April 29, 2005
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The Rev. Isaac Skidmore arranges an altar for an Eastern Orthodox Easter celebration this weekend in Ashland. Other Orthodox celebrations are scheduled in Rogue River and Grants
Pass.
Mail Tribune / Roy Musitelli
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An Orthodox Easter
By JOHN DARLING
for the Mail Tribune
For Orthodox Christians who operate on an old calendar and under a different understanding of the Nicean Council, Easter has not yet happened. Its this Sunday and for anyone who would like
to celebrate Easter again, youll find it at three Rogue Valley churches.
Orthodox Christianity, the Eastern branch that split from Catholicism many centuries ago, celebrates Easter on a different day because it takes a different slant on the Nicean Council instruction made
in 325 A.D. that Easter falls the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox, "and not according to the reckoning of the Jews."
That "reckoning of the Jews" signified the day Jews celebrate Passover, which was about them being saved, freed and redeemed in their Egyptian captivity, by the sacrifice of a lamb.
For early Christians, said the Rev. Isaac Skidmore of St. Gabriel the Archangel in Ashland, Passover became transformed to mean "God purchased our freedom with the blood of Jesus Christ and
hes the sacrificial lamb that allows us to be delivered from the enslavement to human passions, thus opening the gates of paradise and fellowship with God."
To honor the resurrection as well as historical chronology, Orthodox Christians decided Easter should always fall after Passover, never before or on that day, the 14th day of the Jewish month of Nisan.
To keep to that tradition, all Orthodox churches continue to adhere to the long-gone Julian calendar, promulgated by Julius Caesar. Because it lacked an accurate vernal equinox, it was replaced by the
Gregorian calendar in the 16th century.
Western Christians followed the Julian calendar and took the Nicean "reckoning" clause to mean they should simply disregard the Jewish Passover date in setting the date of Easter.
Orthodox Easter is called Pascha, pronounced "paska," and it means the resurrection of our Lord so that our sins may be passed over, said the Rev. Seraphim Cardoza of St. Innocents in
Rogue River.
Cardoza called the event a moveable feast, as there is much feasting into the wee hours, while serving a vigil for the return of Christ.
"For every Christian, Easter is the highest day of the year, except for Christmas in America, because that has become such a commercialized holiday," said Cardoza.
In the Grants Pass church, the vigil around midnight is done in the dark, with candles being lit, one by one, awaiting, metaphorically, the arrival of the bridegroom, who comes at midnight (Matthew
25:6).
It is the greatest and most elaborate celebration, the feast of feasts, said officials of Christ the Savior Orthodox Church.
Easter for Orthodox followers, said St. Gabriels Skidmore, is the time when God enters the reality of our human experience and is glorified and exalted above mortality, "like a hand reaching
into our fractured existence, so we never have to be alone."
St. Gabriels Easter feast goes on till about 3 in the morning Sunday, with parishioners taking Easter baskets and breaking the 50-day fast of Lent with meats, cheeses and wines in joyous
celebration, Skidmore said.
"Easter is an expression of the human instinct for resurrection, for the sense of life coming out of death in spring," he said. "Christ said, I am the resurrection and the
life and thats where you need to put your instinct for rebirth, in a place that will not annihilate the self or those around us, but will give us real renewal."
The Easter date isnt the only issue separating Catholic from Orthodox faiths. The big doctrinal schisms, said Skidmore, are the Catholic insistence in the 11th century on the primacy of the pope
over other bishops, something Eastern churches dont accept.
Orthodox churches also dont support the Western amendment to the Nicean Creed, stating that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father "and the Son." Orthodoxy believes Christ receives
his divine essence from God, but does not "drink of it from the same pool of divinity" something Skidmore called "generic trinitarianism."
Orthodox churches see themselves as drawing from the very roots of Christianity, he added, and do their best not to go with modern changes some even feeling that the Gregorian calendar is a
"sellout to the spirit of the world."
Orthodox Easter events in the Rogue Valley
St. Gabriel the Archangel in the Newman Center, Ashland Street at Elkader, Ashland. Vespers at 3:30 today and Holy Matins with Lamentations at 7 p.m. Saturday. Vesperal Liturgy of St. Basil is at
9 a.m. Saturday and Nocturne, Procession, Matins and Liturgy of Our Lords Resurrection, followed by feasting from Easter baskets at 11:30 p.m. 488-3748.
St. Innocents, 2249 N. River Road, Rogue River. Friday services at noon, the Passing of Our Lord at 3 p.m., the crucifixion at 6 p.m. Saturday at 10:45 p.m. is the vigil and midnight
liturgy. Sunday at noon is the Agape Love Feast. 582-2128
Christ the Savior Orthodox Church, a new church, operating in St. Lukes Episcopal Church, Fourth and B streets, Grants Pass. 10:45 p.m. Saturday to 1:20 a.m. Sunday. 956-2190
John Darling is a freelance writer living in Ashland. E-mail him at jdarling@jeffnet.org