Music
We can be grateful that radio stations and retail music systems haven't given us three months of Easter music in the run-up to the holiday. It would be pretty much Peter Cottontail or Handel's Messiah.
Needing a set of tunes to fill the house while preparing our portion of a fine Easter dinner at Mike and Lynn's, I put together this playlist.
Name | Artist |
Helter Skelter | U2 |
Silver And Gold | U2 |
Pride (In The Name Of Love) | U2 |
When Love Comes To Town | U2 |
The Wanderer | U2 |
Walk On | U2 |
Sunday Bloody Sunday | U2 |
Bad | U2 |
One | U2 |
O Mary Don't You Weep | Bruce Springsteen & The Sessions Band |
Jacob's Ladder | Bruce Springsteen & The Sessions Band |
Who says that this Easter?
The relationship between the Protestant churches and the early church is, as Facebook would suggest, complicated.
Not only is Easter a movable feast, not fixed to a date on the secular calendar, but there are different ways that the Eastern and Western churches determine the date. All trace their formulas to the decision of the Council of Nicea in 325. The meeting notes from that council haven't survived, so the calculations are left to the reader. The major points of contention and imprecision are described pretty well in Wikipedia.
So how is it that most Protestant denominations appear to accept the Roman church's designation that a) Easter should happen on a Sunday and b) independently from Passover, upon which the Easter stories are based? (A few Christian groups, such as the Seventh-Day Adventists and Worldwide Church of God, have different views about Easter observances.) The quarrels among Christians seems less about the conclusion - when and how Easter should be observed - than about who makes the decision. Lutherans can observe Easter today not because the Bishop of Rome says so, but because they arrived at the same conclusion without being told.
Of course, we're reached the point that it's not likely that any major denomination is going to devote time and energy revisiting the fixation of the dates for Easter, or Christmas, for that matter. There's plenty to do with the way things are.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="Best Laid Eggs of Mice Nor Men"][/caption]
No comments:
Post a Comment