Skip to content
Vatican Observatory
  • About
    • Overview
    • Team
    • FAQ
  • Telescopes
    • Overview
    • Telescope Images
  • Tours
    • Castel Gandolfo
    • U.S.
  • Latest
    • Overview
    • Resources
    • Press
    • Audio
    • Video
    • Research
    • Authors
      • FAQs
    • Newsletter
    • Tucson Meteor Cameras
  • Podcast
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Resource Center
    • Image Gallery
    • Summer School
    • Books
    • Software
    • Additional Resources
    • ACME
  • Shop
  • Calendar
    • View our Event Calendar
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Smart Ways to Give
    • Sacred Space Astronomy
      • View Content
    • Bequests / Trusts
    • The Foundation
      • Newsletters
      • Annual Reports
  • Press
    • VO in the News
    • Press Kit
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
    • Contact
  • About
    • Overview
    • Team
    • FAQ
  • Telescopes
    • Overview
    • Telescope Images
  • Tours
    • Castel Gandolfo
    • U.S.
  • Latest
    • Overview
    • Resources
    • Press
    • Audio
    • Video
    • Research
    • Authors
      • FAQs
    • Newsletter
    • Tucson Meteor Cameras
  • Podcast
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Resource Center
    • Image Gallery
    • Summer School
    • Books
    • Software
    • Additional Resources
    • ACME
  • Shop
  • Calendar
    • View our Event Calendar
  • Donate
    • Donate Now
    • Smart Ways to Give
    • Sacred Space Astronomy
      • View Content
    • Bequests / Trusts
    • The Foundation
      • Newsletters
      • Annual Reports
  • Press
    • VO in the News
    • Press Kit
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
    • Contact

Across the Universe: Redating Easter?

By Br. Guy Consolmagno  |  18 Jan 2018

Share:
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share via Email

This entry is part 165 of 201 in the series Across the Universe

This column first ran in The Tablet in January 2016

The archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has recently [2016] announced discussions to redefine the date of Easter. Pope Francis and various leaders of Eastern churches have also expressed interest in a common date that all churches would celebrate together.

The Gregorian Reform of 1582 defined Easter via an arbitrary formula. When Christopher Clavius published his explanation of the reform, he included tables for the moveable feasts tied to Easter, valid until the year 5000!

Easter was originally the Sunday following Passover, the first full moon of the Hebrew year. But the start of the Hebrew year varied from year to year. Jewish months, 29 days long, mirror the phases of the moon, and so every three or four years an extra month is needed to keep that lunar calendar in phase with the seasons. After the destruction of the Temple in AD 70, there was no central Jewish authority to determine when to add that month. Instead, Jews of the Diaspora relied on a Greek formula (devised in 432 BC by Meton) to add seven intercalary months over a repeating 19 year cycle. It was clever; and it almost worked.

The Roman world used Julius Caesar’s season-based calendar of 12 fixed months with one leap year every four years. It too was clever, and almost worked. A year is defined by the length of time from season to season — originally, spring to spring. Spring’s beginning is marked by a particular position of Earth’s orbit. By a nice coincidence, it takes almost exactly 365 1/4 days to return to that position. By adding one extra day every fourth year, you can keep a calendar of days in sync with a calendar of seasons. Almost.

The Council of Nicea in AD 325 assumed that the beginning of spring occurred on March 21 by Roman calendar. It defined Easter as the first Sunday following the first full moon after that date. There were two problems with that system, however.

The “almost works” nature of the formula meant that its tiny error built up over the centuries. The leap year is a bit too long; after 133 years, you’ve added one day too many. That was the logic behind the Gregorian calendar reform in 1582: after dropping the extra days accumulated since Roman times, a new rule was added eliminating leap year for three of every four “century” years. (1700, 1800 and 1900 were not leap years; 2000 was.) Of course, even with this new calendar, spring is not always starting exactly on March 21.

And by then, another problem with the Nicean system revealed itself. With Christians now living all around the world, what happens when a given full moon falls on a Monday in one hemisphere while it’s still Sunday further west?

So instead, the Gregorian calendar substituted a mathematical formula that simply attempted to imitate the Nicean system but which, for the sake of simplicity, gave up any attempt to be completely in line with the actual position of the seasons and the moon. In fact, the Gregorian Easter disagrees with a more astronomically calculated Easter nine times in this century alone.

Even in 1582, people thought about adopting a fixed date much like the current proposals suggest. But the reformers felt that keeping Easter as a moveable feast was closer in spirit to the Council of Nicea, from those happier days of Christian unity. They hoped that by keeping this spirit, the Protestant and Eastern churches would go along with the reform. In fact, however, Protestant countries resisted the Gregorian calendar for nearly 200 years; and the Orthodox never did accept it. Let’s hope any new system has better luck.

[I haven’t heard anything new about this effort since the 2016 announcement…]

Share:
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share via Email

Sacred Space Astronomy

The Vatican Observatory’s official digital community and online magazine.

Become a Member

Recent Posts

Religious Scientists at VaticanObservatory.org

By Mr. Christopher Graney  |  21 Jun 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Interview with VOSS Student Isabella Macias

By Robert Trembley  |  19 Jun 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Astronomy & Space Science Education & Public Outreach Newsletter – June 2025, Part 2

By Dr. Larry Lebofsky  |  18 Jun 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Protecting Freedom of Science and Preventing Distortion of Scientific Truth

By Robert Trembley  |  18 Jun 2025  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Archives

      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • October
      • September
      • August
      • July
      • June
      • May
      • April
      • March
      • February
      • January
      • December
      • November
      • August
      • June
      • March
      • January
      • November
      • October
      • December
      • November
      • April
      • May
      • January
      • December
      • September
      • May
      • March
      • December
      • November
      • February

More Posts in this Series:
"Across the Universe"

Nature’s “Where I Work” Photography Exhibition at King’s Cross Shows Br. Guy Consolmagno

By Robert Trembley  |  23 Apr 2024  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

Press Release: New cosmological research of the Vatican Observatory

By Robert Trembley  |  26 Mar 2024  |  Sacred Space Astronomy

“Faith in Science: Catholic and Jewish Perspectives on Creation and the Cosmos.”

YouTube  |  6 Nov 2023  |  Press

Seeking God in science is part of Jesuit’s vocation

YouTube  |  25 May 2022  |  Press

Newsletter

Upcoming astronomical events, scientific breakthroughs, philosophical reflections… just a few reasons to subscribe to our newsletter!

Vatican Observatory
  • About
  • Telescopes
  • Tours
  • Latest
  • Podcast
  • Education
  • Shop
  • Calendar
  • Donate
  • Press
  • Specola Vaticana
  • Contact
Privacy Policy  |   Cookie Policy  |   Disclosure Statement  |   This website is supported by the Vatican Observatory Foundation

Podcast:

  • Apple Podcasts Listen onApple Podcasts
  • Spotify Listen onSpotify
  • Google Podcasts Listen onGoogle Podcasts
  • Stitcher Listen onStitcher
  • Amazon Alexa Listen onAmazon Alexa
  • TuneIn Listen onTuneIn
Made by Longbeard