MaoistLandlord [he/him] to christianity • 3 years agoWhy does Good Friday change every year? Isn’t it ‘celebrating’/remembering Jesus’ crucifixion? Shouldn’t it be the same date every year?message-squaremessage-square16 fedilinkarrow-up16
arrow-up16message-squareWhy does Good Friday change every year? Isn’t it ‘celebrating’/remembering Jesus’ crucifixion? Shouldn’t it be the same date every year?MaoistLandlord [he/him] to christianity • 3 years agomessage-square16 Commentsfedilink
minus-squareVHS [he/him]hexbear12·edit-23 years agoIt's calculated based on a Lunisolar calculator, which is borrowed from Judaism. The date it lands on is related to Passover. link
minus-squareVHS [he/him]hexbear2·3 years agoGood Friday is the only day for that. But, I mean, it is considered the actual day that Jesus died, just by the Jewish calendar rather than the Gregorian one. Historically there has been more than one calendar. link
It's calculated based on a Lunisolar calculator, which is borrowed from Judaism. The date it lands on is related to Passover.
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Good Friday is the only day for that. But, I mean, it is considered the actual day that Jesus died, just by the Jewish calendar rather than the Gregorian one. Historically there has been more than one calendar.