The Passover is still the Passover, or Pesach, to the Jews. In the Christian calendar, Good Friday which is observed two days before Easter Sunday, falls at the same time as the Jewish Passover.
Yes.
Passover celebrates the Exodus.
I think Easter is the following Sunday after Passover.
Passover is called "Pessa'h" in French. This is not a French word, but comes from Hebrew.
it is over 600 million people in the pentecostal churches today....
Yes. But they are not called churches they are called Mosques.
The meal was called the Passover or Pessach and involved both lamb, bitter herbs and unleavened bread, as indeed it still does today.
The Passover dinner that is eaten the first night of Passover in Israel, and the first two nights outside of Israel is called the Seder
Lent developed out of the fast that Christians kept before the Passover. Though originally the fast was absolute on the day or days before observing the memorial service of Christ's death as "our Passover," as time went on, some "fasted" longer periods of time but not absolutely. The time continued to grow in length until the 40 days that are observed by Catholics and related churches today. Lent developed out of the fast that Christians kept before the Passover. Though originally the fast was absolute on the day or days before observing the memorial service of Christ's death as "our Passover," as time went on, some "fasted" longer periods of time but not absolutely. The time continued to grow in length until the 40 days that are observed by Catholics and related churches today. Those Churches that take their doctrines from the Bible instead of from Catholicism may still fast before Passover, but they do not observe the Catholic time of Lent. There are many Christian groups that don't observe Lent -- too numerous to list. It is usually those churches that believe that the Catholic Church does not have the authority of Jesus or God to set or overturn doctrine.
Jesus?
Today, much more ugly churches, more practical and warm, but the Gothics ones are stunning, well worth the trade off.
in churches?