Controversy over the Date of Easter: Difference between revisions

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The First Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. repudiated Quartodecimanism (Easter on the 14th of Nissan), and acknowledge exceptional authority of the  patriarchs of the Churches in Alexandria and Rome over their respective regions. 


So what was the big deal about the date of Easter?
It is astounding that the date of Easter caused so much contention in the early church given Paul's statement that dates are a matter of personal preference and should not be the subject of judgment and disputation.


==Gentile vs. Jewish Christians==
==Gentile vs. Jewish Christians==
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==The Council of Nicea and Easter==
==The Council of Nicea and Easter==
The First Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. repudiated Quartodecimanism (Easter on the 14th of Nissan), and acknowledge exceptional authority of the  patriarchs of the Churches in Alexandria and Rome over their respective regions. 
In 325, at the Council of Nicea, the first canon (unchanging law of discipline) was issued giving the patriarchs of Alexandria and Rome exceptional authority over other churches in their regions.  It was also decided at this council that the Christian Passover must not be celebrated with the Jewish Passover, which was the custom of the disciples. The Roman Emperor Constantine enforced this doctrine by the physical suppression of forms of worship he considered unorthodox.  <ref>Life of Constantine Vol. III Ch. XVIII by Eusebius</ref>   
In 325, at the Council of Nicea, the first canon (unchanging law of discipline) was issued giving the patriarchs of Alexandria and Rome exceptional authority over other churches in their regions.  It was also decided at this council that the Christian Passover must not be celebrated with the Jewish Passover, which was the custom of the disciples. The Roman Emperor Constantine enforced this doctrine by the physical suppression of forms of worship he considered unorthodox.  <ref>Life of Constantine Vol. III Ch. XVIII by Eusebius</ref>