Good Friday is the last day of the Lent.
Good Friday is the second-to-last day of Lent.
Lent is a time of public penance for Catholics. Catholics between the ages of 18 and 59 should fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. Catholics 14-years and older should not eat meat on Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, and every Friday during Lent.
The answer is in the names they are days in Lent one starts it the other is to remember the Friday Jesus died.
Yes!
Good Friday, then Easter.
To pay respect for Jesus Christ, who died on a Friday (Good Friday)
holy Friday
Lent is from Ash Wednesday until Good Friday. Lent is from Ash Wednesday until Good Friday. Lent is from Ash Wednesday until Easter Sunday. Lent ends with the beginning of Mass on Holy Thursday however, the Lenten laws concerning fasting and abstinence continue until the Vigil Mass on Holy Saturday.
The day before Easter is simply Easter Saturday. The day before that is Good Friday.
Lent lasts for forty days and unlike similar fasts last through the nights as well. Sundays are not counted in the forty days as each Sunday is seen as a celebration of the resurrection (like mini-Easters) anyway. Lent ends the Saturday before Easter Sunday. Good Friday is a fasting day anyway. Eastern churches start Lent on the Monday of the 7th week before Easter and end it on the Friday 9 days before Easter. Eastern churches call this period the 'Great Lent'.
Lent is a period of time, not a day. It is fourty days celebrated before Easter, from Ash Wednesday through to the Easter Tridium; Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday.