Orthodox Easter was in the news mainly because it was being observed across churches and communities in April 2026, with coverage focused on Jerusalem and the ongoing calendar debate. Reports also highlighted renewed calls for a common Easter date among Christians, alongside the usual calendar difference that keeps Orthodox Pascha later than Western Easter in many years.[1][2][3]
What was reported
- In Jerusalem, Orthodox Easter celebrations drew worshippers back to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre after weeks of disruption, with public rites and the Holy Fire ceremony attracting large crowds.[3]
- Coverage on Palestinian Christians noted a subdued Holy Week and concerns that Orthodox Easter could also be affected by restrictions and instability.[4]
- A separate piece discussed renewed efforts by Orthodox clergy and theologians to align Easter more closely with the Nicaean formula and possibly move toward a common date with other Christians.[1]
Why it matters
Orthodox Easter often falls on a different Sunday because Orthodox churches generally use the Julian calendar for Pascha calculations, while Western churches use the Gregorian calendar. That makes the date a recurring religious and public-event issue, especially in places like Jerusalem where multiple Christian traditions observe Easter differently.[2][3][1]
A notable angle
One of the bigger storylines this year was not just the celebration itself, but the broader discussion about whether Christians should eventually agree on one Easter date. That debate has been resurfacing as leaders and scholars mark the 1700th anniversary of Nicaea and revisit how Pascha is calculated.[1]