up on the web, and found this interesting entry in Wikipedia:
"The calculation of Easter in the Christian church (first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the March equinox), uses its own definition for the equinox — it always falls on March 21. The earliest possible Easter date in any year is therefore March 22.
I *thought* that that "fixed equinox" would turn out to be the answer, but, noooooo—it's a lot more complicated than that. Just as a small example, there's the extra month added in leap year...
Passover, as everyone knows, is "the evening of the 14th of Nisan, and lasts seven days in Israel, eight days in the Diaspora (although Reform Jews observe a seven-day period).
When is Nisan? That turns out to have a truly complicated answer.
Again quoting WikiPedia,
"The "modern" form [of the Hebrew calendar] is a fixed arithmetic lunisolar calendar. Because of the roughly 11 day difference between twelve lunar months and one solar year, the calendar repeats in a Metonic 19-year cycle of 235 lunar months, with an extra lunar month added once every two or three years, for a total of 7 times per 19 years."
I poked at it a little longer before deciding that I knew as much as I needed to, and way more than was appropriate to respond to your comment.
Oh, and the easiest way to find out when passover is is to type "when is passover " into Google. The old fashioned way is to look at the jewish calendar that your relatives in Israel sent you as a New Year's gift, or the perpetual Jewish calendar that they sent you as a birthday present.
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Dude. Read my post. What you have in quotes is NOT what I said at all.
But now we all know how smart *you* are.
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So, what *is* sunset, etc., since it isn't easter? It sure isn't Passover. Some sites lead me to think it's a modern pagan ritual date based on ancient ritual, but I didn't find an exact match.
Which does bring up the question, should the Masons be held accountable if they hold important rituals opposite pagan holidays as well as against Jewish ones?
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Huh! I didn't know you could do that. Cool!
I'm a big fan of the calendar tools at Kaluach (.com, .net, and .org). They have a service where they'll send you an email reminder of all holidays and New Moons, and you can set up reminders for yahrzeits (memorial days) as well.