Coptic Orthodox Lent 2023

When is Orthodox Easter?

Orthodox Easter, also called Greek Easter is the principal festival of the Orthodox Church. It is the most significant religious holiday for the world's roughly 300 million Orthodox Christians. 

In the bible, it is the day when Mary Magdalene found that an empty tomb in the cave in which Jesus had been placed following his death by crucifixion on the Friday before.

It signifies the end of the 40 days of Lent, meaning Christians who gave up something during lent to signify Jesus' time in the wilderness, can indulge themselves again.

In Egypt, Coptic Easter Monday is celebrated on the same day as Orthodox Easter Monday. The day forms part of a wider spring festival called 'Sham El Nessim' and is a national holiday.

The date is different from Western Easter as the other Christian Churches base the date of calculating Easter on the Gregorian calendar, but the Eastern Orthodox Church still uses the earlier Julian calendar for calculating the dates of festivals, which also includes Easter.

Why is it called Easter?

The name Easter is derived from 'Ostara' or 'Eostre', a pagan goddess of fertility, whose feast was celebrated on the Vernal Equinox. The word East is also derived from her names, as is Oestrogen, the female hormone.

However, In most languages other than English and German, the holiday's name is derived from Pesach, the Hebrew name of Passover, a Jewish holiday to which the Christian Easter is intimately linked.

Easter depends on Passover not only for much of its symbolic meaning but also for its position in the calendar. The Orthodox Church uses the Julian calendar for the calculation of Easter, whereas the Western churches use the Gregorian calendar. This difference can often mean that Orthodox Easter falls later than Easter observed elsewhere. The earliest date it can fall is 4 April and the latest is 8 May.

Easter traditions

Though the Orthodox Churches vary from country to country, an Easter tradition binds them together. The "Holy Light," is a flame distributed throughout the Orthodox world each year from the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem to mark the resurrection of Christ.

Easter Eggs

Modern Easter celebrations revolve around eggs. They may be painted, rolled down hills or eaten if they are of the chocolate variety. The Christian tradition of the egg is an aid to represent rebirth and resurrection - new life being born from the egg. It's also been said that egg recalls the shape of the stone that rolled away on Easter Sunday form the tomb that held Jesus' body.

This egg tradition is almost certainly a distillation of a much older pagan custom celebrating spring. The ancient Persians celebrated their new year at the time of the vernal equinox by painting eggs.

Its adoption into the Christian traditions would have been quite seamless, as eggs were banned during the period of Lent preceding Easter.

The custom of decorating eggs is perhaps most famous in Ukraine. Known as Pysanky eggs, they are painted when raw as the uncooked egg shell absorbs the coloured dye better than when cooked.

Coptic Easter Monday

The final day of the Holy Week is Easter Monday, or Sham El-Nessim. This national holiday has been celebrated by all Egyptians since the formation of the Arab Republic of Egypt in 1953 but is known for its links to Coptic and ancient pre-Christian traditions. The origins of the holiday date back to 2700 BCE during the Pharaonic era of the Old Kingdom, where the arrival of Spring was celebrated. It originally fell in the middle of Coptic Christian’s Great Fast, so celebrations were moved to the day after Easter.

In modern times, Sham El-Nessim has been fully integrated into Coptic Easter, but traditions such as eating salted mullet, green onions and lupin, as well as colouring eggs, are said to have originated from ancient Egyptian celebrations of fertility, despite also having connotations with the resurrection of Christ.

Feasts & Fasts Dates by Year:

Seven Major Feasts of the Lord

  1. Feast of the Annunciation (29 Paremhotep)
  2. Feast of the Nativity (29 Kiahk) 
  3. Feast of the Epiphany / Theophany (11 Tobe)
  4. Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem (Palm Sunday)
  5. Glorious Feast of the Resurrection
  6. Feast of the Ascension
  7. Feast of the Pentecost

Seven Minor Feasts of the Lord

  1. Feast of the Circumcision (6 Tobe)
  2. Flight of the Holy Family to Egypt (24 Pashons)
  3. Presentation of the Lord into the Temple (8 Meshir)
  4. Miracle at the Wedding of Cana in Galilee (13 Tobe)
  5. Transfiguration (13 Mesri)
  6. Covenant Thursday
  7. Thomas Sunday

Other Feasts

  1. Nayrouz Feast (Coptic New Year)
  2. Jonah’s (Nineveh) Feast
  3. Feast of the Cross (Two Feasts)
    1. 17 Thoout – Three day feast that runs from 17 – 19 Thoout
    2. 10 Paremhotep
  4. Feast of the Apostles (Martyrdom of St. Peter and St. Paul)

Monthly Fasts

  1. 29th of Every Coptic Month – Commemoration of the Three Major Feasts of the Lord: the Annunciation, the Nativity and the Resurrection of the Lord.
  2. 21st of Every Coptic Month – Commemoration of St. Mary, the Theotokos (Mother of God)
  3. 12th of Every Coptic Month -Commemoration of the honorable Archangel Michael the Head of the Heavenly

Fasts

  1. Nativity Fast and its Paramoun
  2. Paramoun of the Feast of Epiphany or Theophany
  3. Jonah’s (Nineveh) Fast
  4. Holy Great Fast
  5. Apostles’ Fast (Day following the
  6. Feast of the Pentecost to July 11)
  7. St. Mary’s Fast (August 7-August 21)

Weekly Fasts

Wednesday and Friday: Wednesday in commemoration of Christ’s betrayal by Judas Iscariot and Friday, in commemoration of the crucifixion of the Lord Christ. These fasts are observed throughout the year with the exception of during the Holy Fifty Days (Easter to Pentecost) and any day where a Major Feast of the Lord falls on a Wednesday or Friday.

What are the 13 Coptic months?

Coptic months.

What is Coptic Lent?

Lent, known as “the Great Fast,” is the main fast of the Copts. Lent starts with a pre-Lent fast of one week, followed by a forty day fast commemorating Christ's fasting on the mountain, followed by the holy week of the Coptic calendar called Pascha. Lent climaxes with Good Friday and ends with Easter.

What year is it in the Coptic calendar?

The calendar is still used by the Coptic Orthodox Church and used by the farming populace in Egypt. Coptic years are counted from August 29th, 284 CE 2, the year Diocletian became Roman Emperor. ... Month names 3..

What is the Feast of the Cross Coptic Orthodox?

In our Coptic Church, we celebrate the Feast of the Cross of our Lord twice every year: on Tout 16 (around mid-September) and the 10th of Baramhat which is March 19th of this year. On Tout 16, we celebrate Queen Helena going to Jerusalem and finding the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.