Christians celebrate Good Friday and Easter Sunday Christians have several festivals for various purposes. Each Christian delegation has different festivals and celebrations, and other delegations did not. However, all Christian delegations united to celebrate certain festivals and events. Good Friday and Easter Sunday are examples of such Christian celebrations. Because these festivals are important for all Christians.
Good Friday is Friday before the Easter. Sunday (Easter). The day of Good Friday will change year by year. On Good Friday, Christians remember the day when Jesus was crucified on the cross. Traditionally, Holy Friday is for Easter Sunday cleaning and painting all day. On Good Friday, some Christians fasted (there is no food). This will help remember the sacrifices Jesus did for them on the day of crucifixion. Some Christians will also join the parade, cross the street and enter the church
Following this morning the followers of Christian faith gather around Easter Sundays and near the church and celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. But compared to Holy Friday / Easter Sunday's white version, it is becoming the mainstream of corporate, American colonial Christian culture - it is the story of Jesus ultimately a brown male story It is important to remember that it is. As pointed out by religious historians and theologians, the Roman Empire has made public rituals related to practice (such as the suffering of the victims and the display of the body of a standardized victim) in a manner similar to practice at Jim Crowe, Use. Because it is Southern Lynch, when talking about Jesus' Resurrection from Death, it is brown person who rises from Lynch.
Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus on Easter Sunday just two days after Jesus was crucified. The day of the Easter Day is equivalent to a festival of the Passover, it is a memorial of the Jews related to Exodus, and the night of the full moon near the vernal equinox is fixed. A century of the Christian era, certain parts of the Jewish community established faith in the resurrection of the body of the dead, as described in the Daniel book 12: 2, in the middle of the 2nd century B.C. It was. "When sleeping, many people awake, dust wakes up, dust will spoil forever." Josephus (the 1st century AD) summarized as follows. The Pharisees believed in the resurrection of the deceased, but the Sadducees did not. Sadducees, a politically powerful religious leader, refused the verdict of the Hereafter, Angels, Devils, and Pharisees. The Pharisee's view was Rabbin Judaism and eventually won this argument (or at least survived).