Talk:Moveable feast
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—Yamara ✉ 11:40, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
Discussion
I may be really off here, since I'm no expert on this subject, but isn't Candlemas always on Feb. 2? What about Whitsuntide, Palm Sunday, days like those? -- Zoe
- I'm not sure that Palm Sunday is a feast per se; in Eastern Orthodoxy, it's right around the transition from Great Lent to Holy Week, and at most would only include a slight relaxation of the Lenten fast, such as allowing fish and oil that day. February 2 is always the Presentation of Christ in the Temple, sometimes called the Encounter instead of Presentation. I think Roman Catholics emphasize the cleansing of Mary in the Temple that day, but celebrate the same event. Don't know what Candlemas and Whitsuntide are... Wesley
If this is about Christianity then the inclusion of Japanese holidays seems misplaced. If it is about other things as well, then Independence Day (always on the 4th of July) could be contrasted with Thanksgiving Day (usually taken to have religious significance, not always Christian, even though its date was enacted by a supposedly religiously neutral Congress) in that the latter is the fourth Thursday in November rather than always on the same date. And what of Richard Nixon's reforms that made Memorial Day, Columbus Day, and perhaps a few others, always fall on the nearest Monday to a particular date? And how do Muslims decide when the Hajj takes place? Michael Hardy 23:10, 17 Oct 2003 (UTC)
I have removed the sections for Japanese, Canadian, and American holidays as these are not relevant to the artice and it might get out of hand. All the info can be found on the pages:
Zabdiel 18:08, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
Fixed feasts
Do we actually need a list of fixed feasts here ? -- Beardo 22:07, 26 May 2006 (UTC)
Thanks
I was somewhere else and wanted to know the usage of this term; this article was concise and very helpful! Thanks a lot, made my day a little less infuriating. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.163.213.216 (talk) 23:20, 11 January 2007 (UTC).
Corporate Definition
I'm removing the Corporate Definition section. If it belongs (which I can't fathom), here's the text:
Typically breakfast after the Wednesday morning meetings, a privilege that is provided to us to all to share in as a sales floor. Not only does breakfast provide the sustenance that drives 75/25, but it also gives us a few brief moments to meet and greet which builds comraderie as a team. In the past, Tim Sheehy engaged in Movable Feasting, creating a rift between east and west which was almost irrepairable as Mitch and I can attest to. Please leave breakfast in its designated area and resist the urge to create a selfish breakfast cache in non-designated arenas.
-Pat 21:20, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Spelling
Where, in the world, in the spelling "moveable" used? I thought it was universally "movable". 82.13.26.251 (talk) 21:30, 5 April 2009 (UTC) British spelling is moveable
Harvest Festival
I just want to point out that Harvest Festival in the Anglican church is a moveable feast that is not determined by the date of easter. It is held on the nearest Sunday to the nearest full moon to the autumn equinox. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Peas Pudding (talk • contribs) 18:29, 25 November 2010 (UTC)
Fake entry removed
There is no "Sextopola - 69 days before Easter (Pre-Vatican II Calendar)" according to all available reference material. Maybe a bit sad that the joke stayed in the page so long, though --GGG65 (talk) 03:47, 1 April 2011 (UTC)
it's unclear from the article whether boxing day is really a moveable feast
the second paragraph says that boxing day is a moveable feast. but boxing day does not meet the definition in the first paragraph ( moving with easter) and the claim seems to even contradict the statement in the third paragraph. assuming I am correct, then I suggest that the current paragraph two be inserted at the end of the current paragraph 3, but rewritten to say that boxing day is NOT a moveable feast!
this was dictated into my android phone, sorry if there are typos.
it's unclear from the article whether boxing day is really a moveable feast
the second paragraph says that boxing day is a moveable feast. but boxing day does not meet the definition in the first paragraph ( moving with easter) and the claim seems to even contradict the statement in the third paragraph. assuming I am correct, then I suggest that the current paragraph two be inserted at the end of the current paragraph 3, but rewritten to say that boxing day is NOT a moveable feast!
this was dictated into my android phone, sorry if there are typos.