Catholic Believers Celebrate Easter

All Catholic believers today observe the Passover festival, the resurrection of Jesus Christ, in accord with the New Testament, three days after his conquest and death on the cross. Although a holiday that falls on different days depending on the year and the differences between the Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish calendar remains one of the moments [...]
Although a holiday that falls on different days depending on the year and the distinction between the Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish calendar remains one of the most important moments in the calendar of celebrations for Catholic believers.
The Passover festival for Christians takes place each year on the following Sunday, the first full moon after the spring equinox.
Easter is preceded by a pre-preparative period of fasting that lasts for 40 days called Creschem from the “The Wednesday of Perhime”, and ends on Sunday in Palms, the last Sunday before Easter Day. 40 days commemorate the past 40 days in Christ's wilderness in prayer and fasting.
Following the celebration of the Cross's <x0th century, the blessing of food is another ritual of Catholic believers at the Easter Festival.
Believers turn to the Church to receive the blessing of food to celebrate this important moment of Christ's resurrection. In the food basket containing the Easter Sunday table, where there is no Easter Bread, a bottle of wine, a little cheese and sobly garlic that symbolize spring coming, and the red egg, the symbol of Christ's resurrection and restoration.
The main theme of the Passover is the rebirth, the symbolic resurrection of which lies firmly in flowers and primarily in lilies. This beautiful flower is believed to have grown in the same garden where Jesus was arrested.











