This is an interesting article, except for the part on Galileo. The Church did not persecute Galileo for heresy; rather he was penalized for disobedience. Faith and science have never been antithetical; one of the oldest observatories is at the Vatican. From
Atlas Obscura:
Easter, a Christian holiday commemorating
Jesus Christ’s resurrection from the dead, is defined not only by
Church liturgy but also by astronomical circumstance. As specified by
the First Council of Nicaea, Easter is not a straightforward
anniversary, always recurring on the same date from now until eternity.
Instead, it is to be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full
moon after the spring equinox—an occasion already laden with
astronomical significance. The equinox, after all, is a day when time is
split equally into 12 hours each of light and darkness, of illumination
and obscurity.
The stakes of getting the date right were
unusually high, Heilbron writes. If the faithful were to worship Easter
on the wrong Sunday, out of sync with the rest of Christendom, then
their very souls could be at risk. This was not merely an academic
concern: at the height of the Church’s calendar problem, in the second
half of the 16th century, the eastern Church and the western Church were
an incredible ten days out of sync with one another. This was only
reconciled in 1582 when Pope Gregory XIII implemented what has become
known as the Gregorian calendar reform.
Gregorian reform eliminated, at a stroke
and literally overnight, ten entire days from the western European
calendar. People going to bed on October 4th, 1582, when the reform was
implemented, would have woken up the next morning to find it was October
15th. Although this disorienting reform was intended specifically to
put the calendar back on track for reaching the next spring equinox on
March 21st, March 21st is not always the true, astronomical spring
equinox. To determine exactly when the equinox would be, in the
future—and, thus, when Easter should properly be celebrated—a more
subtle and astronomically precise tool of measurement was required. A
meridian line. (Read more.)
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