Día de Resurrección

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El Día de Resurrección es una fiesta solemne de Dios que conmemora la resurrección de Jesús tres días después de su muerte en la cruz. En la Biblia, la fecha del Día de Resurrección es el “día siguiente del Día de Reposo (domingo) que sigue a la Fiesta de los Panes sin Levadura”. Sin embargo, la mayoría de las iglesias lo guardan el primer domingo después de la luna llena que ocurre en el equinoccio de primavera o después de este, y lo llaman Pascua de Resurrección. En muchos países de Europa, el día anterior y posterior a la Pascua de Resurrección es una fiesta nacional y se celebra como una de las festividades más importantes del año. En los Estados Unidos, la gran mayoría de las escuelas tienen vacaciones de primavera generalmente antes y después de la Pascua de Resurrección. Y muchas oficinas públicas y empresas están cerradas y disfrutan de unas vacaciones alrededor de la Pascua de Resurrección.[1][2][3][4][5]

Nombre Día de Resurrección
Significado Conmemoración de la resurrección de Jesús
Ceremonia Partir el pan que abre los ojos espirituales

Origen del Día de Resurrección

El origen del Día de Resurrección es la resurrección de Jesús. Un origen más fundamental se puede encontrar en la Fiesta de las Primicias de los tiempos del Antiguo Testamento. La Fiesta de las Primicias se estableció para conmemorar la salida de Moisés y los israelitas a los que lideraba, después de cruzar el mar Rojo hace unos tres mil quinientos años.[6] It was celebrated on the day after the first Sabbath (Sunday) following the Feast of Unleavened Bread. On that day, the priest waved a sheaf of the first grain before God.


“Speak to the Israelites and say to them: ‘When you enter the land I am going to give you and you reap its harvest, bring to the priest a sheaf of the first grain you harvest. He is to wave the sheaf before the LORD so it will be accepted on your behalf; the priest is to wave it on the day after the Sabbath.’ ”

- Leviticus 23:9–14


The firstfruits offered on the Day of Firstfruits in the Old Testament represented Jesus Christ. Jesus fulfilled the prophecy of the Day of Firstfruits by being resurrected as the firstfruits of those who had fallen asleep.


But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.

- 1 Corinthians 15:20


Date of Resurrection Day

The Date in the Bible

Jesus was arrested on the night of the Passover, died on the cross on the Feast of Unleavened Bread,[7] and fulfilled the prophecy of the Day of Firstfruits by being resurrected on the day after the Sabbath (Sunday).

When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had driven seven demons.

- Mark 16:1–9


Thus, Resurrection Day is the day when the prophecy of the Feast of Firstfruits was fulfilled, so it must be observed on the day after the first Sabbath following the Feast of Unleavened Bread, just like the Day of Firstfruits.

The Date Changed

Most churches celebrate Resurrection Day on the first Sunday after the full Moon following the spring equinox.[8] This is the result of accepting the Western Church’ insistence on the date of the Passover Holy Supper. The Paschal controversy was sparked between the Eastern and Western Churches from the 2nd century to the 4th century.

The Western Church insisted that the Holy Supper should be celebrated on the Resurrection Day, not on the evening of the 14th day of the first month by the sacred calendar which Jesus had taught. In A.D. 325, the churches decided to follow the insistence of the Western Church at the Council of Nicaea, and so the Passover of the new covenant, the day the Holy Supper was originally held on, disappeared from the ecclesiastical calendar, and the date of Resurrection Day was set to be the “first Sunday after the first full Moon following the spring equinox.”[9][10] In the Gregorian calendar, it is usually between March 22 and April 25,[11] which is similar to the feast day of the goddess Ēostre (Easter), which was widely worshiped in Europe at that time.[12] Today, the word Easter is related to the festival of the goddess Easter.[13]

Ceremony of Resurrection Day

Biblical Ceremony: Resurrection Day Bread

The Bible records how Jesus was resurrected and appeared to His two disciples who were on their way to Emmaus. The two disciples talked with Jesus, but they did not recognize Him. It was because their eyes were covered.[14] So Jesus gave them the bread He had given thanks for to eat, and the disciples’ eyes were opened to realize that they had been talking with Jesus, who had died on the cross.[15] Afterwards, the saints of the early Church celebrated the Resurrection Day by breaking bread on the day after the first Sabbath coming after the Feast of Unleavened Bread, following the example of Jesus.

After the Feast of Unleavened Bread . . . On the first day of the week we came together to break bread.

- Acts 20:6–7


The World Mission Society Church of God keeps the Resurrection Day on the basis of the dates of the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened in the Bible, and break the bread, following the example of Jesus.[16][17]

Pagan Customs: Easter Eggs and Bunny

Today, many churches celebrate Easter by eating boiled eggs, and regard bunnies and eggs as symbols of Easter. The reason bunnies and eggs became the symbols of Easter is assumed to be because the custom of worshiping the goddess Easter (Ēostre) of the Teutons, who governed spring and dawn, was introduced into Christianity.[18] Since spring is the season of new life, Easter was regarded as the goddess of fertility, and bunnies and eggs were both used as symbols of fertility.[19] The fact that the Resurrection Day is called Easter in English and Ostern in German proves that Resurrection Day has been changed by the influence of pagan religions. The origin of Easter the goddess and eggs goes back further in history. Ancient Babylonians believed that a large egg fell into the Euphrates River from the sky and that the goddess Ishtar was hatched from this egg.[20] In Israel, this goddess was called Ashtoreth.[21] The Bible tells us that Israel provoked God to anger by adopting the customs of pagan religions.[22][23] Recognizing this problem, some Christian groups celebrate Easter by eating candy or chocolate instead of boiled eggs, but this is also a non-biblical custom that cannot be found in the early Church.[24]

  • Names of Resurrection Day in Each Language
Language Name Etymology Remarks
English Easter, Day of Resurrection, Resurrection Day Eostre, Eostrae (the name of the goddess of spring and abundance)[25] Easter and Ostern are non-biblical names.
German Ostern[26] Eostarum (the name of the goddess of spring and abundance)[25]
Greek Πάσχα [Pascar] Pronunciation of the Hebrew word פֶּסַח [pesach][27] in the Greek way In the Bible, Pascha is a feast that Jesus celebrated on the day before He suffered.[28] The Holy Supper of Pascha is a ceremony to commemorate Jesus’ death[29], not His resurrection. Nevertheless, it became common in the Western Church to celebrate the Holy Supper on the day commemorating the resurrection of Jesus. So in some languages, the day of Jesus’ resurrection is wrongfully called Pascha.[30]
Latin Pascha Derived from πάσχα, a Greek word for tuning the Hebrew word פֶּסַח [Pesach]
Russian Пасха Pascha in Latin
Spanish Pascua
Romanian Paști
Italian Pasqua
Portuguese Páscoa
French Pâques
Dutch Pasen[31]
Korean 부활절 Commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ
Chinese 复活节 (simplified),

復活節 (traditional)

Japanese 復活祭, イースター

References

  1. List of Holidays in France in 2022(Días festivos en Francia en 2022). Public Holidays in France in 2022.
  2. Gesetzliche Feiertage in Nordrhein-Westfalen 2022 (Días festivos en Renania del Norte-Westfalia 2022). Die Feiertage 2022, 2023 n Deutschland.
  3. Calendar of business days 2022 (Calendario de días hábiles 2022). Trading Hours & Holidays, EURONEXT.
  4. 4. FG declares holidays for Easter celebration (El Gobierno Federal declara feriado por celebración de la Pascua de Resurrección). The Guardian, 30 de marzo de 2021
  5. 5. Christians around the world celebrate Easter Sunday (Cristianos de todo el mundo celebran el domingo de Pascua). USA TODAY, 17 de abril de 2017.
  6. «Éxodo 14:21–30». 
  7. «Matthew 26–27». 
  8. Easter, The Free Dictionary.com
  9. Easter, WORLD HISTORY ENCYCLOPEDIA, January 11, 2021
  10. Supremacy of the Popes, James Gibbons, The Faith of Our Fathers, 1876, pg. 134
  11. Easter 2008 is the Earliest in Nearly a Century, Time and Date, March 14, 2008
  12. Origin of Easter: From pagan festivals and Christianity to bunnies and chocolate eggs, ABC.net, April 15, 2017
  13. Why Easter Is Called Easter, and Other Facts About the Holiday, U.S.News, April 12, 2017
  14. «Luke 24:13–16». 
  15. «Luke 24:30–34». 
  16. Resurrection Day of Jesus Christ, WATV.org
  17. Sacred Assemblies of the Passover, the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and the Day of Resurrection 2022, WATV.org, April 15, 2022
  18. Easter summary, Britannica
  19. "Who Is Eostre and What Does She Have to Do With Easter?". crosswalk.com. 2022. 3. 18.
  20. Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons, pg. 109, 1998
  21. «"ASTARTE WORSHIP AMONG THE HEBREWS"». Jewish Encyclopedia. 
  22. «Judges 2:12–15». 
  23. «1 Kings 11:31–33». 
  24. The #1 Most Popular Easter Candy, According to New Data, Earth This, Not That!, April 11, 2022
  25. 25,0 25,1 «"Easter"».  Britannica
  26. Ostern, Cambridge Dictionary
  27. Strong's #6453 - פֶּסַח, StudyLight.org
  28. «Luke 22:15». 
  29. «1 Corinthians 11:23–26». 
  30. Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons or The Papal Worship: Proved to be the Worship of Nimrod and his Wife, Volume 27, pg. 149
  31. Pasen, Cambridge Dictionary